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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

UK 'cannot argue' over prisoner votes ruling

A row in the UK over votes for prisoners has been inflated for political reasons – but the government must act according to the law and abide by the European Court of Human Rights' ruling.

Chris Grayling, the United Kingdom's first non-lawyer Lord Chancellor in 500 years, has kept his head fairly well down on the votes for prisoners controversy. He is very wise to do so – and not only because this row has been inflated beyond measure for specious political reasons. Grayling is also under legal duties that preclude him arguing that the UK should ignore a clear decision of the European Court of Human Rights.

 Grayling's post was created by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005. This followed then-Prime Minister Tony Blair's somewhat offhand announcement of reform to the post of Lord Chancellor in order to get rid of his one-time mentor Lord Irvine. As a result, Grayling has sworn an oath required by the act to 'uphold the rule of law' and is subject to rather incoherent words at its beginning that imply that such upstanding behaviour has long been expected from the Lord Chancellor.

The precise ambit of the rule of law can be contested. However, there is no doubt that, in modern construction, the rule of law means, at the very minimum, that governments act according to whatever the law is – whether made by statute, judges or any other source that the state has agreed to respect. Thus, if the European Court of Human Rights requires the UK government to respond to a judgement on prisoners' votes then we do.

The notion that a government is bound to act legally is pretty obvious to lawyers, but others sometimes have difficulty in getting it. The Attorney General, Dominic Grieve QC, a decent man and a good lawyer, has been explaining to fellow ministers that they cannot argue with the referee after they have been sent off. The court says we have to devise a way of conceding the principle of prisoners' voting. His advice amounts to: "Just do it."

As the Mail explained: "For Dominic, the rule of law is the key issue. The legal advice is very clear that the UK has to abide by the court's ruling. There are different ways of doing it, but we cannot just say no – it may be popular politically in the short term, but legally it is madness and even the popularity of it may fade when we start having to pay compensation to murderers."

The voting row is nonsense anyway because any prison governor confronted with an inmate who wanted to vote would probably jump for joy at a wish for such civic involvement. Plus, the evidence from other countries is that prisoners, like too many who are free, do not see any point in voting. And, in any event, the court has not said that every prisoner can vote: you could exclude most of them if you really wanted.

Grayling's professional pose is as a hanger and flogger. He replaced Ken Clarke because Prime Minister David Cameron wanted a sharper, more retributive image for the coalition's criminal justice policy. The Lord Chancellor has said previously that he was "profoundly unhappy" at the interference of Strasbourg judges in the UK's internal affairs. Let us hope, however, that his silence to date at this stage of the debate is deliberate. Indeed, it will stick in his craw, but his duties probably require him publicly to stick up for his colleague, the beleaguered Attorney General. No bad thing. He needs some support.

 Roger Smith OBE is the director of Justice, a law reform and human rights organisation

Comment: Roger Smith is wrong in relation to this section of his article "you could exclude most of them if you really wanted".
 

Monday, October 29, 2012

Can the Tories - or Any Government - Be Trusted With Human Rights?

Can the Tories - or Any Government - Be Trusted With Human Rights? 

"The degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons." Dostoyevsky
David Cameron has a strong and visible distaste for being told what to do by extranational organisations. Particularly irritating is the European Court of Human Rights, which just won't let this votes for prisoners thing go. You see, Europe, and much of the rest of the world considers the ability to change one's government by voting to be a human right.

Not a civil right, or social privilege which can be positively provided by the state - perhaps as part of a social contract in return for the individual upholding responsibilities, but a right which every person has by virtue of being born. In case the events of World War II left anyone in any doubt that protection from tyranny was a good thing, everyone signed up to the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, which is extremely clear that the right to vote is universal. Of late the European Court of Human Rights has been on our backs about the fact that just under 90,000 of our citizens are firmly denied that right.

"Ah, but" many will ask, "isn't it more immoral for people who have broken the law to participate in the making of the law than to take the vote away?" Well, no. Not really. Not unless you think it would be immoral for a gay man in the 50s, imprisoned for nothing more awful than having sex with someone he loves, to vote to decriminalise 'homosexual behaviour.'

On the other side of the aisle, you'll frequently hear arguments along the lines of Medhi Hasan's on the BBC's excruciating low budget Big Questions fill-in, Sunday Morning Live.
"I'm not saying you give murderers, rapists and other violent criminals the right to vote. There are limits."
Sickening though the thought of sharing genetics with them may be, rapists remain human beings. A person's humanity can neither be removed nor relinquished - no matter how disgusting their crime. So if we consider, as per the UDHR, that the right to vote is a natural, human right, the only limit can be humanity.

Sadly, the general Tory attitude is less of pride in the kind of awe inspiring civilisation we can prove ourselves to be by defending the frequently indefensible, and more that human rights are an irritation, like forms to fill in or roadworks. A boring obstacle between them and what they want.

Cameron pledged in 2006 to replace the Human Rights Act with a British Bill of Rights, basing his argument largely on the idea that terrorists could use the act to avoid extradition.

It was a suggestion that, the "terrorists are humans too, we should protect them from torture and murder as fiercely as we protect our citizens from terrorists" argument notwithstanding, was savaged by Ken Clarke as "xenophobic" and "anti-foreigner." And yet, despite a few bumps in the road, it's more than likely going to happen.

Chris Grayling, who just weeks ago pinched Ken Clarke's portfolio to become justice secretary, on Sunday's Andy Marr Show expressed the government's irritation that we get caught up in these rules which, let's face it, aren't really meant for the likes of us anyway.
"If we send a message that we are going to stand up to the court, where does that leave countries in other parts of Europe that perhaps have a less good human rights record than us."
See? The rules no more apply to Britain in the context of international law than they do to the chief whip in the context of his bike and the Downing Street gates. We're just not what they were designed for.

But the sad thing about all of this is that it's not really about human rights. I suspect, since nobody's advocating our withdrawal from the UN, or the UDHR, that it's not about sovereignty, or international law having primacy over our own. No, pitifully, it's about Europe.

See, if you're David Cameron, prisoner votes are as close to a perfect policy as you're likely to find. Opposing them makes him look like he's finally getting tough on the 'faceless Belgian bureaucrats' and 'unelected judges' who think they can boss us about, which looks great in front of the wing of his party mostly comprised of the elderly and mildly xenophobic. And while readers of a certain stripe of popular mid-market newspaper would apparently prefer most criminals to be beaten to a bloody pulp by homeowners before they got anywhere near a prison, anything that makes the concept of incarceration more dehumanising is likely to go down well with them too.

While this might make for a calming influence in the party, and an easy news cycle for Grayling, what it amounts to is a defence of widespread disenfranchisement.

The foremost western proponent of disenfranchisement for prisoners and felons is the United States, where it is thought that almost 6m people of voting age are denied the vote either because they are in prison, on parole or even - as in 14 states - because they have entirely spent felony convictions.
The United States has its own bill of rights.

If Cameron has his way, and we're allowed to decide who gets what rights separately from the rest of the world, what you end up with is a document which, despite purporting to define and defend your natural rights as a person, can be fiddled with or cast aside by a parliamentary majority. And Grayling's bullish originalistic reading of the European Convention are a preview of how that conversation will go:
"The [ECHR/UDHR/British Bill of Rights] was never intended to cover [whatever is causing particular inconvenience to the government this week]"
National governments' obsessions with expediency, convenience and the election cycle leave them funamentally unworthy of our trust where the defence of human rights are concerned.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Prisoners to launch legal action on voting rights

Prisoners to launch legal action on voting rights 

Former inmate asks lawyers to start proceedings for compensation after prime minister said he would not change law

David Cameron said he would not change the law on prisoners' vote despite a European court of human rights ruling. Photograph: Andrew Cowie/AFP/Getty Images

Prisoners denied the right to vote are to start legal proceedings for compensation immediately in wake of the declaration by David Cameron that he will not change the law despite a ruling by the European court of human rights and the views of his senior law officer Dominic Grieve.

John Hirst, the former prisoner who took the original case, said he had asked his lawyers to start proceedings for compensation in the wake of Cameron's comments last week.

The British government has until 22 November to respond formally to the ECHR ruling, and despite Cameron's strong public line there is a dispute inside the government on how to act.

Hirst's lawyers are writing to the Strasbourg court to bring to its attention the prime minister's comments. Cameron told MPs he might allow parliament another chance to vote on the issue to show the ECHR it had considered and rejected its opinion.

Hirst told the Guardian: "All three arms of the state, executive, parliament and judiciary, were found guilty of a human rights violation.

"The UK is required under international and European law to remedy the breach and prevent it happening again. In addition, English public law states that one of the roles of the state is to secure human rights.

"The Council of Europe states, and the UK agreed in the Brighton declaration, that the primary responsibility for human rights falls upon member states.

"What this case discloses is that there is a systemic failure in the UK, a structural fault, which needs to be fixed.

"When the Council of Europe identifies this situation in a member state it identifies the problem and advises what action needs to be taken to remedy the breach. In this case it is to amend section 3 of the Representation of the People Act 1983 to allow convicted prisoners to vote. My case shows that section 3 is not compatible with article 3 of the ECHR's first protocol.

"So either the UK complies or withdraws from the Council of Europe and the ECHR."

The justice secretary, Chris Grayling, speaking about the row for the first time, took a cautious approach, saying: "I have to be very careful in my role as justice secretary and lord chancellor. The reality is that we are signed up to the European convention on human rights. We are signed up to the European court of human rights. If, therefore, we choose to disagree with a ruling from that court, we have to understand that we are taking a significant step outside that international commitment."

Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr Show, he added: "There are precedents from other European countries of them saying 'no, we don't agree with you' to the European court of human rights, but of course the counter-argument is that if we send a message that says we will stand up to the court, where does that leave countries in other parts of Europe that perhaps have less good human rights records than we do, where there are really quite serious issues about the right to a trial?"

Grieve, the attorney general, said in a lengthy speech last week that he disagreed with the ECHR judgment in the prisoner case, and acknowledged that the British parliament was sovereign in the matter.

But he cautioned: "Observing its judgments is an international legal obligation arising by treaty … it is possible for parliament to take no action on the judgment, although that would leave the government in breach of the treaty and liable to criticism and sanctions from the Council of Europe by its fellow signatories and to damages awarded by the court.

"Some have also argued that the solution for the UK in view of these problems is to withdraw from the convention altogether on the grounds that it is an undesirable and unnecessary fetter of national sovereignty in decision-making. I disagree. Withdrawal would result in reputational damage."

Inmates At Tymoshenko's Prison Vote

Inmates At Tymoshenko's Prison Vote 

 Published 28 October 2012

Inmates in the prison where former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko is jailed cast votes in Ukraine's parliamentary elections on October 28 near the eastern city of Kharkiv. Her daughter, Yevhenia Tymoshenko, casting her ballot in their home city of Dnipropetrovsk, says she voted for the freedom of her mother and the freedom of political prisoners. (Reuters video)

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Prisoner votes: Ministers in talks over European ruling

Prisoner votes: Ministers in talks over European ruling 


The government is in the final stages of negotiations over a European Court ruling that it must allow prisoners the right to vote.
But government sources denied reports that the coalition was planning to introduce a draft law to allow some inmates to vote as "nonsense".

The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that a blanket ban on voting for anyone sent to jail is illegal.

The government has until the end of November to decide how to react.

The UK has been on a collision course with the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) since the Strasbourg court ruled in 2005 that it was a breach of human rights to deny prisoners a vote.

The court ruled it was up to individual countries to decide which prisoners should be denied the right to vote from jail, but said a total ban was illegal.

In May of this year, it gave the UK six months to outline how it proposed to change the law on prisoner votes.

'Over my dead body'
 
At the time, David Cameron said it would make him "sick" to change that, and that he would resist the ECHR ruling, saying the ban on voting from jail "should be a matter for Parliament... and not a foreign court".

Downing Street sources said the prime minister still believed that "when people go to prison, they lose their right to vote".

The coalition has to decide whether to comply with the ruling, seek a further delay or do nothing and risk a fine or maybe more.

Of the report that prisoners could get the vote, a government source told the BBC: "It is completely untrue. It's not happening. It's complete nonsense."

They said the discussions were "legally complicated" but declined to elaborate further.

BBC political correspondent Robin Brant said one Tory backbench MP said any change would be made "over my dead body", and another that the justice secretary should get on with his day job and show the ECHR that "two can play at interminable delay".

Labour has previously said it would back the prime minister's stance.

But Liberal Democrat backbencher Stephen Williams, a member of the constitutional reform select committee, has said prisoners serving short sentences should be allowed to vote as part of their rehabilitation.

At present, the only prisoners allowed to vote in Britain are those on remand.

Related content:

Tories bow to European court of human rights over prisoner voting rights

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Why shunning former prisoners drives them back to crime

Why shunning former prisoners drives them back to crime

Patrick O'Flynn: Joined up writing does not a journalist make

Patrick O'Flynn: Joined up writing does not a journalist make

Patrick O'Flynn is a journalist working for Pornographer-in-Chief Dirty Desmond's Daily Express. He has self appointed himself as "Speaking up for Britain". In reality he speaks only for himself, and Dirty Desmond (who is paying O'Flynn to pipe up). Dirty money for doing a dirty job.

Patrick O'Flynn

Today Patrick O'Flynn makes this tough sounding but unintelligent statement "LONGER JAIL TERMS ARE THE BEST WAY TO CUT REOFFENDING".

I don't suppose the first time offender expected to receive a 6 months prison sentence for disrupting the Oxford/Cambridge Boat Race. This excessive sentence will cost the taxpayers £20,000. Patrick O'Flynn thinks the public should be made to pay £40,000 instead! There is nothing to suggest that the self publicist/protestor will reoffend. All Michael Howard's failed "prison works" policy did was double the prison populaton at double the cost to the taxpayers.

Success is not measured by how many but instead how few are in prison. The more in prison the more crimes are committed. A higher reoffending rate only serves to prove that warehousing is no match for rehabilitation.

Patrick O'Flynn stupidly confuses the unpaid voluntary sector with the paid by results private sector who are Cameron's friends.

Keeping more in prison for longer only benefits the private sector with more profits.

Perhaps Patrick O'Flynn's liquid lunches are paid for by the likes of GLS?

Sheriff: Group fighting for ‘prisoners votes’

Sheriff: Group fighting for ‘prisoners votes’

A new battleground has emerged in the war over Ohio votes this election: Jails and prisons.

In a hearing set for 9 a.m. Tuesday in Cincinnati’s federal court, a judge will consider whether county elections boards should be stopped from enforcing a Nov. 3 absentee-ballot request deadline for people who are jailed. 

Butler County Sheriff Rick Jones was incredulous when he learned that his jail warden, Lt. Nick Fisher, was served Sunday with a subpoena to appear at that hearing. 

“It is well-known that Ohio is considered a crucial ‘swing state,’ so it’s natural that some will want to fight for every possible vote they can get,” Jones said. “It may be the American way, but wow, fighting for prisoner votes!”

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Two Steps Backward: Suppressing the Vote in 2012

Two Steps Backward: Suppressing the Vote in 2012
The United States has a history of promoting free elections - and of restricting them. The Constitution of 1786 left elections up to the states, and generally, only white, male property owners could vote. Since then, constitutional amendments and enabling legislation have hugely extended citizen suffrage. But it has not been a steady climb.

More home improvements

More home improvements

I now have double glazing in my bathroom, lounge and dining room, and master and back bedrooms. Yesterday a radiator was fitted in my hallway. I can now go from warmth to the bathroom and back without feeling the cold.

The lounge still needs the French Oak laminate floor laying.

This morning a man came to measure for a pvc front door and doubleglazed window above it to replace the old wood door which let in the cold making me feel I lived in Siberia.

The landlord noticed that a joist has gone just inside the front door. I will be pushing for new lighter coloured laminate to replace the dark ne at present.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

'Inmates should get to vote'

'Inmates should get to vote'

 Bermuda: WEDNESDAY. OCT. 17:

Prisoners should have the right to vote, says PLP parliamentary candidate and social commentator Walton Brown.


“There is no inherent reason why people who are incarcerated should be denied the right to vote,” he told the Bermuda Sun.

Mr Brown, candidate for Pembroke Central, Constituency number 17, raised the issue on his radio talk show Bermuda Speaks.

He told us that the -practicalities of allowing prisoners of age to cast a vote could be worked out after the principle was agreed.

He added: “The benefit is we strengthen our democracy and we give people who don’t currently have the right to vote that right to vote.

“Giving the democratic right to vote to citizens is inherently the right thing to do.”

He added: “Detractors can say what they wish, but we should be making decisions based on principles and we should try, where possible and practicable, to extend the vote to as many people as possible.”

Mr Brown added: “First of all, we need to assess the extent to which we want to embrace that principle. If we embrace the principle, we work out the practicalities.”

He said that the problem of which constituency a prisoner’s vote was cast in could be worked out by their previous registration, instead of using the constituency where they were locked up, which could slant elections.

Mr Brown said: “If someone is an inmate, they will be registered to vote and they would get a vote in that constituency.”

Mr Brown spoke out after the UK Government began to consider its options after the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg gave the UK six months to come up with proposals on how it will change the law on prisoner votes.

Mr Brown said he had been unaware of the UK row before he had made the case for allowing people serving jail sentences in Bermuda to vote. But he added: “It’s definitely a matter which should be considered here.”

In May, UK Tory/Liberal Democrat coalition Prime Minister David Cameron told MPs that he would resist the European Court ruling on voting rights for prison inmates. Government was warned it could face appeals for compensation which, if successful, could lead to payouts totalling millions of pounds.

According to the BBC, Mr Cameron said the ban on voting from jail “should be a matter for Parliament…and not a foreign court.”

The Opposition Labour party has signalled it would back Cameron’s hardline stance.

Convicted killer John Hirst took his case to Europe in 2004, arguing that banning him from the polls breached his human rights and won. Hirst went to the European court after the High Court of England and Wales dismissed his action in 2001.

Britain, then ruled by the Labour Party,  later appealed the judgment, but the European Court’s grand chamber upheld the lower court’s ruling. But MPs in 2011 overwhelming voted 234-22 against extending the franchise to prisoners. Britain also denies the vote to people convicted of corrupt or illegal election practices and patients detained in psychiatric hospitals for criminal offences.

The European Court of Human Rights appeared to soften its line in May, saying it was up to national authorities to decide which prisoners should be allowed to vote – but said a blanket ban was illegal.

Those in favour of giving prisoners the right to vote argue that it helps convicts to re-engage with society and could cut crime.

Mr Brown said: “It’s important to have a discussion about it and come to a consensus because this is not defined by political parties. Then we can work out the details.”

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Gary McKinnon saved from extradition to US on hacking charges

Gary McKinnon saved from extradition to US on hacking charges

Gary McKinnon, the computer hacker who has been facing extradition to the US for the past decade, has been given a dramatic reprieve by the Home Secretary.

Comment: Catwoman has made the right decision for the wrong reasons. 

Related content:

I thought this story related to Catwoman and Hilary Clinton ...

Police called to break up violent cat fight in Downing Street




Friday, October 12, 2012

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Fight back against the weather

Fight back against the weather

Last night the weather forecast predicted zero degrees Celsius in Selby and Brig. It was certainly cold in Hull this morning and my thermostat displayed 14.5 degrees Celsius in the dining room (presently the lounge during repairs and improvemts). I turned the heating on until it reached 18. Tonight I lit the fire using mainly wood from the bathroom and lounge. My thermostat registered 33.5 degrees Celsius (about 92.3 degrees Fahrenheit).

At least the workmen did not find bodies under the floorboards

At least the workmen did not find bodies under the floorboards

The workmen turned up this morning to magnolia paint the recently plastered walls and lift up the old laminate floor ready for the lighter replacement.

In the corners either side of the bay window they discovered floorboards and joists rotted by damp, and woodworm!

At this rate my dream of it all being done in time for Winter is fast fading...

Tuesday, October 09, 2012

States Deny Millions Of Ex-Felons Voting Rights

States Deny Millions Of Ex-Felons Voting Rights


Eric Bates was caught twice in the late 1990s driving with a suspended license, and then again in 2006. That third time, under then-Virginia law, Bates was considered a habitual offender and was prosecuted as a felon.

He served 14 months in prison and was released in 2008. He returned home hoping to put his legal issues behind him and move on with his life. 

But like many of the nearly 1 million people who are released from correctional facilities each year, Bates said he has had difficulty finding steady work and making ends meet. His rather pedestrian criminal record has also come with one other lingering consequence: Bates has found himself among the approximately 5.8 million whose voting rights have been taken away because of a felony conviction. 

"I owned up to my crime. I served my time and I just want my rights back," Bates, 53, an unemployed electrical engineer, told The Huffington Post. "I want to participate. But it's just as well as if I murdered somebody. It's a life sentence."

Utah lenient when it comes to former prisoners voting

Utah lenient when it comes to former prisoners voting

Group: States shouldn’t snuff right to vote over felony conviction; Utah less punitive than most.

A record number of U.S. citizens — nearly 6 million — will sit out the upcoming presidential election because they are incarcerated, on parole or probation, or are ex-felons.

Friday, October 05, 2012

Constitution Watch Prisoners votes

Zimbabwe:

Constitution Watch 

How will the New Constitution Impact on the Coming Elections? Part I 

All prisoners will be qualified to vote [at present prisoners serving sentences of six months or more are disqualified].

Activists work to register felons to vote

Activists work to register felons to vote

Civil right activists have stepped up efforts to allow more than 1.5 million voting-eligible felons in Florida and millions more nationwide access to elections.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 (UPI) -- Civil right activists stepped up efforts this week to allow more than 1.5 million voting-eligible felons in Florida -- and millions more nationwide -- access to elections, urging that laws they see as discriminatory need to be changed.

Freddie Starr ate my pussy claims underage girl

Freddie Starr ate my pussy claims underage girl


Freddie Starr's attempt to stop the paedophile allegations against him being aired following the expose of Jimmy Savile has failed.

Source

Related content...

TV Starr cannot be named

Update:
Freddie Starr: I have never touched an underage girl

Freddie Starr has insisted he has "never touched an underage girl" and denied he was the 'third man' at a dressing room sex party allegedly hosted by Sir Jimmy Savile and Gary Glitter.

Monday, October 01, 2012

Deaths in custody lessons are being ignored, says charity

Deaths in custody lessons are being ignored, says charity

Coroners reports aimed at preventing further deaths have little impact as there is no official body to enforce them, says Inquest

Deaths in custody in English and Welsh prisons are rising, with the annual number of fatalities climbing from 155 in 2006 to 189 last year. Photograph: Paul Doyle/Alamy

Lessons learned from deaths in police and prison custody are being repeatedly ignored or lost because there is no official body to enforce them, according to a charity that supports bereaved families at inquests.