Government hasn't heeded Bill of Rights views: Faculty
There is little evidence that the UK Government listened to consultation responses in introducing the Bill of Rights Bill, the Faculty of Advocates has said.
Responding to the bill, which would repeal the Human Rights Act 1998 and introduce a more limited Bill of Rights, Faculty doubted the UK Government's claim to have taken heed of the responses from various stakeholders, including those in Scotland. "There is little sign that the Government has listened to the warnings proposed by Faculty in its response to the call for evidence by the Independent Review of Human Rights or in its response to the consultation in March 2022 on the intended Bill of Rights", Faculty stated.
It continued: "When the Human Rights Act 1998 was first introduced, it had its doubters – most notably in Scotland, perhaps, in the late Lord McCluskey, who warned that it would provide a 'field-day for crackpots and a goldmine for lawyers'. Many will doubtless contend that Faculty’s defence of the 1998 Act is driven by that latter sentiment. However, experience since 2000 (when the 1998 Act came into force) has shown that the Act has largely been a force for good. The courts have adopted a sensible, and fact-sensitive, approach to the rights and freedoms ensured by the 1998 Act. Decisions that the Government of the day finds disagreeable or inconvenient do not provide a coherent basis for wholesale change."
Faculty regards as "of particular concern" what has been described as introducing "common sense" to the justice system. "The judiciary already strives to arrive at decisions which 'make sense', Faculty responded. "The plea for ‘common sense’ is a populist one, designed to justify the executive arrogating to itself (or, more accurately, to the legislature, which the executive will often control) the ability to decide what 'makes sense' in this area, rather than leaving it to the judiciary independently to determine what human rights law requires.
"As we are talking about the rights and fundamental freedoms that the Convention is designed to protect, and as the UK is to remain party to the Convention, it is the judiciary – not the executive – that should be deciding where the crucial lines should be drawn. Otherwise, the state, as party to and bound by the Convention and yet in control of what the Convention means for daily life in this country, is acting as judge, jury and executioner. Independent oversight is diluted, and possibly lost. That cannot be in the public interest."