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Adam Collyer's avatar

This article is spot on. Most of the Acts of Parliament that are passed these days are basically Enabling Acts, passing the power to Ministers (which in practice means civil servants) to govern by regulations, and giving the power to quangos to make laws and fine people for non-compliance, without reference to the courts.

Several examples spring to mind.

The first is the Electoral Commission, which has the power to fine people for breaking the election rules/law that it has created. (See Darren Grimes for an example of this.) The Information Commissioner has similar powers.

The second example is even more egregious: the RT website is blocked by internet service providers, having been added to a list of banned websites by the relevant Minister. The power to create a list of banned websites was itself taken by the Minister by issuing a regulation under the Sanctions and Money Laundering Act.

And the third example was of course the lockdowns. Many people think they were created by the Coronavirus Act, but they were in fact created by regulations issued by Matt Hancock under the Public Health Act. That Act (passed in 1984) was originally fairly innocuous but the regulatory powers were added in a frankly toxic amendment to it passed in 2008.

All this amounts to a brutal attack on our democracy itself, and in my opinion we are running out of time to save it.

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Scouse Heisenburg's avatar

Could the common law save (physical) cash? What might a hypothetical case be out of which came a judgment that retailers must accept payment in cash?

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