Part of the openDemocracy Network

Power2010

Breaking the monopoly of the professional politician: Guy Aitchison's idea for popular forums in Parliament
 

When you're in a hole, stop digging: Pam Giddy's advice to MPs who still don't get it
 

Ending the divine right of political parties: Steve Hawkins makes a radical suggestion
 

Les Miserables and Power 2010: John Jackson diagnoses the political class's selective crisis-mongering
 

A call to oD readers: Helena Kennedy calls on oD readers to support Power2010
 

More in this series

Submit your idea for the Power 2010 pledge.

The British Crisis

Do the public really want to change ‘the system’?: Stuart Wilks-Heeg presents polling evidence
 

Don't trust MPs' constitutional poker: Guy Aitchison supports the call for a citizens' convention
 

Brown's 'National Council for Democratic Renewal': Anthony Barnett on the Prime Minister's desperate proposal
 

More in this series

Navigation

delicious | digg | reddit | newsvine | furl | google | yahoo | technorati | diigolet

Syndicate content

A bill of rights that belongs to us

John Jackson, 10 - 12 - 2008
delicious | digg | reddit | newsvine | furl | google | yahoo | technorati | diigolet

John Jackson (London, Mishcon de Reya): Here in California, eight hours behind British time, I have only just got round to reading Henry Porter’s excellent article in last Sunday’s Observer.

His call for a Bill of Rights with entrenched privacy laws may well be echoed strongly during the important Convention on Modern Liberty to be held next February and, hopefully, echoed with the rider that the protections we already have under the Human Rights Act should not be trimmed away.

What Henry has not touched on is how we get to the content of such a Bill. Conventional theory is that this is a matter for Parliament brought into play by Government and following, perhaps, some form of popular consultation.

That route would, unavoidably, become mired in our discredited party politics  and miss the opportunity to catch the swelling tide of public opinion that ‘we’, all of us, should play a more direct and decisive role in determining the fundamental principles which shape the society which is ‘ours’ and which we live in.

There are different, tried and tested, ways of doing this. How the ‘new’ South Africa devised its constitutional settlement, including a statement of rights,  is a shining example in which all South Africans take unifying pride.

Thinking along these lines may well be given impetus also by next year’s Convention. If it is. the issue of our need of a written constitution will not be, as Henry Porter puts it, ‘for another time’. It will be for ‘now’.

This article adheres to the openDemocracy.net principles.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><b> <i> <br> <p> <div> <img> <map>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may quote other posts using [quote] tags.
More information about formatting options

Books from Amazon