Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Euro judges end Government's bid to overturn prisoner voting rights

Euro judges end Government's bid to overturn prisoner voting rights

by Wendy Fuller, Daily Mirror 13/04/2011


The Government has lost its final appeal against a human rights ruling requiring Britain to give prisoners the vote.

David Cameron has six months to produce ­“legislative proposals” ending the current blanket ban on inmates voting in national and ­European elections.

The ultimatum was ­delivered by a five-judge panel of the European Court of Human Rights yesterday.

The PM said the Government must comply – or face possible compensation claims running into millions.

In November, when the original decision was made, the PM said: “It makes me physically ill to contemplate giving the vote to inmates.”

But judges are not insisting that all prisoners have the right, declaring only that it is a blanket ban which breaches the human rights code.

The Government is free to revoke the right for serious offenders and grant it only to small-time criminals.

Comment: The Government is not free to remove the right to vote for serious offenders.

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous10:43 AM

    All prisoners should be allowed to vote regardless. What harm can it possibly do in an honest country. Unless of course we are NOT an honest country ??

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think that all prisoners should be allowed to vote and it possibly would breach their human rights if this was taken away.

    ReplyDelete