Response of the Haldane Society to government proposals

The Haldane Society expresses its alarm at the latest round of Government proposals to further erode the legal aid budget and with it the ability of millions to assert their rights before a court: “Transforming Legal Aid” (Ministry of Justice, April 2013). We believe that these cuts, if implemented, will be a catastrophic attack on access to justice for the poorest and most vulnerable members of society. The cuts introduced under the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders (LASPO) Act only came in to force on 1 April.

As with the cuts being made to the benefit system we see this as nothing more than punishment for the most vulnerable in our society. And as with the judicial review consultation before it, the Justice Secretary makes a number of disparaging claims about legal aid and cases ‘without merit’ for which he provides no evidence at all.

The consultation proposals offend basic notions of fairness, justice and respect in the most pernicious ways. The removal of legal aid for all treatment matters in prison will be to deny prisoners expert assistance in asserting their rights in respect of one of the most fundamental aspects of prison life.

The introduction of a residence test for those claiming legal aid will disproportionately affect foreign nationals newly arrived in the country or here temporarily. It is nothing other than discrimination. Such legislation would mean potential abuses by the state will go unchallenged. Frequently, it is children of foreign nationals who need legal aid, so that they can get the social services’ support to which they are entitled if destitute. A residence test would leave children unable to enforce their rights.

In criminal work, the proposals for price competitive tendering for criminal legal aid work will destroy community legal services and herald a race to the bottom which will only favour those large corporations who can absorb the losses. The continued withdrawal of legal aid for defendants in criminal cases threatens the equality of arms in the courtroom. Pressure will be brought to bear to plead guilty and cases simply will not be properly prepared because no proper funding is allocated to them. Miscarriages of justice will result and will not be remedied for years.

The effect of these proposals, if successful, will also be to remove the ability of the client to instruct the solicitor of their choice. Instead solicitors will be allocated to clients through a rota system.

Both criminal and civil legal aid lawyers have faced – and absorbed – cuts to funding over several years. These new cuts, taken together with the LASPO cuts, raise the very likely prospect that there will no longer be specialist legal aid lawyers in the near future. An important part of the welfare state – free legal advice and representation for those who need it most – will be destroyed.

The Society is clear that these proposals must be opposed. We will be submitting a response to the consultation. We encourage all practitioners to do the same on behalf of their firms, chambers and other legal organisations. We call for all individuals,  representative and campaigning organisations, who share our view that access to a properly  resourced , high standard legal advice and representation is a fundamental pillar of the welfare state, to work together to defeat these proposed changes.

Frances O'Grady (TUC) in conversation with Sharan Burrow (ITUC), chaired by John Hendy QC

The Institute of Employment Rights & The Haldane Society invite you to hear:

Frances O’Grady General Secretary TUC


In conversation with

Sharan Burrow, General Secretary ITUC


Trade unions at work globally: offering an alternative to austerity

Chair: John Hendy QC


Tuesday 14th May 2013, 6.30pm

At the Diskus Conference Centre, UNITE House, 128 Theobolds Road, London WC1X 8TN
Nearest Tube Holborn

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Public Meeting - Give Peace a Chance in the Basque Country: Justice and Freedom for Political Prisoners

GIVE PEACE A CHANCE IN THE BASQUE COUNTRY: JUSTICE AND FREEDOM FOR POLITICAL PRISONERS

CAMPACC SUPPORTED BY HALDANE SOCIETY OF SOCIALIST LAWYERS AND EUROPEAN LAWYERS FOR DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS (ELDH)

Public Meeting

Tuesday 16 April 2013, 6.30pm

At Garden Court Chambers, 57-60 Lincoln's Inn Fields, London WC2A
 (closest tube Holborn)

Chaired by Professor Bill Bowring,
President of the European Lawyers for Democracy and Human Rights (ELDH); International Secretary, Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers

Speakers  
Iratxe Urizar, lawyer, member of the Basque Observatory of Human Rights;
Asier Aranguren, former political prisoner and spokesperson of the Collective of Basque Political Prisoners;
Gorka Elejabarrieta, representative of the Sortu International Department and former representative of the Abertzale Left in the European Parliament;
Alistair Lyons, solicitor, Birnberg Peirce Solicitors.
Plus video from the Collective of Basque Political Prisoners

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Report on the Day of the Endangered Lawyer

The image in this article is a picture of one male and one female lawyer behind bars.  The text reads, "Day of the Endangered Lawyer.  24th January 2013.  Keep your hands off the lawyers".

The image in this article is a picture of one male and one female lawyer behind bars.  The text reads, "Day of the Endangered Lawyer.  24th January 2013.  Keep your hands off the lawyers".

The Report on 2013's Day of the Endangered Lawyer has been published.  The Haldane Society, alongside our international comrades, participated in the actions on the day and in the creation of the report.

Click here to download the report.

 

Emergency Protest Over the Current Guantánamo Bay Hunger Strike

The London Guantánamo Campaign invites you to join us at an emergency protest over the current hunger strike at Guantánamo Bay

Sunday 17 March, 2-4pm
US Embassy, Grosvenor Square, London, W1A 1AE
(nearest tube: Bond St/Marble Arch)

We will have speakers and an open mic.

 Hunger strikes: “the weapon of those who have nothing but their bodies with which to protest” ("Borderline Justice", Frances Webber, 2012)

Almost all of the 166 prisoners at Guantánamo Bay have been on hunger strike since early February. This protest which has led to force feeding against the human rights of prisoners and some prisoners losing over 15kg in weight was prompted by the confiscation of personal items from cells and the desecration of copies of the Koran. In a letter sent by lawyers for the prisoners to the prison commander on 4 March, they state that the “situation is potentially life-threatening.” The US military denies the situation, which is clearly getting out of hand.

Over half of the prisoners have been cleared for release and less than a dozen face any charges after more than a decade of arbitrary detention. The desperation shown in the latest episode of this hostage crisis has been ignored by the mainstream media. We invite you to join us as we protest this injustice.

For more details, please call Aisha on 07809 757 176 or e-mail london.gtmo@gmail.com

Persecution of Environmental Activists by EDF

The Haldane Society supports the direct action taken by the 21 No Dash for Gas activists at West Burton power station in October 2012. Our government is not taking the threat of climate change and the need to transition to a low carbon energy system seriously. The activists who took this action acted in the tradition of the suffragettes and the abolitionists who demanded structural change and justice through civil disobedience.

The Haldane Society condemns the move by EDF to pursue the activists in a civil case for £5 million. We believe this to be an abuse of the legal process and a cynical attempt to put people off dissent and undermine the right to protest. We call on EDF to drop the civil action and we call on people to sign this petition demanding the same:
http://www.change.org/en-GB/petitions/tell-edfenergy-to-drop-legal-action-against-no-dash-for-gas-activists

"Lawyers on Trial in Turkey: Implications for Establishing Peace and Justice": Public Meeting

Peace in Kurdistan Campaign

supported by the Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers, European Lawyers for Democracy and Human Rights (ELDH) and CAMPACC

Please note new time and location:

6.30pm Thrusday 28 February, Wilson Room, Portcullis House, Westminster, SW1
IMPORTANT Please try and arrive at 6pm to make sure you leave enough time to get through security

Hosted by Siobhain McDonagh MP

Speakers:

  • Michael Mansfield QC, President of the Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers
  • Prof Bill Bowring, President of the European Lawyers for Democracy and Human Rights (ELDH)
  • Melanie Gingell, barrister Tooks Chambers and member of the Bar Human Rights Committee: observed hearings in Turkey on 6 November 2012 and 3 January 2013
  • Margaret Owen OBE, barrister and member of the Bar Human Rights Committee: observed hearings in Turkey on 16 July 2012 and 6 November 2012
  • Chaired by Ali Has, Solicitor Advocate
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Judicial Review Consultation Response

The Haldane Society has responded to the Ministry of Justice's consultation on "reform" of judicial review.  The reform proposals would see access to judicial review massively restricted, thereby impacting on the ability of individuals to hold the government to account through the courts.  The proposals, if brought into law, would:

  • Reduce the time limit for judicial review, making it almost impossible for individuals, but not large corporations, to comply with the requirements in time;
  • Limit access to judicial review by restricting oral renewal hearings, allowing the oral rehearing of an application which was rejected on the papers.
  • Increase fees and so remove the ability of almost every ordinary person to apply for judicial review.

Download the Consultation Response