
114k of 200k signatures.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 15:55, Reply)

More likely there'll be huge legal roadblocks preventing it happening. Probably waste a few millions drafting it up. Gives Gove something to do I suppose. As an English Lit graduate he's more than qualified to oversee it.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:02, Reply)

( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:10, Reply)

than they take a blind bit of notice of a petition.
If people chased Tories in marginal seats with large flaming torches and pitchforks, that might work.
This bunch aren't nicknamed the Tory Taliban for nothing.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:17, Reply)

People who voted them in only care about home ownership.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:18, Reply)

You can only exert pressure if there's a weak spot. They have a majority, they will just push all the nasty stuff as fast as they can. They have 5 years to do as much damage as they can, faster they do it, the less chance they can be stopped.
They don't give a flying fuck about petitions
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 21:51, Reply)

I think 38degress is going to be pretty busy for the next 5 years...
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:17, Reply)

but as i see it there is no harm in trying.
That link, though, won't let people residing outside the UK sign.
this one though, through change.org shared by a facebook fiend this morning, does accept outside UK addresses:
www.change.org/p/david-cameron-mp-we-call-on-the-government-and-the-prime-minister-to-provide-a-national-referendum-on-the-planned-abolition-of-the-human-rights-act?recruiter=73997710&utm_source
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:18, Reply)

Right to life
- I think that's fairly well covered in existing UK legislation
Freedom from torture and inhuman or degrading treatment
- check
Right to liberty and security
- yep, though this is open to as many interpretations as you like
Freedom from slavery and forced labour
- uh-huh
Right to a fair trial
- I thought it was the Daily Mail and their readers who were most likely to say that the UK justice system is fucked
No punishment without law
- Magna Carta, bitch
Respect for your private and family life, home and correspondence
- You might have a point with regards to a snooper's charter, but that's democracy for you. Suck it up, not enough people cared to vote in the other lot
Freedom of thought, belief and religion
- See below
Freedom of expression
- Unless it's to express the opinion that teh Geyz should be stoned to death
Protection from discrimination in respect of these rights and freedoms
- Again, we were among the pioneers of this. We're not fucking Serbia, are we?
Right to education
- Remind me where Malala pitched up after she got shot
Right to participate in free elections
- And not to act all butthurt when they don't deliver the government YOU want
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:24, Reply)

"Right to a fair trial
- I thought it was the Daily Mail and their readers who were most likely to say that the UK justice system is fucked"
...but the justice system in this country is fucked. Like really. Legal aid? might as well not exist now amongst many other loverly things. Never mind eh, we've got Gove in charge now /facepalm
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:41, Reply)

Easier to tell someone "take it to Strasbourg" than actually to do it.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:42, Reply)

I'm baffled by the hysteria and scare mongering surrounding this. I think stupid people think just because it's called the Human Rights Act it is automatically a good thing.
As far as I can work out the aim of this is twofold:
1) to give us back the ability to deport dangerous convicted criminals.
2) to deny people in prison the vote, which is part and parcel of the penalty of a custodial sentence.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:55, Reply)

though I shouldn't be surprised given the hysteria we had during the election, and in general at the moment
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 17:24, Reply)

The proposal states that the bill should "limit the use of human rights laws to the most serious cases. [...] There will be a threshold below which Convention rights will not be engaged, ensuring UK courts strike out trivial cases."
That is, the government will decide when you can exercise your human rights.
Speaking of hysteria and scare-mongering, by the way, I think that's quite an apt description of the pro-BBR stance: www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/bella-sankey/human-rights-act-british-bill-of-rights_b_7257376.html.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 17:26, Reply)

"ensuring UK courts strike out trivial cases." The judiciary is not the government.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 17:33, Reply)

which will allow the judiciary to decide when you can exercise your human rights. How is that any better? And how will the threshold be set?
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 17:55, Reply)

The government puts them in place via statute, and the the judiciary, independently of the government, interprets and applies them. How is any legal threshold ever set? Define the burden of proof thresholds 'beyond all reasonable doubt' and 'on the balance of probabilities'. They're effectively just subjective abstracts, often, but not always, that subjectivity is moderated by a jury in an attempt at objectivity, but they work pretty well nevertheless.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 18:08, Reply)

having a system in which individuals (or small groups of individuals) decide when you can even access your basic human rights is more open to abuse than a system in which you can always access them.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 19:12, Reply)

It's about application of the law. The law has always been made and administered by a small group of individuals. What exactly do you mean "access"? It's about what you can and cannot expect the law to allow you to do. I've never "accessed" my human rights, mainly because I've never committed a serious crime, and the only state bullying I've experienced has been lawful (HMRC) or fairly inconsequential, but infuriating (old bill). I resent the tax man more than old bill.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 21:26, Reply)

Having an in-state body deciding whether state bullying has occurred is not as good an idea as having an external body decide. Do you disagree with that?
And I realise (acronyms alert!) replacing the HRA with a BBR will not remove us from the ECHR, but as you say yourself below it will bring our signature into question.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 22:39, Reply)

I kid, I kid. There is a very good separation between state (i.e. government of the day) and judiciary. You may have noticed that governments constantly (Labour and Tory) take issue with the judiciary. The whole legal aid thing has meant that currently lawyers aren't keen on the the Tories, and not without good reason. But always retain a healthy scepticism when people who earn their bread from the tax payers start whinging about potential loss of income or job security. I had loads of shit teachers as a kid. How often do you hear of a teacher being sacked for being shit? Anyway, I'm going to bed now. Don't worry about the HRA, we're not going to see a fascististic police state appear in the next five years.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 23:43, Reply)

Or put it another way: What is the harm in allowing it?
I've yet to see a coherent argument for this particular policy, let alone one that justifies throwing out the entire Human Rights Act.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 18:31, Reply)

I think it is part of the punishment. It is frankly nothing in comparison to being literally incarcerated. It's mainly a symbolic withdrawal of a freedom. On a more practical and pragmatic level, it would massively distort a constituency's size and make up, and people forced into a particular prison can rarely claim to have to been part of the community or have any connection to the constituency in which their prison lies. Why should they therefore have a say in who represents that constituency?
The problem with the HRA, is you can't just throw bits of it out. Ideally we wouldn't throw the entire thing out, just tweak it. But that isn't really how statutes work: it's all or nothing, hence the idea or replacing it with a Bill of Rights.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 18:47, Reply)

by the use of a postal ballot in the prisoner's home constituency. Yes it's more expensive, but in comparison to the cost of locking someone up in the first place it's small beer.
As for it being a part of the punishment, that ultimately boils down to a "We do it like this because we've always done it like this" argument. It's not really an argument based on any reasoning or principle, merely an unwillingness to change. It's not like punishments haven't changed over the years - we used to lock people up in stocks after all.
If the punishment aspect of the disenfranchisement is small in comparison to the deprivation of liberty (and let's face it, it is), then I fail to see why we don't just accept the decision of the European Court of Human Rights and change the punishment accordingly.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 19:07, Reply)

How do you therefore define their home constituency? Maybe we should just stop locking people up just because we always have done.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 20:32, Reply)

Persons of No Fixed Abode already have a procedure to enrol on the Electoral Register. There's no reason to change that.
As for your final sentence, maybe so and I'd support that. There's plenty of evidence that suggests that locking people up is counterproductive with regard to preventing reoffending. However that's unlikely to be acted upon in the near future due to such ideas being deemed politically unpalateable.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 23:34, Reply)

I'll send Mark Bridger and Ian Huntley round to babysit your daughters next time you fancy a curry. Or maybe just fuck those full life tariffs and move them into the bail hostel in your neighbourhood, rather than their "home constituencies". As long as your delusional ideologies remain intact, that's the main thing. Never mind realities, practicalities and the dark side of human nature. Enjoy your dopiaza.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 23:52, Reply)

A weak Straw Man argument coupled with an Ad Hominem. I think this conversation has reached its conclusion.
( , Thu 14 May 2015, 0:24, Reply)

They will get out if they live long enough. Votes for Broadmoor! is there always a clear dichotomy between protection of the public and punishment? Is rehabilitation always possible? Is the world as black and white as your ideologies?
( , Thu 14 May 2015, 1:44, Reply)

Surely being banged up for crimes looses some rights to contribute to society in an election.
You haven't offered any argument other than some pointless 'why can't they have a vote' argument, which seems against a brick wall. They've committed crimes and cost the tax payer shit loads of money prosecuting them and housing them in a prison. They can vote and do normal things like a law abiding citizen of society when they've served their time. Until then they can feel frustrated and fucked off in their cells contributing nothing.
( , Thu 14 May 2015, 1:10, Reply)

the case before the ECHR in 2009 was actually about prisoners not being able to vote in the European Parliament elections, not in UK elections. European election, European rules, makes sense to me.
Anyway the point about people forfeiting their rights when they commit crimes is really rather sinister. I used to believe that myself, back in the day, but it is vitally important that convicted criminals are still human beings and the law still applies to them. The Tories seem to want to make rights conditional on good behaviour generally, and i find that a deeply disturbing direction to head in.
William Roper: So, now you give the Devil the benefit of law!
Sir Thomas More: Yes! What would you do? Cut a great road through the law to get after the Devil?
William Roper: Yes, I'd cut down every law in England to do that!
Sir Thomas More: Oh? And when the last law was down, and the Devil turned 'round on you, where would you hide, Roper, the laws all being flat? This country is planted thick with laws, from coast to coast, Man's laws, not God's! And if you cut them down, and you're just the man to do it, do you really think you could stand upright in the winds that would blow then? Yes, I'd give the Devil benefit of law, for my own safety's sake!
( , Thu 14 May 2015, 8:39, Reply)

( , Wed 13 May 2015, 18:06, Reply)

I know this sounds all UKIP and that, but isn't it better that the British people have even the most remote ability to manage their own laws through our parliamentary democracy than it is to be controlled by the utterly undemocratic rule of the ECHR?
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 18:20, Reply)

We signed up to the ECHR long before the HRA was enacted. On human rights, and many other areas of EU law, but that muddies the waters, as Strasbourg administers the European Court of Human Rights independently of the EU, which is primarily based in Brussels (the Council of Europe is not the same as the European Commission), European law has long been the supreme law in the UK. One of the points of enacting the HRA was to limit redress to Strasbourg, as the same laws were now on the UK statute books. Where it gets even more complicated is how does getting rid of the HRA affect our signature on the Convention.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 19:03, Reply)

the human rights act is our own law or the tories wouldn't be able to repeal it would they?
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 21:42, Reply)

( , Wed 13 May 2015, 18:07, Reply)

( , Wed 13 May 2015, 21:50, Reply)

Jesus.
This sort of thing is exactly why we need the EHCR.
Personally i'm all for having a British Bill of Rights, that would remove the need for people to go to Europe if their case could be settled here, but then why pull out of the EHCR unless you want things they won't allow?
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 19:40, Reply)

so here is a link: "UK Cases at the European Court of Human Rights since 1975"
www.parliament.uk/briefing-papers/sn05611.pdf
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 19:52, Reply)

the Tories are sure to back down on one of their flagship policies simply because a handful of online timewasters clicked on a petition.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 16:58, Reply)

My Aunt is in a care home with severe dementia. I was informed that the staff at the home are unable to prevent her walking out because that would be in breach of the Human Rights Act. They could only stop her if she was Sectioned under the Mental Health Act, but they won't do that because then the NHS would have to pay for her care, instead of her life savings being sucked dry like they are currently to pay for her.
If she did walk out, she would be instantly lost and would die from exposure that night. Luckily, she has never really asked, and when she has we were able to gently suggest it was a bad idea. So in that case, the Human Rights Act could actually kill her.
I don't really have a point, I'm just sayin'.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 17:05, Reply)

It has the same sort of ring as people who blame Health and Safety (gone mad) as a way of hiding a cop-out.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 22:56, Reply)

sending your tweets to the police for approval == MASSIVE LULS!?
I do hope they like closeups of bell-ends.
( , Wed 13 May 2015, 17:08, Reply)