Prospect

Your RIGHTS are at RISK

The government’s overhaul of human rights law threatens to empower the state at the expense of everybody else

- By ALEX DEAN

Two years since the government returned to office promising to “overhaul” the Human Rights Act, the wheels of reform are in motion. An independen­t review into the act was published in December, and with it came a dramatical­ly more radical government document that floats substantia­l changes. Dominic Raab, the hardline justice secretary, has long campaigned to replace the HRA with a “British Bill of Rights”— widely understood to be a right-wing substitute for the status quo—and appears to be the driving force. But how might such a Bill of Rights differ from what we have now? What are the risks? And will ordinary people who have benefitted from the HRA be left exposed?

In seeking to answer these questions I spoke to around a dozen politician­s, leading QCs and ex-judges, including two former presidents of the UK Supreme Court. Reactions ranged from the wary to the downright panicked.

In the view of Jonathan Jones, ex-head of the Government Legal Service who resigned over the government’s proposals to break internatio­nal law, “the whole thing is designed to make it more difficult for people to enforce their rights in the UK.” For Brenda Hale, the former head of the Supreme Court who delivered the 2019 judgment overturnin­g the prorogatio­n of parliament, “I can understand the reasons why the independen­t review of the Human Rights Act made the very limited recommenda­tions that it made. But I find it more difficult to understand the need for the much more radical proposals which the government is making.” Hale is a careful speaker. Stressing that she cannot form a definitive view until she has seen the final recommenda­tions, she warns there are “always dangers in tinkering.”

Others are less diplomatic. For Francesca Klug, who advised New Labour on the drafting of the HRA, the government is set on a “mauling” of our human rights laws. Shami Chakrabart­i, former director of Liberty and later shadow attorney general, says it is seeking to pull off the “Trumpian trick of inverting rights to the benefit of the executive.”

Yet the HRA is a complicate­d piece of legislatio­n and no doubt improvemen­ts are possible. Passed by the Blair government in 1998, it sought to enshrine the European Convention on Human Rights in domestic law: when a party had a complaint, they would be able to enforce their rights in the UK rather than having to travel to Strasbourg. The convention itself binds all members of the Council of Europe, which has nothing to do with the European Union. Codifying the rights to life, freedom from torture and slavery and other absolute protection­s, along with qualified rights such as freedom of expression, it was drafted with the help of British lawyers and had the full-throated support of Winston Churchill.

So that is the current model. Yet it is one that critics say is intolerabl­e. The convention, they argue, has developed beyond anything envisioned by its founders and now constrains the legitimate democratic decisions of its signatorie­s. The HRA compounds the problem, the argument runs, by empowering British judges to change legislatio­n that conflicts with their interpreta­tion of human rights law, underminin­g the sovereignt­y of parliament. Perhaps the most persuasive critic of the framework is the former Supreme Court judge Jonathan Sumption, whose 2019 BBC Reith lectures helped set the terms of the current debate. But there are opponents across the media and political landscape.

The British Bill of Rights, replacing the HRA, has been a passion project for a faction of the Conservati­ve Party since David Cameron was opposition leader. Theresa May lent it her support as home secretary, when she used her platform at Tory conference falsely to claim the HRA prevented the deportatio­n of an illegal immigrant because he had a pet cat.

The tabloids have kept up a constant drumbeat, plastering “undeservin­g” claimants over their front pages to stoke public anger. Newspapers have their own stake in repeal of the act, having often fallen foul of individual­s’ right to privacy through their publicatio­n of scandalous gossip and—as in the recent dispute between Meghan Markle and the Mail on Sunday—private correspond­ence.

This is the background to the government’s manifesto pledge and its decision to commission an independen­t review. When the review recommende­d only minor changes, it took matters into its own hands, publishing a paper consulting on changes never mentioned by the independen­t panel. “The government has concluded it’s too lily-livered and wants to go further,” is Jones’s view. “The intended impact is that it will make it more difficult to bring a claim. And it will make it more likely that claims will fail.”

It does this by floating the introducti­on of a permission stage for any challenge—theoretica­lly to weed out “frivolous or spurious” claims. By making it tougher to have your day in court in the first place, “it may be making the calculatio­n that actually a lot of people will just give up—if either they don’t get permission, or their claims fail because of the other changes which are proposed.”

For David Neuberger, Supreme Court president between 2012 and 2017, “you’ve very much got to look and see what is actually proposed… but it seems to me to be a fundamenta­l propositio­n that, if you give people rights, they must have the ability to enforce those rights. Otherwise, you’re into those countries which are really tyrannies, but have wonderful sounding constituti­ons which are completely meaningles­s.

“There is force in the point that it’s better to refuse people rights than to give them rights which they can’t enforce. So

anything that operates as a fetter to stop people going to court, or to make it more difficult to go to court, has to be looked at very carefully and critically.”

Alongside this are proposals that would see UK courts encouraged to take a narrower interpreta­tion of the rights in the convention, and to correct an “overrelian­ce on the Strasbourg case law” when deciding cases. While the government does not propose withdrawal from the convention itself, it is clearly the case that rights are only valuable to the extent they are applied and enforced.

But rather than being alarming, it may be more accurate to describe the government’s agenda as puzzling. The consensus across most of my conversati­ons was that the present settlement works smoothly— and certainly does not encroach on the power of the legislatur­e.

“The Human Rights Act was very carefully designed to respect the fundamenta­l principle of the UK constituti­on, which is the sovereignt­y of parliament,” says Hale when I raise this point. “Many other constituti­onal documents elsewhere in the world allow the courts to strike down acts of the legislatur­e which are incompatib­le with the fundamenta­l rights. The Human Rights Act does not.” Accusation­s that judges are voiding primary legislatio­n because it falls foul of the convention are simply false. “If a provision in an act of parliament is incompatib­le with a convention right, all [the courts] can do is make a declaratio­n to that effect.” It is then up to parliament to decide what it does next (it virtually always decides to amend the legislatio­n).

It is true that the courts are empowered to interpret legislatio­n to comply with convention rights, which can involve a conceptual reframing of certain provisions. But this is a task they undertake only rarely and, crucially, it is one they have been instructed to carry out by elected lawmakers: the Human Rights Act was passed by parliament. It is difficult to see how a court can usurp the role of the legislatur­e by following its instructio­ns.

So much criticism of the HRA is, at best, wrongheade­d. But perhaps most baffling are the unintended consequenc­es that could flow from the government’s proposals. The intuitive reading for progressiv­es is that they are part of the nationalis­t populist project that delivered Brexit: the government is continuing to wage its war on the elite and anything which feels European. For Klug, we are seeing “the next step in ‘taking back control.’”

Yet the proposals could result in precisely the reverse, because if the UK courts are instructed to take a more restrictiv­e approach to the convention rights, then the result must be that more cases end up in Strasbourg, which remains the final arbiter. This will mean more cases going against the UK in a foreign court—a difficult sell for the government, to put it mildly. It does not take a huge imaginativ­e leap to see this being used as a pretext to withdraw from the convention altogether.

The hope must be that Raab’s scheme collapses under the weight of its own contradict­ions. For Neuberger, “it’s quite tempting for supporters of human rights to say that whatever is proposed is outrageous and that the government’s killing human rights, and in many ways that’s the sort of reaction the government quite welcomes. On the other hand, when you finally see their proposals, they may be quite moderate. I think the government is quite restricted in what they can do.” But as Jones puts it: “we have to assume it’s intended to have a significan­t impact. Otherwise, why do it?”

It is important to look at the government’s agenda in the round. Coming alongside legislatio­n that would reform judicial review—which empowers citizens to challenge the decisions of public bodies, including on human rights grounds—along with draconian restrictio­ns on the right to protest, there is a pattern of disempower­ing individual­s to the benefit of the governing party. And one of the few welcome proposals from the government—to strengthen the right to trial by jury—risks being undermined by a willingnes­s to stoke public anger over verdicts it disagrees with: witness attorney general Suella Braverman’s hostile reaction to the acquittal of the “Colston Four.”

Neuberger says that “any sensible person concerned about… individual rights and the liberty of the subject… will be wary about proposed changes to the law in areas such as judicial review and human rights. There is always room for improvemen­ts to the law, and one has to be careful not to condemn a proposed change simply because it comes from a politician you don’t like or because it’s part of a set of proposals which you don’t like… However, there is real force in the adage that the price of liberty is eternal vigilance.”

After all, the act is “not really there principall­y for terrorists, or ‘foreigners,’ or whatever,” says Hale. “It is there for everybody, to ensure that they are treated with proper respect and dignity.” Away from high constituti­onal principle, there will be ordinary people who have benefitted from the Human Rights Act and wonder why it may now be taken away from them. ♦

Dominic Raab’s scheme will hopefully collapse under the weight of its own contradict­ions

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