X

Vous n'êtes pas connecté

Rubriques :

Maroc Maroc - NEWSDAY.CO.TT - A la Une - 25/Jun 06:53

Russian roulette with rights

THE GOVERNMENT’S removal of a special majority requirement before the passage of whistleblower legislation in Parliament is a significant development. It potentially opens the floodgates: governments may seek to pass more laws touching fundamental rights without super-majorities. This is a dramatic reversal of what has hitherto been legislative orthodoxy. In proposing a simple amendment to the Whistleblower Protection Bill 2022 to delete a clause declaring the law “inconsistent with sections 4 and 5 of the Constitution” – which enshrine rights such as due process of law – Attorney General Reginald Armour told MPs this was being done considering the Privy Council’s recent ruling in the case of Dominic Suraj and others v AG. “We are amending the legislation today consonant with a development that occurred after the bill was laid,” Mr Armour said on June 21. In 2022, the London law lords – considering covid19-era restrictions – found local laws could be passed affecting rights without special majorities, since Parliament has an inherent power to promulgate laws in the public interest once proportionate. And so the new approach, as per the AG, is to consider the objectives of the statute. “When you look at the totality of the legislation and you find a proportionate balance in the aim of the legislation and the rights which it impacts, there is a measure by which that legislation can then pass by a simple majority,” he advised. Other amendments were made to the bill in the committee stage in an effort to get its balance right. In the past, the Government has been accused of passing bad laws, playing willy-nilly with the requirement for super-majorities and hastily gutting bills to secure passage. But this is not just a question of the watering-down of provisions to evade the special-majority rule; this is a matter of saying the rule does not apply in the first place and then leaving it for courts to decide the “proportionality” of measures plainly touching rights. The result: consequential laws might be passed, as this one was, by simple majority and even proclaimed, while legal cases snake their way through court for years. By the time a ruling comes, the damage is done. In contrast, the polygraph legislation, also debated last week, was passed with a special-majority requirement remaining intact. It received unanimous approval from MPs. Its future implementation is, to a degree, assured. What’s clear is that the Government’s understanding of its law-making powers has the potential to dilute the ability of the opposition and independent benches to veto laws. That might be both good and bad. Governments may be able to get more done. But without the inoculation of a consistent recourse to super-majorities, legislators risk playing Russian roulette with important measures affecting rights and riding roughshod over citizens. The post Russian roulette with rights appeared first on Trinidad and Tobago Newsday.

Articles similaires

Law will protect citizens

newsday.co.tt - 27/Jun 06:55

THE EDITOR: The Newsday editorial of June 25 focused on the Government’s passage of whistleblower legislation by simple majority. The editorial...

Opposition Chief Whip on Ragbir’s surprise vote for Government: ‘I was taken aback by Rai’

newsday.co.tt - 22/Jun 02:17

OPPOSITION chief whip David Lee was philosophical when asked to respond to his colleague Rai Ragbir's surprise vote for the Government's bill in the...

UNC MP breaks rank in House – Rai votes with the Government

newsday.co.tt - 22/Jun 02:17

CUMUTO/MANZANIILA MP Dr Rai Ragbir on Friday broke rank with opposition colleagues in the House of Representatives and voted for Government's...

Blowing corruption fight

newsday.co.tt - 18/Jun 03:07

FOR US to have a future without corruption, there must be protection for whistleblowers. The good news is legislation doing exactly that is back in...

Sorry! Image not available at this time

Clergymen And Women Proffer Advice To Avoid Rivalry Between Mothers In-laws And Daughter In-laws

itvradiong.com - 27/Jun 20:03

Clergymen And Women Proffer Advice To Avoid Rivalry Between Mothers In-laws And Daughter In-laws. In Nigeria and some other parts of the globe, there...

Sorry! Image not available at this time

Volodymyr Zelensky signed the law on a single roaming zone with the EU

root-nation.com - 18/Jun 13:10

The President of Ukraine signed the Law of Ukraine “On Amendments to Certain Laws of Ukraine Regarding Implementation of European Union Legislation...

The Impact Of China’s Digital Silk Road On The Digital Domain Of The Philippines – Analysis

eurasiareview.com - 18/Jun 00:15

By Julio S. Amador III and Deryk Matthew N. Baladjay One of the first policy directives given by President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to his government...

EU chat control law would allow scans of encrypted messages

mashable.com - 19/Jun 16:35

Digital rights activists and organization say this would undermine end-to-end encryption. Kids' online safety is a big issue in the U.S. and...

Silk stink

newsday.co.tt - 20/Jun 05:10

THE WILLFUL failure on the part of public officials to reform the process by which senior counsel status or silk is bestowed betrays an eye-watering...

Sorry! Image not available at this time

MURIC Condemns Sokoto Assembly’s Bill Seeking To Limit Sultan’s Powers

kanyidaily.com - 26/Jun 14:54

The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) has urged the Sokoto House of Assembly to stop a bill that seeks to amend parts of the state’s emirate council...

Les derniers communiqués

  • Aucun élément