A thoughtful essay on the Inglorious Revolution of 24 September 2019, with a bit of the Marxist inspired background of the Supreme Court.
From First Things
By Peter Hitchens
Far too often nowadays I have that disturbing feeling of walking on a
thin crust suspended over a great void. Things and institutions I have
regarded as secure and permanent all my life keep disappearing. I had
this feeling on Tuesday when our new “Supreme Court” (an absurd term, as
we shall see) started ordering our government about.
We were warned. The revolutionary Blair government, crammed with
former student Marxists but bizarrely viewed by media and politicians
alike as “right-wing,” had announced years ago that it planned to set up
such a body, supposedly to tidy up and “modernize” our messy laws.
Others wondered if they had something else in mind—something that
might lead to the scenes of last Tuesday, when a British prime minister,
while on a diplomatic visit to New York City, was publicly humiliated
and effectively ordered home by a roomful of lawyers. One wise prophet,
the distinguished judge Lord (David) Neuberger, warned in October 2009
that the planned new court could assert itself against the
Parliament-based government. He said there was a real risk of “judges
arrogating to themselves greater power than they have at the moment.”
He suggested that the Supreme Court had been created “as a result of
what appears to have been a last-minute decision over a glass of
whisky.” And then with even greater prescience he prophesied, “The
danger is that you muck around with a constitution like the British
Constitution at your peril because you do not know what the consequences
of any change will be.”
Well, quite. But the man who piloted the change through Parliament,
the left-wing lawyer and one-time flatmate of Anthony Blair, Lord
(Charles) Falconer, seemed pleased at the possibility of a more
politically engaged and aggressive judiciary. He predicted: “The Supreme
Court will be bolder in vindicating both the freedoms of individuals
and, coupled with that, being willing to take on the executive.”
Why did we never even have such a body until ten years ago? As we
shall see, it would have been, and still is, a contradiction in terms.
But in interesting times such as these, elephants fly, fishes walk, figs
grow on thorns, and oxymorons inherit the earth.
The most powerful law court in the land was, by a curious paradox,
not in the land at all, but based in tiny Luxembourg, across the Narrow
Seas which have kept invaders from our door but are useless against
bureaucratic takeovers by the European Union. There sits the European
Court of Justice, which as long ago as 1990 established that it could
tell British courts to overrule British Acts of Parliament when they
conflict with E.U. law. It can carry on doing this until we eventually
do leave the E.U., if we ever do.
These various messes came about because we are so old, and rely so
much on convention and manners, that it is all too easy for
unconventional and ill-mannered busybodies to come storming in with new
ideas. England’s constitution was not planned and built, like America’s.
Instead, it grew during a thousand years of freedom from invasion. Both
are beautiful in their way. America’s fundamental law has the cold,
orderly beauty of a classical temple. England’s has the warmer, more
chaotic loveliness of an ancient forest. It seems to be wholly natural
but, when examined closely, it shows many signs of careful cultivation
and pruning. Our powers are not as separated as America’s, but slightly
tangled. Still, it has worked well enough for us over time.
Any thinking person must admire both the American and the English
constitutions as serious efforts in a world of chaos, despotism, and
stupidity to apply human intelligence to the task of giving people
ordered, peaceful, and free lives. They have a common origin in the
miraculous Magna Carta, which Americans often revere more than modern
Englishmen do. We in England have grown complacent about our liberty,
and have become inclined to forget our great founding documents.
But the two constitutions are not the same, and in my view they are
not compatible. For my whole life, until a few years ago, the very idea
that England should have a Supreme Court was an absurdity. The Highest
Court in England is the Crown in Parliament which, as I was once taught,
had the power to do everything except turn a man into a woman. In these
more gender-fluid times, that expression is not much used. But it
contains the truth. Parliament can make any law and overturn any law,
made by itself or by the courts.
That is why England (often to my regret) lacks a First Amendment and
cannot have one unless we undergo a revolution. No law in England could
possibly open with the words “Parliament shall make no law.”’ Our 1689
Bill of Rights, the model for the U.S. Bill of Rights a century later,
tells the king what he cannot do and the courts what they cannot do. It
grants me (as a Protestant) the right to have weapons for my defense.
But while it draws its sword against arbitrary power, it puts a
protective arm round Parliament.
So far so good, though I do increasingly worry that it cannot last.
Our system is terrifying in theory, and so in difficult times it could
be just as terrifying in practice. With a large enough majority, a
government could dismantle our free constitution in an afternoon. In
practice, politicians shrink from using such powers and—if they want to
attack our liberty—use a delicate salami-slicer for the purpose.
I will try to explain our crisis. Our new “Supreme Court,” just ten
years old and barely out of short pants, has, by eleven votes to none,
condemned the Johnson government for suspending Parliament for a few
extra days. This is extremely odd.
First, how is this a legal problem at all? Parliament was not
dissolved or arrested by soldiers. Nobody has tried to make law in its
absence, or raise taxes without it, or illegally prolong the life of our
standing army. It was just made to take two weeks extra holiday—at a
time of year when it normally takes three weeks anyway for political
party conventions. This was a slippery thing to do, but it failed in its
aim of making Parliament readier to do the executive’s bidding. Rather
spectacularly, Parliament used its remaining days in session to give
Prime Minister Al “Boris” Johnson two big black eyes, denying him the
general election he wanted and banning him from leaving the E.U. without
a negotiated settlement. In short, Parliament proved what most people
already knew: It can look after itself when faced with a tricky prime
minister, and doesn’t need lawyers or courts to do so.
There’s another problem. Another court full of very distinguished
attorneys and judges, the High Court, looked at the same thing a few
weeks ago and said it was “not justiciable.” This means that there is no
keyhole in this problem into which to insert the key of law, no point
of legal leverage. In short, it was none of their business and should
have been left to Parliament.
This High Court contains some of the sharpest and most experienced
legal brains in the country. Yet none of the members of the new court
shared their view. How is this possible in any gathering of genuinely
independent minds? Unanimity is for sheep. It looked fairly obvious
that, given an opportunity to boss the executive about for the first
time, the “Supreme” Court had just taken it for its own sake. Britain is
now the sort of country where judges can strike down the actions of the
head of government—but alas, not the sort of country where those
mysterious judges have to undergo searching hearings before they are
appointed.
And what were they unanimous about? There was no great statute that
had been broken. The supposed “precedents” were desperately thin, and
dealt with serious breaches of law. They really didn’t equate to sending
Parliament on a couple extra weeks of vacation. Left-wing people by and
large whooped with joy over the supposed humiliation of Johnson, whose
problems are actually elsewhere just now. The rest of us scraped the
debris off the walls and ceiling and marveled at just how lasting, how
rich, and how nasty the legacy of Anthony Blair remains.
Peter Hitchens is a columnist for the Mail on Sunday.
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