The select committee, the Murdochs and Brooks

I’m not sure what purpose will be served by today’s grilling of Rupert and James Murdoch and Rebekah Brooks (whose portrait still hangs at the National Portrait Gallery, I found on Sunday) by the Culture, Media and Sport select committee. I have to admit I suspect MPs of wanting to be seen to bear down on the figures at the centre of the phone hacking storm; I’m not sure they know what they want to achieve, or what they can achieve with only an hour scheduled to question the two Murdochs, for example. It may well be a huge anticlimax. But almost anything could happen. Which is why it’s worth considering some unlikely eventualities.

Some people must be wondering whether the evidence will be given on oath. That’s very unusual in select committee hearings, but the chairman does have power to administer an oath. I very much doubt he will, though, since it makes little difference. If a witness lies under oath in the committee, he or she will be guilty of perjury – but that perjury would be punishable only by the House of Commons, not in the courts. If he or she lies not under oath, that would surely amount to contempt of Parliament – again, punishable by the House. In either case, the punishments available would be the same.

In theory, the House has power to compel the witnesses to answer the questions it puts: you cannot refuse to answer questions put to you by a Parliamentary committee. Not even the traditional common law privileges – the right not to incriminate yourself, and legal professional privilege – apply, according to the Parliamentary bible, Erskine May (chapter 37 of the 24th edition covers this, for those who can get access to a copy). That wouldn’t necessarily stop the witnesses citing it: the Maxwell brothers, advised by George Carman QC, did exactly this in 1992. The then chairman of what must have been the social security select committee, Frank Field, warned the brothers they faced possible imprisonment for contempt of Parliament – but still they refused to answer, and as I recall, they never did.

So, as David Allen Green has written, the select committee today will not be able to compel answers there and then. In a sense, no one can ever compel anyone to answer questions – even by the use of torture (a power not even Parliament claims for itself). The real question is, what sanctions will you take against a silent witness?

Sir George Young, Leader of the House, said last week that the Committee on Standards and Privileges (to which any refusal to answer questions would be referred) could fine a witness; Chris Bryant, the Labour MP, said that was “wrong”. According to Erskine May, Parliament has seemed to accept for some time that it cannot impose fines (unlike the House of Lords, oddly), based on non-binding judicial statements (obiter dicta, in legal jargon) in a couple of 18th century cases that said the Commons is not a “court of record”. A number of Parliamentary committees since the 1960s have recommended that Parliament legislate to put the power to fine beyond doubt – but it never has. It ought to do so now as a matter of urgency.

What’s not in doubt is the House’s power to imprison someone for contempt – though only until the end of the Parliament, according to Lord Chief Justice Denman in Stockdale v Hansard back in 1839. That limitation might, one day, prove very important: if someone were imprisoned against the background of a major national scandal that forced a general election, he or she would have to be released soon after the election was called. Parliament hasn’t actually imprisoned anyone since 1880, as it happens. I detect, though, in recent years, an increasing assertiveness – or arrogance – from MPs; I’m certainly not making any sort of prediction about this case, but I would not entirely exclude the possibility of Parliament’s seriously making the threat of imprisonment again before long.

Of course, trying to rely on the privilege against self-incrimination would be effectively an admission of guilt, something that might have made sense in the desperate circumstances the Maxwell brothers faced, but will be less attractive to today’s witnesses. A much more effective line – and more troubling I think to the House authorities in terms of advising the chairman, John Whittingdale, on the propriety of his insisting on answers – would be to ask the chairman to stop a certain line of questioning on the grounds that any answer to a particular question might prejudice someone’s trial – perhaps someone else’s trial – in future. I certainly do think clumsy questioning by MPs today might cause future legal problems, which is why I’d advise the committee to proceed with extreme caution.

A particularly interesting hypothetical for lawyers is what would happen if a lawyer is asked a question about something that would normally be legally privileged. As I’ve said, no such privilege is available, according to Erskine May (which cites an example of solicitors producing privileged material to a Parliamentary inquiry). The lawyer would though, feel him or herself in an extremely awkward situation, and might well feel duty bound to risk contempt of Parliament.

The technical power of Parliament to overcome these privileges is extraordinary – but it makes a little more sense when you realise that, in return, the evidence witnesses give is protected by Parliamentary privilege. Select committee business clearly amounts to “proceedings in Parliament” for the purpose of the Bill of Rights, so a witness cannot be prosecuted using evidence of what he or she said before a committee, and no one can sue them on the basis of it, either. Looked as as a whole, it’s clear that Parliament’s rules are not simply the expression of power, but are designed so as to permit and require absolute frankness. I’m not sure they’re as out of date, in this age of supposed “transparency”, as they first seem to be.

The fact that Parliamentary privilege applies raises the most outlandish hypothetical of all: what if someone were to confess to a serious crime in front of a select committee? The operation of privilege would mean that confession could not be used against them in court: in the absence of other evidence, no prosecution could be brought.

It seems Parliament can waive privilege – at least, that was the view of former Speaker Weatherill in 1998. By I’m not sure that’s the simple solution it seems. Amending the Bill of Rights retroactively might result in a breach of the article 6 Convention right to a fair trial, and any such confession given in such questionable circumstances might not be admissible evidence: at least, there’s a good argument it ought to be excluded by the trial judge. These questions are, I think, better left to fiction.

2011-07-19T13:27:25+00:00Tags: |

Without Prejudice

In Without Prejudice this week, John Cooper QC joins Charon QC, David Allen Green and me to talk mainly about all the legal issues raised by the News of the World phone hacking scandal, in particular:

  • the powers of Commons select committees in respect of witnesses
  • the “judge-led” inquiry set up by the government
  • possible offences
  • what kind of media regulation we should create.

After all that, to avoid feeling completely hacked off, we also talked about

  • Julian Assange’s extradition appeal this week
  • a little-noticed aspect of the legal aid reforms, and its possible impact on media law cases
  • the importance of advocacy training and the new facilities at Middle Temple.

Listen to the podcast here or subscribe through iTunes.

Plus, why not listen to a special Without Prejudice interview Charon QC did yesterday with the US lawyer, Peter Friedman, of Hull McGuire PC, about the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and the potential liability for News Corporation if the FBI finds wrongdoing.

2011-07-15T11:29:49+00:00Tags: |

News Corp withdraws its undertakings: but why?

This changes everything. As Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt said in the House in his statement this afternoon, News Corporation has withdrawn its proposed “undertakings in lieu” in relation to BSkyB. These were its undertakings, for instance “spinning off” Sky News to make it independent, and protect it from News Corp dominance.

Since it was that package of undertakings that led Hunt to say he was minded to let the deal through, it follows that he must now refer the bid to the Competition Commission. He is free to do so purely on grounds of media plurality. There can be no accusation that he’s acted unlawfully or departed from the proper legal procedure.

But why on earth would News Corp do this? As I wrote last week, the law was on the side of their bid. A couple of things occur to me.

First, in spite of the strength of their legal position, Rupert Murdoch and News Corp must have feared that, the political temperature on this issue being so high, there was a risk that ministers might feel obliged to “find a way” to block the bid, and try to call Murdoch’s legal bluff, or gamble that they might, just, successfully defend a judicial review in these extreme circumstances. Ofcom’s consideration of BSkyB’s “fitness” might just have provided some cover for ministers, as might any revised view from Ofcom or the OFT on the credibility of News Corp’s undertakings. There might even have been a very remote risk of ministers taking my advice and changing legislation urgently and getting clearance from the European Commission to rely on new public interest considerations. From News Corporation’s point of view, while today’s move puts the bid on the back burner (as many MPs have been demanding) it does not kill it; it leaves open the possibility that News Corp could once persuade the Competition Commission, as it persuaded the OFT and Ofcome, and that the bid could go through one day, when perhaps the heat has subsided. While we’re used to thinking about Rupert Murdoch’s power over  government, the truth is government has a great deal of power over him. He might well choose to do them a favour rather than raise the stakes yet higher at this moment of danger for his whole empire.

From ministers’ point of view, the decision comes like a prayer being granted. It gets Jeremy Hunt completely off the immediate legal and political hook. His transparent decision to delay a decision – by relying on the number of responses he had to his last consultation – was not unsustainable in the short term politically, and in the longer term legally. This gives him much more room for manoeuvre. It allows him to give in to Ed Miliband’s demands, while saving a little face. It allows the government to avoid a vote in the Commons this week, in which most Liberal Democrats might well have voted with Labour.

So it suits both News Corporation, and the government. The question has to be: was this a deal? I suppose it’s conceivable that it was a decision taken unilaterally by News Corp, without consultation with anyone in government or the Conservative Party. That may even be true.

But in my view, one of the inquiries announced last week by the Prime Minister must look into all contact between News Corp and everyone and anyone in government and Parliament last week and this. The public must know if this was yet another stitch-up between News Corp and politicians.

 

Without Prejudice special: phone hacking, the News of the World and the BSkyB deal

We couldn’t gather urgently in the same room with wine, but today Charon QC spoke to both David Allen Green and me about the News of the World phone hacking scandal, and the range of legal issues it raises.

He speaks first to me about whether the NewsCorp-BSkyB deal can be stopped and about potential judicial inquiries, then to David about the Coulson arrest, whether closing the News of the World makes any legal difference to what happens now, and potential criminal liability of individuals and even companies for offences including for conspiracy.

Listen to the podcast here or subscribe to Without Prejudice through iTunes.

2011-07-08T18:33:35+00:00Tags: |

Supreme Court judgment: R (MacDonald) v Kensington & Chelsea

Because of bladder problems, Elaine McDonald needs to go to the toilet several times during the night; and because of mobility problems, she can’t get there safely on her own. Kensington & Chelsea have decided that her needs can be met by the use of incontinence pads, which is about £22,000 a year cheaper than what she wants: an overnight carer to help her get to the toilet. By a majority of four to one, the Supreme Court has upheld the lawfulness of Kensington & Chelsea’s decision. Not only is this an emotive issue – the judgment is fascinating because of the harsh criticism aimed by some of the majority Justices against their dissenting member, Lady Hale. More of that later.

The first, and to my mind rather technical issue, was whether, after Kensington & Chelsea had in 2008 assessed the claimant as needing

assistance to use the commode at night

it had properly changed that assessment in subsequent reviews, which spoke in more general terms of her “nighttime toileting needs”. By three to one, the Justices ruled that the council had changed its assessment. The dissent came from Lord Kerr, but even he thought the council was entitled to change its mind, so that a failure to do so by the route of another formal needs assessment was merely technical. I don’t think Lady Hale made any decision on the point.

Second, it was argued that the decision to provide incontinence pads breached Ms. McDonald’s article 8 Convention right to respect for private life. Again, the majority (this time of four) ruled in favour of the council. As Lord Brown explained (paragraph 19):

it cannot plausibly be argued that such respect was not afforded here … the respondents went to great lengths … to consult the appellant … They respected the appellant’s human dignity and autonomy, allowing her to choose the details of her care package within their overall assessment of her needs … the appellant cannot establish an interference here by the respondents with her article 8 rights. I add only that, even if such an interference were established, it would be clearly justified under article 8(2) … on the grounds that it is necessary for the economic well-being of the respondents and the interests of their other service-users and is a proportionate response to the appellant’s needs …

The majority also rejected two arguments based on the Disability Discrimination Act 1995, both of which Lord Brown described as “hopeless” (paras. 22 and 24). Lords Walker, Kerr and Dyson agreed.

Lady Hale did not address those four issues at all: instead she looked purely at the rationality of the council’s decision, a point raised by interveners, AgeUK. The core of her reasoning is at paragraphs 75 and 76:

It seems to me that the need for help to get to the lavatory or commode is so different from the need for protection from uncontrollable bodily functions that it is irrational to confuse the two, and meet the one need in the way that is appropriate to the other. Of course, there may well be people who are persuaded that this is in fact a more convenient, comfortable and safer way of solving the problem; then it is no longer irrational to meet their need in this way. The authority suggest that this is “accepted practice” but they cannot point to evidence that it is accepted practice in effect to oblige the client to accept it … the fact that they have been trying so hard for so long to persuade her to accept their point of view does not mean that it is a rational view or one which she is bound to accept. For the reasons already given, I do not think that it is.

But at paragraph 77 she went on to outline her further concerns,

Furthermore, I am troubled by the implications of the contrary view. A person in her situation needs this help during the day as well as during the night and irrespective of whether she needs to urinate or to defecate. Logically, the decision of the majority in this case would entitle a local authority to withdraw this help even though the client needed to defecate during the night and thus might be left lying in her faeces until the carers came in the morning.

and she concluded her judgment, at paragraph 79, by strongly implying that the majority’s decision is “uncivilised”:

In the United Kingdom we do not oblige people who can control their bodily functions to behave as if they cannot do so, unless they themselves find this the more convenient course. We are, I still believe, a civilised society. I would have allowed this appeal.

Sympathy with Ms. McDonald will lead many to agree with her. I’ve accused Lady Hale in the past of wearing her liberal heart on her sleeve, and I think this is another example. On this occasion, though, the language she used seems to have irritated some of the majority into responding with their own trenchant criticism of her approach. At paragraph 32 for instance Lord Walker says

I totally disagree with, and I deplore, Lady Hale’s suggestion that the decision of the majority would logically entitle a local authority to withdraw help from a client so that she might be left lying in her faeces day and night, relieved only by periodic changes of absorbent pads or sheets.

While at paragraph 27, Lord Brown says

it seems to me, with great respect to Lady Hale’s acknowledged expertise in social care law, particularly surprising to find her saying (in para 77) that logically, on the majority’s view, the local authority could properly withdraw care “even though the client needed to defecate during the night and thus might be left lying in her faeces until the carers came in the morning” or, indeed, “withdraw this help during the day.” One might just as well say that logically, on Lady Hale’s approach, it would be irrational not to supply a night carer to take the client to the commode, irrespective of cost, if there is any likelihood of the client having to urinate even once during the night. The true position is that the decision is one for the local authority on the particular facts of the case and, on the particular (and undisputed) facts here, it is nothing short of remarkable to characterise the respondents’ decision as irrational.

He goes on, devastatingly in my view, to point out that Lady Hale appeared entirely to have missed an important background fact:

As to the cost, Lady Hale says (at para 74) that “it might well have been open to the local authority . . . to provide her with the sort of night time care that she was asking for . . . in one of the Extra Care Sheltered Housing Schemes in the borough.” As, however, may be seen from the “Conclusion” to the borough’s 2010 review (quoted in para 11 above), the appellant “has declined the offer of moving to one of the borough’s extra care sheltered housing schemes.” In other words, the appellant specifically refused that very solution which Lady Hale mentions.

I agree that this undermines Lady Hale’s reasoning considerably.

Many people will be instinctively attracted to Lady Hale’s approach in spite of this, as I’ve said, simply because they, like me and like the majority, sympathise with Ms McDonald. I wouldn’t want to be in her situation. But I can’t agree with Lady Hale.

What concerns me most about cases like this one is the effect of judicial decisions on democracy at the local level. Decisions about what should be done for Ms. McDonald cannot be seen in isolation: resources are limited, however much we might wish it otherwise. To see care provision in terms of absolute entitlement in the way I think Lady Hale effectively does (i.e. the claimant’s need can be characterised as needing help to get to the toilet, and that’s what she wants, therefore she has an absolute legal right to it regardless of cost) seems to me to wish away that reality.

Decisions about the allocation of resources must be for the council, and councillors must be politically accountable for what they do. If those who live in Kensington & Chelsea don’t like what’s been done to Ms. McDonald, they must decide what else they want to do: transfer money from elsewhere within the social services budget, take money from some other budget (such as library or environmental services), cut council staff wages (including perhaps those of the carers they’d like to look after Ms. McDonald) or increase the council tax bill or some other charge, for instance for parking. Or, if they think local government budgets aren’t big enough, they should complain to Eric Pickles.

Judges can if they wish heroically order a particular form of care for people in real need, leaving local authorities  and social workers with the awkward, unglamorous job of deciding who else to say no to instead. But if they do, local government and social work soon become merely administrative exercises in implementing the not necessarily very consistent diktats of Whitehall and the courts. If we want any hope of reviving local government, and if we want professional experts rather than judges to make difficult individual decisions in complex areas, we should certainly not go that way.

Can the NewsCorp-BSkyB deal be stopped?

A lot of people must be wondering this, given recent allegations and revelations about phone hacking by the News of the World. So can the Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt now block the planned merger of News Corporation and BSkyB?

He has already said he is minded to allow it, subject to certain undertakings relating in particular to the independence of Sky News, undertakings on which he is consulting the public. We have till this Friday, 8 July, to respond.

The process was initiated by Vince Cable, who issued a European Intervention Notice last November under the Enterprise Act 2002, citing concerns about media plurality and requiring the OFT and Ofcom to report, which they have done. Their view is that the undertakings News Corporation will agree to are practical and viable, and address the concerns about media plurality.

In my view it’s not legally defensible now for Hunt to slam the brakes on this process, let alone put it into reverse. Crucially, the legislation governing the procedure – article 5 of the Enterprise Act 2002 (protection of Legitimate Interests) order 2003 – requires him when deciding now whether to refer the matter to the Competition Commission to take account only of the public interest consideration mentioned in the original European Intervention Notice – the plurality of media ownership. Given his previous indication that he was minded to accept undertakings, and given the Ofcom/OFT advice, in my view a court on judicial review would be bound to conclude that a referral now could only be based on new public interest considerations – and would quash the decision to refer.

So are there any alternatives?

Well, he can’t issue another European Intervention Notice, because of section 67(5) of the Enterprise Act 2002. A pity, that; that principle was no doubt included so as to stop government intervening on a merger or takeover repeatedly, simply to frustrate it. It does, though, ignore the possibility of new public interest concerns coming to light.

Parliament could of course repeal section 67(5), or amend it to permit a second reference where new concerns arise. Interestingly, a new notice could mention public interest concerns not currently laid down in the relevant legislation: section 42(3) makes clear that the concept of a public interest consideration means

a consideration which, at the time of the giving of the intervention notice concerned, is specified in section 58 or is not so specified but, in the opinion of the Secretary of State, ought to be so specified.

The government would then have to seek the approval of the European Commission under article 21.4 of the EU Merger Regulation for “recognition” in principle of its new public interest concern. But that would mean giving the European Commission the final word over whether the government could intervene again; not an attractive approach for any British government. I don’t think ministers will be seriously considering this as a way forward in this case.

What we’re left with is Ofcom’s power to take steps against the holder of a TV broadcasting licence under either of the Broadcasting Acts 1990 and 1996 – as a ditigal terrestrial, satellite and I think cable broadcaster, I imagine BSkyB hold both types of licence (both a TLCS and DTPS licence).

Both section 5(5) of the 1990 Act and the parallel section 5(5) of the 1996 Act permit Ofcom to revoke a licence (or, more strictly, to include provisions in a licence providing for revocation: I assume they’ve done this). Revocation procedures can be initiated where a relevant change has occurred following grant of a licence – and such a change can include a change in the persons having an interest in the licence-holder that would call into question whether it remains a fit and proper person to hold a licence.

There must be some doubt, though, whether a regulator can properly revoke a licence on the basis that the licence holder (in this case, presumably BSkyB Group or one or more of its subsidiaries) is no longer a fit and proper person because it’s now controlled by another company (News Corporation), another of whose subsidiaries (News Group Newspapers) is suspected of presiding over illegality and a cover-up. If Ofcom were challenged on this, I think a judicial review might well succeed on the grounds that there’s no rational connection between the conduct of a newspaper firm and the likely conduct of a broadcaster. It might depend whether senior managers of News Corporation itself can be linked to the phone hacking scandal or cover-up. But I’d be surprised – unless even more explosive evidence emerges linking phone hacking to the very centre of the Murdoch empire – if an independent regulator were bold enough to take action.

What all this shows is that the legislation in its current state does not satisfactorily address legitimate public interest concerns about the toxic mix of media concentration and impropriety.

Parliament should now consider amending section 67 of the Enterprise Act to permit a second European Intervention Notice where new public interest concerns emerge following an initial intervention, or allowing an existing notice to be amended; and the government should seek recognition from the European Commission of a new ground of public interest consideration, where a merger involves a company which is (or one of whose subsidiaries or related companies’ staff is) linked to suspicions of serious or systematic illegality. It can then make an order under section 58(3) of the Enterprise Act to give statutory force to that new consideration. Parliament should also consider amending the Broadcasting Acts to permit the Secretary of State to “call in” a decision on whether a licence-holder remains a fit and proper person to hold a licence – or at least to direct Ofcom to make a formal investigation and decision on fitness – where related companies of those taking controlling interests in licence-holders are linked to serious or systematic illegality. In that way, political will can be brought to bear directly on the regulatory process in cases like this.

Outing, idle gossip and sexuality discrimination

An interesting discrimination law judgment came the Court of Appeal on Friday in Grant v H.M Land Registry.

Chris Grant worked for the Land Registry, initially at Lytham, where he was “out”; but when he got promoted to a job in Coventry, he decided to keep quiet about at first about being gay, intending perhaps to come out when he felt comfortable in doing so. But his new line manager already knew he was gay, and as Mr Justice Elias explains (para. 21 of the judgment):

In the course of a telephone conversation between Sharron Kay, the claimant’s new line manager, and Ms Crothers, Ms Crothers hinted to Sharron Kay that she thought the claimant was very pleasant. She had met him at an assessment day and spoken to him briefly and they had got on well. Sharron Kay knew that Irene Crothers was single and she said to her “Don’t go fluttering your eye lashes at him, he’s gay.”

This is, pretty obviously, the sort of conversation that happens every day in offices everywhere. The legal question was whether, in revealing Mr. Grant’s sexuality, his boss discriminated against him and/or harassed him on grounds of sexual orientation, contrary to regulations 3 and 5 of the Employment Equality (Sexual Orientation) Regulation 2003, which were in force at the time, the facts having occurred before sections 12, 13 and 26 of the Equality Act 2010 came into force last year.  The same question arose in relation to a second incident

.. when the claimant attended a dinner with some of his new colleagues. There were four people at the meal, namely the claimant, Alison Bradbury, Sharron Kay and Irene Crothers. The three women all knew that the claimant was gay. Sharron Kay had inadvertently been told by Alison Bradbury, and she in turn had told Irene Crothers in the telephone conversation, although the claimant was not at the time aware that Ms Crothers knew he was gay. Sharron Kay asked the claimant about his partner, saying “How is your partner, Chris? How is he?”

Initially an Employment Tribunal in Birmingham held that these were both acts of discrimination and harassment, but the Land Registry won an appeal to the Employment Appeal Tribunal on the basis that the original tribunal had failed to take into account the fact that Mr. Grant had been open about his sexuality in Lytham. The Court of Appeal has upheld the EAT’s approach. In relation to the phone call, Elias J says (paras. 45-6)

In my judgment, the fact that the claimant had “come out” in Lytham is a highly significant factor … This is so whether Sharron Kay knew that this was the case or not. The point can be tested in this way. At any time any one of the three hundred or more employees at Lytham could, in conversation with a colleague at Coventry, have revealed perfectly innocently the fact that the claimant was gay. They would have been justified in assuming that the claimant would have no objection to this … If Irene Crothers had been informed by a Lytham employee that the claimant was gay, it would in my view be bizarre if that employee could, by the mere innocent disclosure of that information, be liable for either direct discrimination or harassment. The disclosure would still in fact have been unwanted by the claimant, and no doubt the claimant would have been equally upset by the fact that he was deprived of the opportunity to divulge this information in his own way and in his own time. But it would make a mockery of discrimination law to impose liability in these circumstances. A defendant would be liable for discrimination for doing something which the claimant had reasonably led him or her to believe would not cause the claimant concern.

The implications of a finding of discrimination in these circumstances would be far reaching.

and in relation to the dinner conversation (para. 51):

There was one person at the dinner party who, as far as he knew, was not aware of that fact and he was made to feel uncomfortable by the reference. But again, I do not think that he was justified in objecting to Ms Kay communicating this information, even in his presence. It was not a detriment and, in my judgment, could not properly be so described. Nor in my view is it enough to say that he was made to feel uncomfortable. Indeed, the Tribunal’s finding was that for a short period over dinner the claimant felt uncomfortable. Again, given that it was not the purpose of Ms Kay to humiliate or embarrass him, I do not think that a tribunal is entitled to equate an uncomfortable reaction to humiliation. I accept that there may be circumstances where revealing a gay person’s identity in this way in his presence could be so described, but not in these circumstances.

I think the Court of Appeal’s approach must be right. I’m not sure a breach of privacy necessarily amounts to sexual orientation discrimination – and the concern that the two concepts must be kept separate comes across clearly in Elias J’s judgment (see paragraph 44). But in any event, it seems to me wrong for someone to be able in effect to convert his (in itself perfectly reasonable) wish to control how and when he reveals personal information about which he has in another context been open into a legally enforceable right against others.

Had the claimant won on this principle, I think it would have had an incredibly “chilling effect”, to use a phrase often heard in another context, and not only on office gossip. Wouldn’t you always have needed prior permission to mention a colleague’s sexuality to a third person, or to ask after a colleague’s partner in the presence of others – just in case what you said might hurt them?

 

2011-07-06T20:10:00+00:00Tags: , , |

Without Prejudice

In the latest Without Prejudice podcast, Charon QC, Timothy Pitt-Payne QC, Amanda Bancroft of Beneath The Wig and I discuss

  • Lady Hale’s comments on legal aid
  • the law on checking out potential employees
  • the Milly Dowler murder trial, and treatment of her parents
  • Alex Salmond’s spat with the UK Supreme Court over human rights
  • Ken Clarke’s new “stab a burglar” idea.

David Allen Green couldn’t be with us last night – we missed him, but he’ll be back next time.

Listen to the podcast here or subscribe through iTunes.

2011-07-01T15:56:24+00:00Tags: , , , , |

Decision Time on Radio 4

I took part in Decision Time on BBC Radio 4, first broadcast last night, in a discussion about the European Court of Human Rights – specifically whether the UK could denounce the European Convention on Human Rights, or otherwise reduce the Court’s power, in the light of the controversy over prisoners’ votes.

Nick Robinson chairs the discussion with Jack Straw, the Conservative MP Priti Patel, Sir Stephen Wall, former chief European adviser to the Prime Minister (and former “client” of mine in government, as it happens), and Allegra Stratton, political correspondent of the Guardian. It’s great fun to be called a “senior political insider”, and if Radio 4 says so, I won’t argue.

You can listen here for the next six days.

2011-06-16T11:42:27+00:00Tags: , |
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