Originally posted by amateur51
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So - to follow on from my previous post (and at the risk of some repetition, for which I apologise in advance) - we might now be facing the distinct possibility of no UK HRA and no membership of ECHR (or only a conveniently selective use of it). However, no one has yet come clean about Britain's possible future attitude to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) or the perhaps lesser known International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to each of which Britain is a signatory, each of which has far wider application and endorsement than merely those of Britain or Europe and each of which had its origins in the United Nations; might Britain decide to withdraw as signatory to either or both of these and, if so, what effect might that have on the future tenability - not to say credibility - of its UN membership?
The follow-up to such measures would almost certainly be the abolition of the Freedom of Information Act, the curtailing of the scope of the Data Protection Act, the termination of Legal Aid and the scrapping of Conditional Fee Agreements (colloquially known as "no win, no fee" ones).
In such a climate, "pariah state" status for Britain could surely not be so far away and the irony of Mr Cameron's current visit to Afghanistan would be lost on few besides the most inflexible of devotees. Could such a Britain remain an EU member or might the much vaunted 2017 referendum on its membership be rendered unnecessary because Britain might just get thrown out?
There's just one snag to the implementation of any or all of these plans - they'd require an outright Conservative majority at the next General Election and, whilst a week - never mind several months - is a long time in politics, the likelihood of such a victory seems ever more remote.
Grayling claims that "80-90% of the British" population would favour what's now being put forward as the Tory stance on ECHR membership; he does not, however, reveal the origin of this particulary unbelievable statistic.
Britain once has a major international reputation for justice; presumably, however, some complacent individuals appear to consider that such a reputation might be worth sacrificing on the altar of "justice only for the rich and only when it suits us to dispense it". Odd, though, wouldn't you say, that all of this is rising to the surface at a time when cuts to the police force are still being made...
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