How the legal system made it so easy for the Post Office to destroy the lives of the sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses – and how the legal system then made it so hard for them to obtain justice

 

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The coming year: how the parameters of the constitution will shape the politics of 2024

What is often left unsaid in complaints about pesky human rights law and pesky human rights lawyers

15th December 2023

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Those criticising human rights law and lawyers often shy away from spelling out the substance of a particular right

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You may or may not remember Abu Qatada and how he once featured in British politics.

About ten or so years ago, he was the Rwanda policy of his time.

The British government under both Labour and then the coalition of Conservatives and Liberal Democrats wanted to deport him to Jordan.

But the pesky human rights lawyers and pesky human rights judges and pesky human rights courts would not let this deportation happen.

And how the politicians and the media fumed.

The headlines seem somewhat familiar:

But what was missing from almost all the news coverage and political discussion was the actual reason why human rights law was preventing the deportation of Abu Qatada.

And that reason featured an ugly word, a word which politicians and the media of the United Kingdom like to avoid.

That word was torture.

In particular, in this case, whether it was open for a person to face legal proceedings where the evidence had been obtained by torture.

This meant that if you wanted to deport Abu Qatada by withdrawing from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) what you were really saying was that it was fine for a person to face criminal charges based on evidence gained by torture.

Of course, that is not what was being said: what was being blamed were the pesky human rights lawyers and pesky human rights judges and pesky human rights courts.

But all the pesky human rights lawyers and pesky human rights judges and pesky human rights courts in the world can do little or nothing unless there is an actual right being infringed.

In the end the United Kingdom resolved the problem not by breaking human rights law or withdrawing from the ECHR, but by negotiating a treaty with Jordan where it was agreed that torture-gained evidence would not be used:

Abu Qatada was deported not because then Home Secretary Theresa May stood up to the pesky human rights law, but because she and the United Kingdom government complied with human rights law.

And what then happened?

Without being able to rely on torture-gained evidence, Abu Qatada was cleared in Jordan of the criminal charges he faced:

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Ten years or so later, we are repeating the same sort of story.

The pesky human rights lawyers and pesky human rights judges and pesky human rights courts are stopping the government implementing the Rwanda scheme.

But, as with Abu Qatada, most (if not all) of those upset by this non-implementation leave unsaid the actual substantial right at issue.

The principle of non-refoulement means that an asylum-seeker should not be returned (or otherwise removed) to a country where their human rights will be violated.

As the Supreme Court set out in the recent appeal judgment:

Those in favour of the Rwanda scheme do not say (aloud) that they actually want asylum-seekers to end up in places where their lives and freedoms will be threatened on account of their race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion.

Just as those in favour of Abu Qatada’s deportation did not say (aloud) that they wanted a person to face charges based on torture-gained evidence.

But in both cases that is the necessary – inescapable – implication of their position.

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Sometimes, of course, when it suits, those opposed to human rights law will happily spell out the substance of their grievance: take prisoner votes, for example.

In that example, both the substance of the right and pesky human rights lawyers and judges and pesky human rights courts could be attacked, and were.

But even with prisoner votes, the underlying problem was resolved by political negotiation and case law rather than defiance:

Again: reform and compliance, rather than confrontation.

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Unlike the prisoner votes issue, however, those in favour of the Rwanda scheme do not want to spell out the underlying human rights issue.

And that omission is – or should be – a tell.

It tells us that those wanting to rid us of human rights law do not want to address why there is a human rights issue at stake.

They want to tell you the tale of pesky human rights lawyers and judges and of pesky human rights courts as being a political problem in and of itself.

No doubt many human rights lawyers and judges are irksome, but it is only possible for them to be obstructive when there is a fundamental right at stake in a concrete case.

And, as with Abu Qatada and prisoner votes, such obstructions can be resolved by, well, politics: reform, negotiation, compliance.

You know: the sort of things which politicians are supposed to do, when they are not blaming human rights law instead.

Using ugly situations as the means to attack human rights law indicates that there is something else going on.

It shows that what is really being clamoured for is for brute executive might to be allowed, despite the violations of rights in individual cases.

But that bit is usually left unsaid.

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A role-reversal? – a footnote to yesterday’s post

1st December 2023

Discussing yesterday’s post with a long-suffering friend, the following thought came to mind.

In the Rwanda judgment, the Supreme Court goes into detail as to the work needed on the ground to make the removals policy robust and practical; and, in turn, the government is seeking to use parliament to simply declare a policy legal instead of illegal.

This seems quite the role-reversal: the court setting out what needs to be done as a matter of policy, instead of the executive and the legislature, and the executive threatening to use the legislature to decide whether something is lawful.

Strange, if you think about it.

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On yesterday’s Supreme Court judgment on the Rwanda policy

16th November 2023

Yesterday the Supreme Court handed down its appeal judgment in the Rwanda policy case.

For an informed view on the case, it is worth taking the time to watch Lord Reed, the President of the court, giving the summary of the judgment:

A court-approved summary can also be read here – and the full judgment is here.

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I wrote a couple of quick posts on the case yesterday for the mainstream media.

At the Financial Times, I did an “instant insight” (and it certainly had one of those two qualities) which emphasised two things which were immediately evident about the case.

First, it was remarkable – and, to me, a surprise – that the current Supreme Court under Lord Reed, which is generally regarded as deferent to the executive and legislature on “policy” matters, went unanimously against the government.

In essence, and to echo John Kander and Fred Ebb’s New York, New York: if a government cannot win on a “policy” matter before a Lord Reed Supreme Court, it cannot win that case anywhere.

Second, the court – perhaps showing more political sense than the entire cabinet – deftly avoided resting the case on the European Convention of Human Rights or the Human Rights Act.

Both instruments were, of course, mentioned in passing – but the effect of the judgment would have been just the same had neither instrument applied to the facts.

The court instead had regard to a range of other legal instruments and sources of law, including what is called customary international law.

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Over at Prospect, I approached the judgment from a different perspective, and I averred that the government could have won the case had they wanted to do so – by which I meant that the government could have negotiated a treaty with Rwanda that would have addressed the concerns ultimately expressed by the Supreme Court, instead of relying on a flimsy Memorandum of Understanding.

And this was not just a commentator-with-hindsight, it was what the government had been explicitly warned about a year ago by a House of Lords committee:

Some other commentators are not with me on this point – and they say that even a substantial treaty with Rwanda, which ensured there was no risk of asylum seekers being wrongly returned to their country of origin, may not have been enough to save the policy in this appeal.

Perhaps they are right and more would have been needed, but on any view such a treaty would have been necessary, if not sufficient: a non-enforceable MoU was inherently inadequate.  It would not have been relied upon had the government been actually serious about this policy.

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I am now thinking about writing a detailed post on the case from a constitutionalist perspective; but in the meantime, let me know below what you think about the decision and what you reckon to be its significance.

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The courts have already deflated the Rwanda policy, regardless of the Supreme Court judgment next Wednesday

10th November 2023

Even if the United Kingdom government wins on the lawfulness of the policy, it has already lost in respect of procedure

Those interested in day-to-day politics in the United Kingdom are now looking to next Wednesday for the Supreme Court decision to be handed down on the lawfulness of the Rwanda policy.

The conventional wisdom is that if the current Home Secretary is still in post on Wednesday, a Supreme Court defeat for the government may be the basis for the Home Secretary to resign and campaign for the United Kingdom’s departure from the European Convention on Human Rights, or something.

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Nobody outside the court will know the result in advance and so the hand-down will be a moment of drama and excitement.

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On balance, any legal challenge to “policy” – that is an approach to general political problems – is likely to fail.

For an entire policy to be quashed it would require that each and every possible application of the policy in any concrete situation must be unlawful – that there is nothing that can be done to save a decision in a particular case.

Courts are reluctant to do this – not least because policy is usually the province of politicians, and judges will not want to trespass.

And the current Supreme Court under Lord Reed often seems cautious in dealing with “policy” challenges.

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There perhaps are reasons why this particular policy may be unlawful in the round – and if it was not arguable that the policy was itself unlawful the Supreme Court would not have heard the case – but it would not be shocking if the Supreme Court sides with the government and holds that some applications of the policy may be lawful, subject to certain conditions.

And here is the nub of the situation, which many in politics and the media seem to be overlooking: the courts have already held that there are strict and onerous conditions in particular cases.

These conditions are so strict and so onerous, it may well be that few if any asylum seekers will be relocated to Rwanda, even if the Supreme Court rules that the general policy is legal.

Followers of this blog may recall posts about this at the time of the initial High Court decision and the Court of Appeal decision:

As this blog has before averred, the government can both win and lose a legal case at the same time.

And even if the government wins on whether the policy is lawful, the procedural protections already insisted upon by the courts in the application of the Rwanda policy will present difficulties for a Home Secretary after next Wednesday.

Whoever that is.

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The extraordinary newspaper column of the Home Secretary – and its implications

9th November 2023

The extraordinary newspaper column of the Home Secretarythe Home Secretary! – should be either consequential (in that the Home Secretary loses their job) or significant (in that it signifies something about the government that does not sack this Home Secretary).

But in neither situation, should it be treated as normal, and it should not just be shrugged off as an ambitious politician seeking advancement.  It should matter, one way or the other.

This blog does not offer commentary on Israel/Palestine/Gaza – as this blog does not have any special knowledge or understanding about the Middle East.

But this blog does follow the constitutional (and operational) relationship between central government and the Metropolitan Police, and it also follows free expression issues and Irish matters.

And in respect of each of those things, the Home Secretary’s column is (at best) unfortunate and (at worst) horrific.

It is a rare Home Secretary who makes the Metropolitan Police – the Metropolitan Police! – look liberal.

If the Home Secretary keeps their job after this, their intervention should not be forgotten.  It was a crass and illiberal assault on the constitutional (and operational) independence of the police, against freedom of expression, and based in part on a mangled and limited understanding of Irish history.

This intervention should not have any place in our polity, even in these unusual political times.

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“Computer says guilty” – an introduction to the evidential presumption that computers are operating correctly

Whatever happened to ‘the best-governed city in the world’? – some footnotes to the article at Prospect on the Birmingham city insolvency

9th September 2023

Over at Prospect magazine I have written an article headlined Whatever happened to ‘the best-governed city in the world’?.

Please do click and read it.

The rest of this post below provides some footnotes to the article and further thoughts about the subject.

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The title of the article, of course, derives in part from the Alan Moore comic.

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The other part of the title, however, is derived from one of the various quotations and sayings that you come across if you happen to come from or live in Birmingham. Others are “city of a thousand trades” and “more canals than Venice”.

But “the best-governed city in the world” seemed a good starting-point for this piece.

I knew it was from an American journalist about late Victorian Birmingham, but off-the-top-of-my-head I did not know more than that.

So I thought it may be interesting to track down the original quotation: any further information and context may at least add colour to a piece about local government finance and public procurement, which are not easy things to write about in an accessible way.

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Pretty soon I got a year for the article which had the quotation – 1890 – the name of the journalist – Julian Ralph – and the name of the magazine – Harper’s.

Finding it was Harper’s magazine was amusing for this is the glossy magazine still published today:

And indeed the 1890 article about Birmingham municipal glory is still available on Harper’s website, but only to subscribers:

I am not, however, a subscriber to Harper’s – and it seemed disproportionate to take out a subscription just to obtain the piece, as I suspected there would not be many other articles about Birmingham.

So I wondered if the article was available elsewhere.

(The issue of copyright then crossed my mind, but it seemed to me that an 1890 article by a writer who died in 1903 was likely to be in the public domain.)

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And eventually – Bingo! – I found an online copy of the publication:

And there on the contents page was the article and it actually had the quote as its title:

(Isn’t the Birmingham – see “Best-Governed City,” etc a lovely detail.)

For some reason I expected it to be a short piece, but the actual article was some twelve pages long with double columns.

So I started reading:

 

And on the last page of the article, and in the last paragraph, was this discussion of debt and the treatment of workers (which you should read so as to make sense of the rest of this post):

Any researcher will tell you of those moments when they are visited by the goddess Serendipity.

Not only had I found some colour for my Prospect piece, I had actually found a detailed point of comparison and contrast for a piece about Birmingham’s current predicament.

And, significantly, the 1890 article about “the best-governed city in the world” averred that the city council prowess was not because it avoided debt – indeed, the city council embraced immense debt, at levels almost unimaginable at current prices.

It was about how those Victorian councillors managed and resourced that debt, as serious people of business engaged in grand projects.

More of the Prospect piece then clicked in to place.

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Switching to the here-and-now, a close reading of the “section 114 notice”, the legislation, the relevant legal cases (for example this Supreme Court decision) and the detailed reportage at the Register and elsewhere, meant that various knee-jerk things to blame dissolved.

Labour! Conservative! – well, the key employment claim was commenced when the council was under a Conservative-led coalition, and then a Labour majority. And IT project disasters care little for party affiliation.

Resources! tax! – the IT project disaster looks as if it would have also swallowed double the budget. More public money would have just gone straight through to the contractors and consultants.

(Money In, Money Out is as much a feature of bad IT procurement as Garbage in, Garbage Out.)

The problem with both the matters that have brought down Birmingham is governance.

The employment case was litigated and litigated, but the ongoing exposure appears not to have been properly managed. And sometimes litigants lose.

The IT procurement ended up as an exercise in constant changes to the software to match working practices, rather than the reverse. And any public sector procurement of bespoke developed software, as opposed to commercial-off-the-shelf software, will always tend to go badly.

The problem was glaring: neither exercise in managing risk and exposure was sensibly managed.

Compare and contrast this with the various endeavours mentioned in the 1890 article: the acquisition of gas and water undertakings, and the improvement scheme that changed the face of a Victorian city. These were also enterprises which could have gone wrong, very wrong.

But read again that last paragraph from Julian Ralph:

You will see the seriousness in how the risks and exposures are managed.

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Of course, the Victorian councillors were deft self-publicists – and the leading Birmingham politician of the age, Joseph Chamberlain, can only be matched by Benjamin Disraeli in how his public image was manufactured and exploited.

Joseph Chamberlain even oversaw a memorial put up to himself, while he was still a relatively young politician and businessman.

And the 1890 article was the glossy magazine puff-piece of its time.

But.

Even realising the talent for rampant self-publicity of the Victorian politicians, the acquisition of the gas and water undertakings, and the slum clearances redevelopment, were considerable achievements for what was a growing and unfashionable urban sprawl.

(Indeed, until the year before the 1890 article, Birmingham was not even technically a city – the charter dates only from 1889.)

Whatever the (sometimes understated) faults of the municipal corporations of the time, local government was taken seriously – by voters, by the councillors, by the polity generally. Corporations had great powers, and they often used those powers sensibly, if ambitiously.

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A close look at current day problems of Birmingham city council also points to it not really being just about Birmingham at all.

Unequal pay will have been a problem for many councils, and poor IT procurement does not only have a Brummie accent.

The predicament of Birmingham is that two major exposures came together at once.

(Though, as the city has long been a centre for transport routes, from the canals to Spaghetti Junction, being the venue for such a confluence does seem apt.)

Many councils are probably a few steps away from a section 114 notice – under all political parties and none. Birmingham, which we are often told is the largest local authority in Europe, is just a striking illustration of a wider problem.

In part, the problems is about resources and ideology – and under-resourced councils and ideological commitments will often make things worse.

But section 114 notices – the emergency brake of local government finance – are also perhaps a function of poor management over time.

The overall problem is perhaps a lack of seriousness: in how we as a polity now treat local government, in how central government and parliament treats local government, and in how councils themselves manage risk and exposure.

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Finally, a shout-out to Prospect to being able to use this glorious 1886 depiction of Birmingham as the picture for the piece – complete with the Chamberlain monument in the foreground:

This print was up on the wall of an office in which I once worked as a temp and staring it probably was the start of my fascination with the (actual) history of my own city.

And if you look carefully at this 1886 print, you will see the dirty industrial smoke is blowing away from the nice civic architecture. As said above: the Victorians were deft self-publicists.

But if they took themselves too seriously, they also took local government seriously. And the latter is the lesson they give to us today.

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One year on from one thing, sixteen months on from another thing…

8th September 2023

On this anniversary of Elizabeth II’s death, we are still in the legislative session commenced with the Queen’s Speech of May 2022 – one monarch and two prime ministers (and several cabinet ministers) ago.

This, by itself, illustrates the drift of the current government. Neither Truss nor Sunak when they commenced their premierships signalled a new legislative programme. Instead they carried on with what was, in any case, primarily a gimmicky pick-and-mix miscellany of poorly conceived legislative proposals.

And so we are are still, in one sense, in the age of Johnson. And he is now not even in parliament, let alone the head of a government pushing through his last legislative package.

The knock-on effect of this is, as my Substack has previously averred, that the government is running out of time before the next election to pass legislation – especially anything fundamental or controversial. Many will think this a good thing, but it is not the sign of a government with direction or drive.

We are one year on from one thing, sixteen months on from another thing, and still perhaps a year away from that one thing, a general election, that can bring about any meaningful change.

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