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The Round Up: Fast-track Failings and Obergefell ‘egoism’

Photo credit: Guardian

Photo credit: Guardian

Laura Profumo brings you the latest human rights happenings.

In the News:

In a critical, though arguably overdue, decision, the Court of Appeal has suspended the fast-track immigration appeals system. The process, under which rejected asylum seekers are detained and given only seven days to appeal, was held “structurally unfair” by the High Court, before being halted altogether by last week’s appeal. The ruling was welcomed by the appellant charity, Detention Action, as meaning “asylum seekers can no longer be detained…simply for claiming asylum”. Previously, the fast-track deadlines could be imposed on any asylum seeker from any country, if the Home Office considered their case could be decided quickly. This marks the third time courts have found the system to be unlawful, yet the suspension will now stay in force until a government appeal is mounted. The decision deals a major blow to a system which is “inefficient, bureaucratic, demeaning and dehumanising”, writes immigration expert Colin Yeo. Whilst there is “no doubt” a replacement fast track will soon be found, in the meantime “let us savour the respite” from such crude expediency.

In other news, the spotlight remains on America, in the euphoric wake of the Supreme Court’s ruling in Obergefell v Hodges. The final paragraph of Justice Kennedy’s judgment, in its stirring clarity, is set to make legal history. Yet not everyone is “enveloped in a warm and fuzzy feeling”, writes UKHRB’s own Jim Duffy. Justice Scalia, the firebrand conservative, “pulled no punches” in his dissent, citing the majority opinion as “egotistic” and a “threat to American democracy”. Scalia’s arrival in London last week further stoked the Obergefell debate. Speaking at a Federalist Society event, Scalia held his colleagues had wrongly used the due process clause to distill a substantive, rather than procedural, right. Defending his position as a constitutional originalist, Scalia maintained the meaning of the Constitution as fixed, rather than the “wonderfully seductive judicial theory” of living constitutions, in which “we can have all sorts of new things, like same sex marriage”. When asked about the proposed Bill of Rights, the Justice’s response was particularly biting: “You can’t do any worse than the situation you’re in now”.

Justice Scalia is not alone in his doubts. Obergefell is no panacea for LGBT rights, argues Karl Laird – the struggle for equality “may only have begun”. The slim majority of the judgment has prompted calls for a constitutional amendment, whilst presidential candidate, Ted Cruz, has argued for the abolition of life tenure for Supreme Court Justices. The “prospect of backlash” is considerable, Laird writes, LGBT activists now facing the legislative push for comprehensive discrimination protection. Only a “patchwork of protection” at state level currently exists. In Georgia, though the prohibition on same-sex marriage is now unlawful, discrimination based on sexual orientation remains “perfectly lawful”: the discrepancy is “intolerable and must be addressed”, presses Laird. Yet the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) has still not been enacted, stalled by concerns for religious freedom which “have never been fully explored” by a reluctant legislature.

Europe may follow suit, argues Matt Evans in the Justice Gap. ECtHR has “significantly contributed to the evolution, protection, and promotion” of LGBT rights, having developed the largest body of case law on sexual orientation “of any international human rights tribunal in the world”. Currently 13 member states allow same-sex marriage, but “it might take another 10 years” for a clear majority to be reached. Until then, Evans concedes, the Court will find “insufficient ‘European consensus’” to extend the reading of Article 12 to same-sex couples. For a bracingly irreverent take on the Obergefell legacy, read the Guardian article here.

 

In Other News..

 

In the Courts: 

 

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