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  1. #1
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    Default Parliament for once sticks up for national interest as MPs vote down European ruling

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...EU-ruling.html

    Day we stood up to Europe: In an unprecedented move, MPs reject European court's ruling that prisoners must get the vote

    Quote Originally Posted by Daily Mail
    MPs mounted an historic defence of Britain’s sovereign right to make its own decisions last night by defying demands from the European courts to hand prisoners the vote. They voted overwhelmingly to maintain a 140-year-old ban on convicts ­taking part in elections because, they said, those who commit a crime have ‘broken their contract with society’. The decisive stance plunged Parliament into an unprecedented stand-off against the European Court of Human Rights.

    No right to vote: David Davis said prisoners had broken their contract with society and should not be allowed the same rights as ordinary citizens.

    Quote Originally Posted by Daily Mail
    After six hours of impassioned debate, MPs voted by 234 to 22 – a majority of 212 – to defy a ruling from the ECHR that the ban must be overturned. Dozens of Conservative backbenchers lined up to insist that after decades of toeing the line, the time has come for Britain to tell unelected Strasbourg judges that they have overstepped their authority.

    Experts said the vote left Britain’s relationship with the European court in ‘uncharted territory’. It places the Prime Minister under intense pressure to launch a defining challenge against Strasbourg. Proposing the cross-party motion which ­‘supports the current situation in which no prisoner is able to vote’, former Tory shadow home secretary David Davis said: ‘The ­general point is very clear in this country: that is that it takes a pretty serious crime to get yourself sent to prison.
    I'm actually stunned, lets make this more of a habit and send a clear message that the sovereign parliament of the United Kingdom along with its sovereign courts are capable of making decisions for our country as they are accountable to the British people and the British people alone. These guys have a terrible track record when it comes to Europe, but for once I can actually say; well done to those MPs who represented their electorates and voted against this ruling from the European courts. Although that said, I shoudn't really be saying well done as this is only a small part of a massive issue in which numerous MPs have lied and lied to us over again and again - but at least its a start.

    See, we can stand up for national interests - and look what happens; nothing, we ourselves remain better off. Next step; a referendum on our membership of the EU and its fellow European bodies, including the ECHR. (but I won't count on it!)

    Thoughts?
    Last edited by -:Undertaker:-; 11-02-2011 at 01:07 AM.

  2. #2
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    Thank Christ for that! Common sense has won the day There are quite a few interesting articles on this. The Guardian came out with some random quotes:

    "There are some Tories who would vote against anything labelled "European" even if they were warned that Hugo Chávez would personally come to Britain and kidnap their children. ... They found a dozen reasons why we should ignore the ruling of the court."

    "This was one of many accusations against the ECHR which, we were told by implication, is full of callow, ignorant judges who would be unfit to oversee a football game in a school playground, and which has so great a backlog that it is 46 years behind."
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2...-simon-hoggart

    I think I can sleep happily now Below is apparently what Davis had also said, which is a very good quote.

    “When you commit a crime which is sufficiently serious to put you in prison, you sacrifice a number of rights. The concept is simple, if you break the law, you cannot make the law."
    http://www.dailyexpress.co.uk/posts/...Ps-in-debates/

    It's an obvious concept. To vote in an MP, or to vote in general, is putting your view across on the creation or design of law. There's nothing else you are voting for, especially when many laws are for the free, law-abiding citizens - why would prisoners want to vote or have their voice heard on the location of a new bus stop? Seeing as someone who is in prison has clearly broken the law, you should not be allowed a say on what happens with the law. If it's existed for hundreds of years, then it's been doing a good job. The EU/ECHR does not need to get involved, when our legal system has been tailored to us and works.

    It's also interesting to note that, although the ECHR is seperate from the European Union, what it has to say must be heard by members of the European Union. It's quite naughty, really.
    Last edited by GommeInc; 11-02-2011 at 05:07 AM.

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    Common sense always wins in the end

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    i don't agree with the MPs on this one at all. Prisoners should have voting rights as i believe it shouldn't be possible or legal to 'remove' someone's rights, even as part of a punishment. although i think what might be more appropriate to think about is that should cases based on the european human rights act be heard in british courts only. should cases like this need to be heard in a european court rather than at the new supreme court?
    goodbye.

  5. #5
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    This ruling is a clear victory for public opinion.

    Quote Originally Posted by alexxxxx View Post
    i don't agree with the MPs on this one at all. Prisoners should have voting rights as i believe it shouldn't be possible or legal to 'remove' someone's rights, even as part of a punishment. although i think what might be more appropriate to think about is that should cases based on the european human rights act be heard in british courts only. should cases like this need to be heard in a european court rather than at the new supreme court?
    Surely your right of movement/freedom if taken de facto when you go to prison, unless you are proposing abolishing prison altogether as it breaches and removes 'rights'? if not, then whats the argument there - there is no argument over 'rights' as rights are de facto taken when the state locks you up for committing a crime. It is a very simple concept, you forfeit certain rights when you commit a crime. If the rights of freedom, movement, voting and so forth are not removed as part of the punishment - then what exactly is the punishment?

    As for the British Supreme Court, lets make our Supreme Court a supreme court of the land and remove ourselves from the ECJ and ECHR.
    Last edited by -:Undertaker:-; 11-02-2011 at 01:41 PM.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by alexxxxx View Post
    i don't agree with the MPs on this one at all. Prisoners should have voting rights as i believe it shouldn't be possible or legal to 'remove' someone's rights, even as part of a punishment. although i think what might be more appropriate to think about is that should cases based on the european human rights act be heard in british courts only. should cases like this need to be heard in a european court rather than at the new supreme court?
    "Why fix something that isn't broken" comes to mind. It's been law for over a hundred years and has worked. If you've broken the law you should have no say on how to interpret or change the law once in prison. You've lost the right to freedom, thus you've lost the unnatural or "legal" right to vote for the people who are free and law abiding. They may allow it for short-term inmates (4 years max) but anymore it becomes tedious, especially when they're in there for a reason. If a fight breaks out between the ECHR and the UK, I hope we don't back down and other good things come out of it.

    Also, a quote from my Head of Law:

    "No votes for prisoners as they've "broken their contract with society"? That criterion would instantly disenfranchise all the ConDem MPs!"

    It's my favourite quote so far

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by -:Undertaker:- View Post
    This ruling is a clear victory for public opinion.



    Surely your right of movement/freedom if taken de facto when you go to prison, unless you are proposing abolishing prison altogether as it breaches and removes 'rights'? if not, then whats the argument there - there is no argument over 'rights' as rights are de facto taken when the state locks you up for committing a crime. It is a very simple concept, you forfeit certain rights when you commit a crime. If the rights of freedom, movement, voting and so forth are not removed as part of the punishment - then what exactly is the punishment?

    As for the British Supreme Court, lets make our Supreme Court a supreme court of the land and remove ourselves from the ECJ and ECHR.
    People have a right to fair justice! You do not have a right to liberty after being punished after a fair trial: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Article...n_Human_Rights - this is not covered under your right to liberty. Your rights are not 'de facto' as taken. You either never have the right, or you have rights and they cannot be taken away (in my opinion). However there is a right to Free and fair elections: http://www.yourrights.org.uk/yourrig...elections.html - this is not related to 'liberty' in the ECHR. Public Opinion in the tabloids could potentially 'ban' civil partnerships - should that be illegal too?

    "Why fix something that isn't broken" comes to mind. It's been law for over a hundred years and has worked. If you've broken the law you should have no say on how to interpret or change the law once in prison. You've lost the right to freedom, thus you've lost the unnatural or "legal" right to vote for the people who are free and law abiding. They may allow it for short-term inmates (4 years max) but anymore it becomes tedious, especially when they're in there for a reason. If a fight breaks out between the ECHR and the UK, I hope we don't back down and other good things come out of it.
    Again, it's a differing opinion to mine.
    goodbye.

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    Bet they'll fine us billions.
    One for the road. :rolleyes:

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    Quote Originally Posted by alexxxxx View Post
    Again, it's a differing opinion to mine.
    It's an interesting opinion, but from a legal perspective, voting is a legal right than a human right. So the whole right argument back fires in a way You do not have to vote, and voting doesn't have a direct link to the quality of your life. A legal right is somewhat synthetic, as is a voting system.

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    Quote Originally Posted by GommeInc View Post
    It's an interesting opinion, but from a legal perspective, voting is a legal right than a human right. So the whole right argument back fires in a way You do not have to vote, and voting doesn't have a direct link to the quality of your life. A legal right is somewhat synthetic, as is a voting system.
    I don't quite understand this. There are no 'natural' rights at all. You don't have a natural right not to be tortured, only legal 'synthetic' ones. I don't understand your argument here. Voting and democracy does improve living standards also.
    goodbye.

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