Site icon UK Human Rights Blog

The Round-Up: constitutional concerns and the Queen’s Speech

In the News

A year of disruption, disappointment, contention and uncertainty is finally drawing to a close. On 19 December, with Christmas around the corner, the country got a hint of what 2020 might bring. The Queen’s Speech, in which the new Conservative government laid out its legislative priorities for the year to come, included more than 30 bills the government hopes to turn into law. 

Unsurprisingly, Brexit is given top billing, with the government announcing that it will pass a series of bills in policy areas directly affected by the UK’s departure from the EU on 31 January. These include agriculture, fisheries, immigration, social security, trade, financial services and cross-border disputes. Civil servants will be hard pressed to to implement the legislation before the end of the post-Brexit transition period in just over a year’s time. 

The government’s next area of focus is the NHS. This is understandable given its prominence as an issue in the run-up to the election, and background murmurs from ministers and advisors that an improvement in health services is essential if the government is to keep voters on side. The government has promised legislation, including fast-track visas and support for overseas job applicants, to make it easier to recruit healthcare professionals from abroad. In response, Jeremy Corbyn stated that there was a huge gap between the government’s rhetoric and the reality. 

Environmentalists have welcomed commitments made by the government on climate change and the environment for the next Parliament. The government has voiced a commitment to a £640 million climate fund and the installation of electric vehicle infrastructure, and made  reference to zero carbon emissions as a key aim. Despite there being some grounds for optimism, it is too early to tell whether the government is serious about tackling the crisis, or if this is mere lip service. A clearer picture will begin to emerge with the budget in early 2020. 

Boris Johnson’s stated commitment to law and order took the form of proposals to strengthen the justice system. A number of measures relating to domestic abuse, victims, policing and sentencing are outlined. Most significantly, the government has announced the first Royal Commission on the criminal justice system since 1991. While many will welcome an attempt to address the problems of a system under extreme stress, some many see the commission as a way of kicking problems into the long grass. 

A pledge for a new constitution, democracy and rights commission to examine “how our democracy operates” has raised concern among the legal profession. The pledge follows the supreme court’s historic and controversial decision to rule Johnson’s suspension of parliament unlawful in September. Simon Davis, president of the Law Society of England and Wales, has warned that the commission might threaten the “delicate balance that underpins our unwritten constitution”. Apprehension is mounting that Boris Johnson may attempt to interfere with the independence of the judiciary and thereby undermine the rule of law. 

In Other News 

In the Courts 

On the UKHRB

Exit mobile version