Government accused of ‘beyond laughable’ hypocrisy for launching campaign urging other countries to obey rule of law

Authored by independent.co.uk and submitted by DeadlyCanister
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The government has been accused of "beyond laughable" hypocrisy for running a campaign extolling the virtues of democracy and the rule of law to other countries – after appearing to repeatedly undermine them itself.

The #BeHeard campaign, launched Foreign Office, names "independent judges free to uphold the law" as a key element of democracy, alongside protecting the rights of minorities and allowing “the press to challenge those in power and to shine a light where it is needed most”.

But ministers were accused of "saying one thing whilst doing another" in launching the campaign, given that they openly admit that they are planning to break international law with new legislation – and have faced a string of criticisms for their approach to democracy, the rule of law, and judicial independence

Last year Boris Johnson's move to unilaterally suspend parliament to force his Brexit policy through against the elected chamber was found to be unlawful by the Supreme Court.

The court unanimously ruled that the prorogation should never have taken effect and said the government was "preventing or frustrating without reasonable justification" the ability of parliament to carry out its functions.

Judge Lady Hale describe the move as a “prolonged suspension of parliamentary democracy" with an “extreme” effect on “the fundamentals of our democracy”.

This year the government used its Whitehall public relations channels to launch an attack on "activist lawyers" defending migrants in legal cases; it has also been subject to a number of alerts from the Council of Europe for measures or policies that might harm freedom of the press.

In 2016 the government-supporting newspaper the Daily Mail branded three judges "enemies of the people" for ruling against ministers in a key legal case, publishing mug-shot style photographs on the front page.

There were reports this weekend that the government wants to appoint the Mail's then editor Paul Dacre to head regulator Ofcom.

Commenting on the new campaign Lisa Nandy, Labour’s shadow foreign secretary said: “Just when you thought 2020 couldn’t get any more bizarre, the Foreign Office has just launched a campaign against itself.”

Layla Moran, Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesperson, told The Independent: "This campaign shows that the Government's hypocrisy knows no bounds.

"To launch an international campaign calling on other countries to join the UK in following the rule of law, just days after they proposed legislation which would break the international agreements they signed, is beyond laughable.

drewbles82 on September 29th, 2020 at 13:14 UTC »

It is laughable, just in the last 24hrs, you had J.Snow from Channel 4 news have a go at an MP as they don't have a clue. Pubs must close at 10pm, except the one for Parliament so they can still get drunk with no masks, (I heard that's been changed now due to the backlash) then a 6,4000 fine for meeting people outside your household in a pub. No singing in a pub allowed. Promises to do well for climate change and plant more trees, yet HS2 goes ahead where you'll end up destroying more trees than planting. Putting a Daily Mail editor who are clearly on the side of the Tory government and put him in charge of Ofcom, so anything negative ever told in media where it be news, TV presenters giving opinions, programs etc, they can banned and fined. All these people moaning about democracy over brexit, we ain't got a democracy if one party controls the media, most papers and now the only thing regulating the whole lot.

bomboclawt75 on September 29th, 2020 at 12:15 UTC »

This is like Boris selling a house to you for 100K, you sign the agreement.

Then Bozo starts adding on zeros to the amount so that you now owe him a trillion pounds.

~Boris! We had a signed agreement !!!!

“I merely amended the agreement, which is well within the law.....................that I created.”

IWouldButImLazy on September 29th, 2020 at 09:43 UTC »

"Rule of.. law? Is this some peasant joke I'm too rich to understand?" - Boris Johnson, probably