Steve Peers
Today the UK Conservative party has formally unveiled its
proposals for reforming the system of human rights protection in the UK. I will
comment further on their implications for EU law soon. But for now, I want to
address the fundamental flaw with these proposals: the combination of a weaker system for protection of human rights with a lower standard of protection.
Assuming that we believe in the concept of human rights at
all – and the Conservative party document says that it does – then there is a genuine
debate we can have about two issues: the mechanism
for protection of human rights and the substance
of the human rights to be protected. Let’s take these points in turn, in the
context of the Conservative party’s paper.
As for the mechanism of protection, there are two fundamental
and interrelated aspects: the relationship between parliament and the courts, on
the one hand (the national angle); and the relationship between national and
international systems of protection on the other (the international angle).
On the first point, most liberal democracies have a
primarily written constitution that has effect as a basic law, meaning that it
takes precedence over acts of parliament or other legal measures adopted by
politicians or civil servants. Most of those countries choose to incorporate
human rights protections into their constitution, with the necessary result
that courts, not parliaments, have the final say over human rights protections.
Of course, this is a simplified model: in many countries, some rights (like social rights) are not protected in the constitutional charter of rights, and so it falls to legislatures to decide how to protect them. And it’s also possible for legislatures to decide when to limit those rights which may be limited on public interest grounds (‘qualified’ rights). In some cases, such as in Canada, legislatures have a more general power to override some of the constitutional rights.
Of course, this is a simplified model: in many countries, some rights (like social rights) are not protected in the constitutional charter of rights, and so it falls to legislatures to decide how to protect them. And it’s also possible for legislatures to decide when to limit those rights which may be limited on public interest grounds (‘qualified’ rights). In some cases, such as in Canada, legislatures have a more general power to override some of the constitutional rights.
On the second point, there are a number of regional human
rights systems which have some form of court to adjudicate upon disputes. While
international treaties are, of course, binding as a matter of international law upon the states which
ratify them, it does not necessarily follow either that the treaties themselves
or the judgments of the courts created by those treaties take effect as the domestic law of the states which ratify
them.
So it’s possible to have a strong system for human rights
protection in a domestic constitution, but with a limited role for international
courts. The prime example of this is the USA, where the courts can overrule the
legislature on human rights issue, as a matter of constitutional law (and the constitution
is difficult to amend, if the politicians wished to overturn such rulings), but
there is only a very limited relationship between national and international
systems of human rights protections.
Within the UK, though, the national and international
systems for human rights protection have been effectively fused by the Human Rights Act, which gives
constitutional protection to human rights as set out in the European Convention
of Human Rights (ECHR), and as interpreted by an international court, the
European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). While the national courts and the ECtHR
don’t have authority as such to invalidate acts of parliament, there is a
general perception that the ECtHR in particular is ‘telling parliament what to
do’.
In order to address this, the Conservative plans aim to do
two things: to create a purely national system of human rights protection, in the form of a ‘British
Bill of Rights’ which would accompany the repeal of the Human Rights Act, and to decouple the ECHR system from domestic
law. The form in which they would do this would clearly weaken human rights protection, as compared to other models, since it’s
clearly assumed that parliament would be supreme over the UK courts (the national
angle), and the intention is to strip the international system of any
significant impact at domestic level.
There are certainly fundamental democratic arguments for
both these changes. National courts, unlike a national parliament, have no
direct electoral legitimacy; and international courts are even less
democratically legitimate. True, the ECtHR judges are in fact elected by the
Council of Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly, made up of national
parliamentarians. But the Council of Europe, even more than the EU, lacks a demos, ie a link between the population
of the 47 Council of Europe members as a whole and its Parliamentary Assembly as
a political unit.
While it is possible that national legislatures may have
less concern about the rights of minorities than national or international
courts, it’s equally true that in practice, the effective protection of human
rights depends upon political will. The American Bill of Rights didn’t prevent
slavery. Nor did it begin to deal with the severe racial discrimination that
followed it until the 1950s. And no-one would suggest that Putin’s Russia is a
model liberal democracy, just because Russia has ratified the ECHR.
The problem with the Conservative plans then, is not just
that they would weaken both the national mechanism for protection of human
rights and its relationship with the main international human rights system which
binds the UK. It’s that they would also significantly lower the substance of human rights protection within
the UK. So they would simultaneously reduce substantive human rights protection
and strip away much of the current means by which human rights are protected.
In particular, the plans would reduce human rights protection
by: lowering the protection against deportation to face torture, or other
inhuman or degrading treatment; providing for detailed possibilities for limitations
of Convention rights; redefining some of the rights in the Convention,
including as regards (again) the absolute ban on torture, or other inhuman or
degrading treatment; introducing a threshold below which ‘trivial’ cases could
not succeed; and limit the territorial scope of human rights protection.
Another leaked policy document goes further, although it’s
not clear what the status of this document is. It would effectively remove
human rights protection from various groups considered undesirable, such as
travellers, ‘illegal’ immigrants and foreign prisoners.
In short, while the new policy document states that the text
of the rights in the ECHR would as such be set out in an Act of Parliament,
that is quite simply a lie. The intention is to accompany that list of rights with detailed limitations and
interpretations that would, in practice, remove the substantive protection of
those rights in a large number of cases.
Furthermore, the plans do not deserve to be called a ‘Bill
of Rights’. That concept denotes a
system where either the courts have the final say in the protection of human
rights (such as in the USA), or at least a system in which the legislature has
set out a broad list of rights which the public enjoys in principle, even if
the legislature has the final say on their interpretation.
The Conservative proposal suggests instead the worst of all worlds:
a highly limited national system of human rights protection, the defenestration
of the link with the international human rights system, and a significant lowering of
substantive human rights protection. While the UK has a proud tradition
supporting the protection of human rights internationally, this plan would
undermine that history, and could well be used as a model by tyrants worldwide.
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