Reblogged from Vox Political:
David Cameron and Chris Grayling have been messing with the justice
system again. This time, according
to The Telegraph, they are planning to make it “tougher” for judicial
reviews to be brought to court, to stop the process being “abused” by pressure
groups and campaigners.
There’s a lot of Telegraph-speak in that first paragraph, as the
Tory-supporting newspaper was working desperately to make governmental
perversion of justice acceptable. What this actually means is that
Cameron wants to make it impossible for organisations that are capable
of mounting legal opposition to unreasonable Conservative/Coalition policies
ever to do so.
The only people able to seek judicial reviews of government policy would be
individuals who are directly affected – and the government is hoping that these
mostly poor people would be unable to afford the cost, thanks to changes in
Legal Aid that mean it could not be claimed for welfare or employment cases.
You see how this works? With those changes to Legal Aid and the possibility
of wholesale privatisation of the entire court system, where justice was
once open to everyone, it will soon be a privilege available only to the
wealthiest in the UK.
To Cameron, and his crony Grayling, justice isn’t for you.
In fact, it won’t be for anyone. The UK will be about money and power, just as
Michael Meacher stated in his recent blog article.
So, for example: The ‘Poundland’ case, which The
Guardian reported was to be heard in the Supreme Court yesterday
(Monday). The original judicial review was launched in the names of Cait Reilly
and Jamieson Wilson, who were both directly affected – but were both
unemployed and penniless, and therefore could not afford to take the case to
court on their own. Their case was brought with the aid of Public
Interest Lawyers – who would most likely be barred from taking part,
being considered a pressure group with no direct interest in the
matter.
The original case resulted in the government taking the unusual – and highly
suspect (in legal terms) – step of passing an emergency retroactive law to
legalise its employment schemes, after the tribunal ruled that all of the
Coalition’s schemes were acting illegally and opened the government up to a
potential £130 million worth of claims for wrongfully-withheld benefits.
PIL has now started a second judicial review – on the retrospective law –
claiming it undermines its clients’ right to justice and violates article 6 of
the European Convention on Human Rights. Under the new procedures this,
too, would be inadmissible.
On the same lines, the
judicial review that ruled (in May) that the test used to decide whether
people are fit for work actively discriminates against the mentally ill, brought
by the Black Triangle Campaign with the charities MIND and Rethink Mental
Illness, would also be inadmissible.
So we have examples in which it is clearly in the interests of justice for
new laws to be challenged – but which would be blocked outright under Cameron
and Grayling’s plan.
According to The Telegraph, “Ministers plan to change the test for
applying for a review so that only people with a direct link to policies or
decision can challenge it, rather than anyone with a ‘sufficient interest.’
“The concerns echo those of the Prime Minister who previously said the
judicial review process was slowing the country’s economic growth as well.”
In fairness, the paper adds: “There are fears that changing the judicial
review process could lead to government decisions going unchecked, and charities
have also raised concerns about not being able to use the process to challenge
decisions and ensure the government is meeting its obligations.”
Meanwhile, Unison has been given leave to launch a judicial review of the
introduction of fees for workers seeking employment tribunals.
The BBC reported
that people wanting to bring tribunals must now pay a fee for the first
time since they were created in the 1960s. It will cost £160 to lodge a
claim for matters such as unpaid invoices, with a further charge of £230 if it
goes ahead.
More serious claims, such as for unfair dismissal, would cost £250 to lodge,
and a further £950 if the case goes ahead.
The plan here is clearly to make it impossible for an unfairly-sacked
worker to take a firm to judicial review; how many poorly-paid working
class people (and remember, wages have fallen by nine per cent since the credit
crunch) have twelve hundred quid knocking around in their back pockets?
“The introduction of punitive fees for taking a claim to an employment
tribunal would give the green light to unscrupulous employers to ride roughshod
over already basic workers’ rights,” Unison general secretary Dave Prentis told
the BBC.
“We believe that these fees are unfair and should be dropped.”
The judicial review will take place in October. Considering Lord Judge’s
recent change of heart over privatisation of the courts, it’s a safe bet that by
then the government will have ‘persuaded’ any judges hearing the case to support
the new charges.
As Mr Meacher wrote: David Cameron’s instincts are “that there is no such
thing as the rule of law, and that the only things that ultimately matter are
power, fear and money”.