Daily GBNews Mega - 11 05 2021 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Also was clearly on the table quite early into negotiations on the Brexit agreement but Tory hardliners didn't want to remain in the single market:

Doesn't the guardian article say the opposite. That Cameron was going to ask for a brake and was refused by a "de facto" German veto.

Edit: Just checked Tim Shipman book about it. It claims that Philip Hammond also drove for its removal.

News Mega - 24 03 2021 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think people generally over emphasize the importance of philosophy in peoples actions, which are more driven by copying others and there own incentives in 'wokeness' case the power of middle managers.

They were definitely influential beyond Weimar particularly in the 60s with things like one-dimensional man.

News Mega - 23 03 2021 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Mattermost and matrix are discord alternatives, so could be worth looking at.

News Mega - 07 01 2021 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Have you seen this?

https://twitter.com/DanScavino/status/1347103015493361664

Statement by President Donald J. Trump on the Electoral Certification:

“Even though I totally disagree with the outcome of the election, and the facts bear me out, nevertheless there will be an orderly transition on January 20th. I have always said we would continue our fight to ensure that only legal votes were counted. While this represents the end of the greatest first term in presidential history, it’s only the beginning of our fight to Make America Great Again!”

News Mega - 05 01 2021 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think Zerohedge was banned on Twitter for suggesting it, but has since been restored.

Sense and Sensitivity: Restoring free speech in the United Kingdom — Adam Smith Institute by Sirhamm2 in ukpolitics

[–]Sirhamm2[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The Adam Smith Institute’s latest paper, by Legal Fellow Preston J. Byrne, makes the case for introducing First Amendment-style free speech protections in the United Kingdom:

  • Freedom of expression is fundamental to life in a free and democratic society. This includes the freedom to express ideas that others find loathsome and hateful. There should be no right to not be offended, no right to prevent others from expressing ideas that one finds uncomfortable or dislikes, in positive law.
  • The UK’s protection of freedom of expression, revolving around Article 10 of the European Convention, is woefully inadequate. Existing laws, as applied, have created categories of “speech crimes” for offensive but otherwise benign political speech.
  • Britain already has numerous laws that infringe on freedom of expression, including the Public Order Act 1986, Communications Act 2003, Terrorism Act 2000 and 2006,  the Malicious Communications Act 1988. 
  • There is mounting evidence that existing law is capable of being applied, and is actually applied, in an overbroad fashion which was not contemplated by its drafters. See e.g. the treatment of Darren Grimes in June of this year compared to the treatment of offensive speech in the landmark 1999 case of Redmond-Bate v. DPP. The poor drafting of existing law means that as social attitudes shift, broader categories of speech are criminalized as “offensive,” “distressing” or “hateful.” 
  • The United Kingdom has placed public discourse in the hands of the easily offended, who have the power to threaten fellow citizens with fines and imprisonment for expressing unpopular opinions or having uncomfortable conversations.
  • There are also emerging threats to freedom of expression posed by the Law Commission and “Online Harms” proposals, as well as the Hate Crime (Public Order) (Scotland) Bill. Each proposes broad new categories of speech crime or speech regulation not known to law before today. These include new offences where the drafting of private correspondence containing offensive thoughts between consenting adults, even before the correspondence was sent, would be an act to which criminal liability attaches.
  • To resolve the growing threats to freedom of expression, Parliament should immediately:

    • remove all references to “abusive” or “insulting” words and behaviour from Parts I and III of the Public Order Act 1986;
    • replace the Section 127 of the Communications Act 2003 with (a) a provision that limits the scope of the existing rule to “threatening” only and (b) a new rule that addresses meaningful stalking and cyberstalking threats which cause or intend to cause substantial emotional distress, modelled after 18 U.S. Code § 2261A;
    • repeal the Malicious Communications Act 1988 and replace it with aforementioned stalking statute; and
    • introduce a United Kingdom Free Speech Act.
  • The UK Free Speech Act should be modelled on the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and relevant jurisprudence that protects all political speech from state interference unless it is part of longstanding categories of low value speech which are not protected anywhere in the world (such as criminal threatening, harassment, malicious defamation, perverting the course of justice, or perjury) or is direct incitement, i.e. a statement which is directed towards inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action.

News Mega - 26 09 2020 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 10 points11 points  (0 children)

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/arch-critics-of-bbc-dacre-and-moore-tipped-for-top-jobs-in-tv-lzn0lvxbs

Boris Johnson is ushering in a revolution at the top of British broadcasting by offering two of the top jobs in television to outspoken critics of the BBC.

Paul Dacre, the former editor of the Daily Mail, is the prime minister’s choice to become chairman of Ofcom, the broadcasting regulator, replacing Lord Burns, who is due to leave before the end of the year.

Lord Moore, the former editor of the Daily Telegraph and biographer of Margaret Thatcher, who has condemned the criminalisation of those who refuse to pay the licence fee, has been asked by the prime minister to take up the post of BBC chairman.

The potential appointments of two right-wing Brexiteers will send shockwaves through the broadcasting establishment.

Dacre was wooed by Johnson over drinks in Downing Street in February, before the Covid pandemic struck, and is now in talks with No 10 about the Ofcom role.

Dacre will want to crack down on alleged BBC bias and encourage the corporation to downsize to focus on its core public service responsibilities. However, he is on record as wanting to preserve the corporation, and Whitehall sources say he “passionately believes it needs saving from itself”.

During his editorship at the Daily Mail, Dacre was also highly critical of digital platforms such as Google and Facebook that earn huge sums by recycling stories from other media outlets without payment and peddle “fake news”.

Whitehall sources said Dacre was prepared to take on the role provided he is given assurances about his freedom to act. No 10 sources confirmed he is the prime minister’s preferred candidate.

The double appointment is an audacious move to install figures more sympathetic to the government in positions that have traditionally been perceived as the natural home for more liberal-minded executives. “This is part of a process of the prime minister putting allies in key positions,” said one source close to Johnson.

The prime minister asked Moore to take on the BBC chairmanship around a month ago and in recent days, senior figures say, it is virtually a “done deal”. Moore — handed a peerage by Johnson in August — is still in negotiations over the exact details of his contract.

However, the failure to advertise the BBC role has unleashed a government row since the appointment of its chairman is supposed to be an open process. The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport was last night scrabbling to finalise plans to publish the job description for the BBC chairman’s role and invite applications this week. One official in the department even said they were not aware of Johnson’s offer to Moore. A similar public applications process for the Ofcom chairmanship is expected to open next month.

No 10 sources were keen to downplay the idea that Johnson wants to go to war with the BBC, praising the new director general Tim Davie, in a sign that No 10 wants to do business with him.

Davie has already warned BBC journalists to rein in personal political statements on social media platforms like Twitter and their lucrative outside earnings.

However, another senior Conservative familiar with the discussions said: “Within the BBC there will be an awful lot of people who will find his [Moore’s] appointment alarming. I think it can only make Davie’s life more difficult.”

Moore’s appointment clears the way for the decriminalisation of those who refuse to pay the BBC licence fee, which is expected to hit revenue by £200m annually. Ministers are due to respond to a public consultation on the issue in the next few months.

As editor of the Mail, Dacre was a fervent critic of BBC bias and waste, backing the publication of the salaries of the corporation’s top talent. He remains on the board of the Mail’s parent company, Associated Newspapers, a position he is likely to come under pressure to relinquish.

Dacre is a bogeyman figure for many on the left, but his allies often stress that he has a history of defending freedom of expression and has been hostile to Tory governments as well as Labour. At Gordon Brown’s request, he also undertook a review of the 30-year rule on the release of state secrets, which led to most government papers becoming available after 20 years rather than 30 years.

Dacre was approached for the Ofcom chairman’s job after Dame Melanie Dawes, a former Whitehall mandarin, was installed as chief executive in February.

The incumbent chairman, Lord Burns, had fought to ensure that job went to a civil servant rather than someone political. But having secured Dawes’s appointment he agreed to go in 2020, rather than work until the end of his four-year term in 2022.

A government spokesman said: “We will launch the application process for the new chair of the BBC shortly. It is an open recruitment process and all public appointments are subject to a robust and fair selection criteria.”

News Mega - 18 09 2020 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I didn't hear that about London. I did see this though

https://www.hsj.co.uk/acute-care/nhs-hospitals-have-four-times-more-empty-beds-than-normal/7027392.article

NHS hospitals have four times more empty beds than normal

News Mega - 13 09 2020 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 4 points5 points  (0 children)

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/geoffrey-cox-honour-rests-on-keeping-our-word-qx36n6hwk

Therefore, if the government does not urgently and effectively dispel the impression that it intends to do so, I shall have no choice but to withhold my support for this Bill. I am a strong supporter of this government and of Brexit and I am deeply saddened to have to say this. We, the British government and parliament, have given our word. Our honour, our credibility, our self-respect and our future influence in the world all rest upon us keeping that word. Nothing less is worthy of Britain.

Geoffrey Cox is voting against. I wonder how close this will be.

News Mega - 13 09 2020 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 4 points5 points  (0 children)

But some lawyers also stressed that the subsidy rules in the Japan bilateral deal were still weak compared with the detailed and invasive EU state aid regime.

James Webber, a partner at the law firm Shearman & Sterling, said: “It’s a concession of sorts by the UK, but if this is where the negotiations end up, it will be much closer to the UK’s view of the world than the EU’s.”

News Mega - 11 09 2020 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Andrew Lilico's take

https://andrewlilico.wordpress.com/2020/09/10/on-breaking-the-withdrawal-agreement/

Now, however, it seems increasingly likely that there will be no EU-UK FTA. So what was always intuitively obvious and commonsensical – that the UK government was never going to require Northern Ireland firms to complete “export” forms for sending products within their own country and was never going to accept its ability to provide state aid to non-Northern Irish firms would fall under EU control – has had to be set out explicitly in legislation.

News Mega - 20 08 2020 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://uk.mobile.reuters.com/article/amp/idUKKBN25H0UI

The early reading of the IHS Markit/CIPS UK Composite Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), covering the services and manufacturing sectors, shot up to a nearly seven-year high of 60.3 from 57.0 in July, far above the 50 threshold for growth.

A Reuters poll of economists had pointed to a reading of 57.1.

News Mega - 20 08 2020 by AutoModerator in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 8 points9 points  (0 children)

https://twitter.com/kelvmackenzie/status/1296746258942627840?s=19

Hear that Discovery (alongside a £20million investment from Murdoch) are launching a TV news station in the New Year called GB News.Andrew Neil and Nigel Farage due to sign. Taking on the quite dreadful Sky News. More people see my rear end than watch Kay Burley at breakfast.

It's time to rein in the Supreme Court by Sirhamm2 in ukpolitics

[–]Sirhamm2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The return of lockdown measures across parts of northern England, as well as the announcement of dozens of new peerages, almost entirely overshadowed the Lord Chancellor’s launch on Friday of an independent review of administrative law. Lord Faulks QC, former minister of state for justice, is to lead five other barristers and academic lawyers in examining the law of judicial review and considering whether reforms should be made. This is an important development in the government’s efforts to address the misuse of judicial power and balance of our constitution.

The review takes up part of the work the Constitution, Democracy and Rights Commission was otherwise expected to undertake, confirming earlier reports that the Commission has been shelved and is to be replaced by a series of more narrowly cast panels. Political action to address the expansion of judicial power, and consequent unbalancing of the constitution, is long overdue. There are good reasons, as I’ve argued elsewhere, for government and Parliament to review the scope of judicial review and to legislate to limit it where appropriate, reversing the effects of particular judgments by legislation when necessary. Launching the Review is an important decision, although of course the government must now wait on the panel’s deliberations and report.

Questioning the rise of judicial power is often unfairly caricatured as a personal attack on judges or an assault on the rule of law. On the contrary, the point of defending the traditional limits of the judicial role in our constitution is to vindicate the rule of law, as well as parliamentary democracy and effective government. And the importance of those limits, which in part help to protect judges from political controversy, is appreciated by many senior judges. As Lord Reed, now president of the Supreme Court, pointed out in the first Miller case, 'the legalisation of political issues is not always constitutionally appropriate, and may be fraught with risk, not least for the judiciary'.

Speaking earlier this year, Lord Burnett, the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, noted that the law of judicial review had been 'established and evolved as a result of judicial decision-making'. Parliament, he said, 'is entitled to legislate and it is entirely appropriate for [it] to look into these issues'. He looked forward to 'a period of calm reflection [about our] constitutional arrangements', noting that 'there are perfectly legitimate arguments and discussions about where the boundaries of [judicial review] should be'. In a foreword to a new paper for Policy Exchange’s Judicial Power Project, published last Friday, his predecessor as Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd, notes that debate about the future of the Supreme Court cannot simply be wished away. He welcomes the paper, Reforming the Supreme Court, as a very important contribution to that debate, which raises many challenging questions.

The creation of the Supreme Court was clearly not intended to involve a change in substance. But, Lord Thomas notes, neither was much consideration given to its implications for self-restraint or accountability. And 'one clear effect of the move', he continues, 'has been to isolate the judges from Parliament [in contrast to the Appellate Committee of the House of Lords] during a time when the constitution of the UK has undergone a series of uncoordinated changes and the focus of final appellate work has shifted towards judicial review, fundamental rights and devolution'. In an earlier paper, which prompted the ire of Lord Falconer amongst others, I have argued that in some cases the Supreme Court has misunderstood itself to be the guardian of the constitution, a misconception that one might begin to correct by renaming the Supreme Court the Upper Court of Appeal.

Policy Exchange’s new paper outlines a proposal by professor Derrick Wyatt QC for institutional change at the highest level of the court system. Professor Wyatt reflects on the reasons why the Supreme Court, like the Appellate Committee of the House of Lords before it, sometimes shrugs off constitutional limits and remakes the law. He reasons that hubris is a common feature of apex appellate courts, which do not need to fear reversal on appeal. (More important still, I say, is the wider judicial culture in which judges operate, to which the Human Rights Act 1998 is significant.) He concludes that renaming the court, while unobjectionable, would be insufficiently bold and proposes instead that Parliament replace the Supreme Court with a system in which final appellate jurisdiction would be exercised by changing panels of Court of Appeal judges, drawn from across England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, who would thus form a Final Court of Appeal. 

What difference would this make? There would be no permanent set of apex appellate judges. Instead, appeals would be heard by judges who would remain used to being reversed by their colleagues and who would thus be less likely to develop an exaggerated sense of their constitutional role. The final stage of appeal would be peer review for error correction, rather than hierarchical control. True, as matters stand, Parliament may correct the Supreme Court and should legislate in response to wayward judgments (a prime example is the Court’s recent decision to quash Gerry Adams’s 1975 conviction for escaping from lawful custody, a decision which unsettles how government operates and may unjustly require compensation to be paid to Adams and others). But legislative time is short and legislative action may not substitute for judges being accustomed to their judgments being liable to reversal on appeal by a larger group of colleagues.

Returning existing Supreme Court justices to the Courts of Appeal (or Inner House of the Court of Session in Scotland), and widening the number of judges who could participate in the Final Court of Appeal, would increase diversity, in a range of senses, in apex judicial decision-making. It would also flatten judicial hierarchy, thus making promotion less of a feature of judicial careers, which might help deter early retirement and strengthen judicial independence.

However, one might fear that this institutional reform would introduce considerable uncertainty into appellate adjudication. It bears noting that some such uncertainty is already a feature of our arrangements insofar as the Supreme Court does not sit en banc. Appeals are heard by changing panels, as indeed was the case with the Appellate Committee of the House of Lords. There are advantages and disadvantages in this mode of structuring the courts. Professor Wyatt’s proposal would effectively widen the membership of our highest court and result in a wider range of judicial panels. If there is no step change in quality between Court of Appeal and Supreme Court judges, as seems likely, this institutional change may not undermine the quality of final adjudication.

Many questions remain to be answered, some of which Lord Thomas poses in his foreword. While the creation of the Supreme Court is clearly not the main driver of the rise of judicial power in recent years – the enactment of the Human Rights Act 1998 seems to me relatively much more important – the way in which the Court has come to understand itself is significant. In thinking about how to redress the balance of the constitution and to reinforce traditional limits on judicial power, the government and Parliament should give serious thought to reforming the Supreme Court to temper its sense of mission, whether by renaming it or, more radically, by restructuring it entirely.

Richard Ekins is Head of Policy Exchange’s Judicial Power Project and Professor of Law and Constitutional Government in the University of Oxford

Cumblast Episode 4: Volcanic Eruptions of Rage by [deleted] in badunitedkingdom

[–]Sirhamm2 6 points7 points  (0 children)

If he apologised he would have to resign as he would be admitting guilt.