Friday 12 March 2021

Perfect Cover

I think we've all come to accept that a global pandemic is being used by all kinds of regimes to take unprecedented actions they'd never normally dare. Think China, Hong Kong, Myanmar, UK. Whilst we're all distracted and under cover of a dense smokescreen, our particularly nasty bullying Home Secretary is rushing through some legislation that's going to have profound consequences for our democratic way of life and free speech. Ian Dunt on the Politics.co.uk website explains:-  

Silencing Black Lives Matter : Priti Patel's anti-protest law


We knew this was coming. Priti Patel has been extremely clear about what she thinks of Black Lives Matter. “Those protests were dreadful,” she said last month. She’s also been clear about what she thinks of Extinction Rebellion. At a police conference last year she branded its activists “eco-crusaders turned criminals”. Now we see what she plans to do about it.

On Tuesday, the Home Office published the police, crime, sentencing and courts bill. It covers a wide range of areas, from sentencing to digital information. But it has a specific section on the policing of protests. And the function of this section is simple: It aims to silence them. It is cancel culture on a statutory footing, directed against the left.

This is not a metaphor. It is the literal and explicit function of the legislation.

The policing bill does this by amending an old piece of legislation called the Public Order Act 1986. This older Act gave police officers powers which they have used against protestors ever since. If they believe that a demonstration risked “serious public disorder, serious damage to property or serious disruption to the life of the community”, they could impose restrictions on it – for instance on where it went, whether it moved or how many people could be present.

This week’s policing bill adds a further justification for the restrictions: noise. If the noise of the protest “may result in serious disruption to the activities of an organisation” – for instance by distracting employees in a nearby office, then the police can impose restrictions. It goes without saying that this applies to almost any protest at all around parliament, the whole purpose of which is to get the attention of politicians. It can therefore cause “serious disruption” of an organisation.

It also applies to passers-by. If the noise of the protest could have “a relevant impact on persons in the vicinity of the procession”, the police can impose restrictions. The standard for this threshold is very low indeed: If the police believe that just one person nearby could be caused “serious unease, alarm or distress”, they can impose restrictions.

Wherever you look in the legislation, it works to lower the point at which the police can intervene. The old legislation, for instance, said they could do so to prevent “disorder, damage, disruption or intimidation”. That old formulation remains, but the Home Office has added a new criteria: “impact”.

Look closely at those words. The ones in the old legislation were all negative. But the new one is entirely neutral. Legally, it seems very broad. But if you look closer it is actually quite specific. It aims its sights at the entire purpose of protest.

The point of a demonstration is to be heard, to make an argument, to encourage others – whether they are people passing by, or workers in a company, or MPs in parliament – to hear the protestors’ point of view. In other words, to have an “impact”. This is why we call them ‘demonstrations’. It is a demonstration of a political view, expressed so that it can convince others. That is what makes it a vital part of free speech.

Demonstrations are not just any kind of free speech. They are the free speech of the unheard. They are the last medium of communication and influence available to people who are frozen out of the formal political system, either in the media or in parliament. And those are the people Patel is trying to silence.

The government is effectively sticking duct tape over the mouths of protestors. They are requiring, quite literally, that they do not make noise. They are silencing them. The inability to be heard is now a precondition for being able to protest.

“Protesting in the way that people did last summer was not the right way at all,” Patel said of Black Lives Matter. Well now we know what the right way is: a way in which no-one can hear you.

She then opens up a new front against demonstrators. She increases the number of them who can be prosecuted for failing to abide by the police restrictions.

These restrictions are usually announced to protestors by police on loudspeakers and on social media. But when those who broke the restrictions ended up in court, they could always say they were unaware of them. And that was entirely reasonable. Protests are chaotic events, often involving large areas, many people and – yes – a lot of noise. It’s very likely a protestor won’t have seen a tweet from the police or been in a position to hear their announcements on a loudspeaker.

This defence was open to them because the 86 Act said they had to have “knowingly” failed to comply. But the new legislation makes a very significant change. It applies if they “ought to know” of the restriction.

This is an astonishing move. It means that even if a demonstrator hasn’t seen the tweet sent by police, or heard the announcements on a loudspeaker, they can still be prosecuted.

Patel is also making the definition of a protest much wider. Previously “assemblies” and “processions”, which are the legal categories of these types of events, had to involve more than one person. But MPs have spent the last few years getting increasingly irritated by Steve Bray, the Remainer campaigner who stood outside parliament during the Brexit crisis. And the Home Office is keen to clamp down on Extinction Rebellion’s plan for a “Rebellion Of One” campaign which would see people take action on their own. The bill seeks to undermine these events by giving police the powers they would have over normal demonstrations even for “one-person protests”.

It then takes aim at the statue debate which blew up around Black Lives Matter. The government seems intent on raising the maximum penalty for criminal damage of a memorial from three months to an astonishing and completely disproportionate ten years. A memorial is defined extremely broadly indeed, as “a building or other structure, or any other thing” which has “a commemorative purpose”.

And then Patel does something really quite extraordinary, which should not be possible in a properly-functioning liberal democracy. She gives herself the power to fundamentally change the meaning of the law at any time without any real parliamentary scrutiny.

The 86 Act hinges on the phrase “serious disruption”. It’s police suspicion of that eventuality which authorises the powers they have over protestors. But the new legislation allows the secretary of state to “make provision about the meaning” of the phrase. She can do this using something called statutory instruments.

Statutory instruments are powers given to ministers allowing them to change or update law with no real parliamentary scrutiny. They’re supposed to be used to implement something that is in an Act of parliament – for instance by changing the type of speed cameras that are used in road safety legislation. It’s uncontroversial, unfussy stuff that parliament doesn’t really need to be consulted on. But Patel isn’t using them for anything like that. She is using them to unilaterally change the meaning of an Act of parliament.

She could, of course, have put what her definition of “serious disruption” is in this new bill. That means it would have got all the scrutiny you’d normally get for legislation – committee stage, impact assessments, press attention, full parliamentary votes. But she hasn’t done that. Instead, she has given herself the power to make it whatever she wants, whenever she wants, with only a slim scrap of scrutiny available. The criteria for whether a protest can go ahead and how is now effectively in the hands of the home secretary.

Just a few weeks ago, education secretary Gavin Williamson insisted that “free speech underpins our democratic society”. He did so because he was ostensibly concerned about left-wing students no-platforming conservatives in universities.

But this legislation shows just how shallow those sentiments were. This government isn’t interested in free speech. It is interested in culture war. Those on the government’s side of the culture war have their speech legally protected. Those on the other side are silenced.

Ian Dunt

23 comments:

  1. Get yer facts sheets here, free facts sheets, read all abart it, new bill coming, you were warned, control of the criminal masses is what they wanted, and NPS is a key means by which that control will be enforced.

    Particularly relevant to Ian Dunt's piece:

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-factsheets/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-protest-powers-factsheet

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-factsheets/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-criminal-damage-to-memorials-factsheet


    Some especially probation-relevant ones include:

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-factsheets/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-homicide-reviews-factsheet

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-factsheets/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-management-of-terrorist-offenders-factsheet

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-factsheets/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-release-of-serious-offenders-factsheet

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-factsheets/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-rehabilitation-factsheet

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-factsheets/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-parole-and-licence-conditions-factsheet

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-factsheets/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-community-sentences-factsheet

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-factsheets/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-sentence-lengths-for-serious-offenders-factsheet

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-factsheets/police-crime-sentencing-and-courts-bill-2021-sex-offender-management-factsheet

    "The measures in this Bill will help the police to keep the public safe from harm from those individuals who pose a known risk of sexual offending. They will enhance monitoring and supervision of individuals by providing greater strength and flexibility in existing orders, whilst delivering an incentive to change their offending behaviour.

    Chief Constable Michelle Skeer– NPPC lead for the Management of Sex Offenders and Violent Offenders"

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  2. The PR quotes accompanying these factsheets are a delight:

    "I endorse the use of polygraph testing…on high risk sex offenders… There have been a significant number of cases where information gained through [it] has led to children and vulnerable people being safeguarded." - DCI Jude Holmes, Public Protection & Serious Crime


    "Rather than continuing to send [offenders] back and forth to prison - doing the same thing but expecting a different result - we instead want to empower the sentencing system to use more effective community sentencing to get them off drugs and into the jobs that we know can lead them to a better life." - Rt Hon Robert Buckland QC MP, Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice



    "The public want to know that custodial sentences for these sorts of crimes do what they say on the tin. They want to know that when serious and violent offenders go to prison, that’s where they’ll stay for as long as possible. These reforms will restore their faith that the system will keep dangerous criminals off our streets for longer." - Rt Hon Robert Buckland QC MP, Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice.


    "When a prison sentence is passed, yes, there is a period on licence during which the individual needs to readjust with the appropriate controls, but there has to be a clear signal that the bulk of their terms will be served behind bars. That is what the public expect; that is what will increase confidence in the system; and that is what we are doing." - Rt Hon Robert Buckland QC MP, Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice




    "Ever since the first large-scale Extinction Rebellion protest in April last year I have been talking publicly and with the government about the potential for change to powers and to legislation that would enable the police to deal better with protests in general given that the act that we work to – the Public Order Act – is now very old, [dating to] 1986...

    ... But specifically to deal with protests where people are not primarily violent or seriously disorderly but, as in this instance, had an avowed intent to bring policing to its knees and the city to a halt and were prepared to use the methods we all know they did to do that." - Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Cressida Dick

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  3. The saddest of times - after years of providing advice, guidance, support & encouragement to the less fortunate, the disadvantaged, the disenfranchised & the dysfuctional the probation service is no longer an agent of change. It is now an agent of state control.

    From servant of the courts to servant of the state.

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  4. https://ukandeu.ac.uk/rutnam-settlement-civil-service/

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    1. The year-long Philip Rutnam saga, which started with his dramatic accusations about the home secretary’s bullying and briefing, fizzled out last week with the news that the two sides had agreed a settlement. A big cash sum, but no formal admission of liability from the Home Office. No comment from Priti Patel’s former permanent secretary.

      This may be in the best interests of both parties. But many people – and not just the massed array of journalists who would have hung on every word – will be annoyed at being denied the prospect of the ultimate court showdown between Patel and Rutnam.

      The government has deemed it value for money to make a payout to avoid a case that would have taken the lid off tensions inside one of the most important government departments.

      Civil servants, who may have fumed quietly when the prime minister ignored calls in November to dismiss Patel, after the prime minister’s own adviser on ministerial standards advised that her behaviour could be deemed to have “been in breach of the ministerial code, even if unintentionally”, will be frustrated that the government has moved to shield her from whatever evidence Rutnam would have exposed.

      The taxpayer can feel justifiably miffed that yet again they have had to bail the government out of their HR problems: in November, Sonia Khan, a special adviser unceremoniously sacked by Dominic Cummings received a substantial payoff ahead of an employment tribunal claim.

      In the past year, we have also seen the cabinet secretary, Mark Sedwill, leave his post following tensions with Boris Johnson’s aides and briefing against him, and the permanent secretary in the Department for Education was forced to step down over the summer exams debacle, which many saw as intended to save the skin of Gavin Williamson.

      These premature exits are often accompanied by silence, so the public is denied the knowledge of what actually happened. It doesn’t require too much imagination to think that, whoever’s interest is being served by these shabby deals, it isn’t the public’s.

      Cummings was once said to have threatened a “hard rain” would fall on complacent civil servants. Does this settlement mean the hard rain has finally stopped?

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    2. There are some signs this may be true. Although 2020 saw a long roll call of civil service exits, the replacements were crashingly conventional. Rutnam himself was swiftly replaced by a long serving diplomat, Matthew Rycroft, moved up from running the soon-to-be-dispatched Department for International Development (DfID).

      Simon McDonald, at the Foreign Office, was told to let someone else manage its takeover of DfID – but was replaced by our recently appointed high commissioner to India, Philip Barton. When Mark Sedwill was pushed aside as cabinet secretary, his replacement, Simon Case, was notable for his youth, not his background.

      And even the eyebrow-raising appointment of diplomat turned spad David Frost as national security adviser was reversed and the former permanent secretary at the Ministry of Defence was elevated in his place.

      Most notably, the government recently offered another five-year term to Tom Scholar at the Treasury, who this time last year was on the same “hitlist” as Rutnam, McDonald and Sedwill. He is the Catherine Parr to their Boleyn, Howard and Cleves at the court of King Boris.

      While tensions appear to have calmed with the demise of Cummings, the civil service may still be suffering from post-traumatic stress. There is more collateral damage from the Rutnam affair. The Cabinet Office investigation the prime minister ordered into Patel’s behaviour has led to two departures.

      Alex Allan resigned his post as the prime minister’s adviser on ministerial standards over Johnson’s refusal to accept his verdict on Patel. He has not been replaced. The top civil servant who conducted the inquiry has moved out rather than up.

      Helen MacNamara, head of propriety and ethics, has left to work for the football Premier League. She reportedly fought a long battle to get her Patel report published and provoked ire for her unwillingness to let the taxpayer fund the prime minister’s new decor.

      The risk from these experiences is that civil servants take the message that standing up to ministers over behaviour, extravagance or rule breaking is not a well appreciated protection from potential scandal but a career black mark at best, a career suicide note at worst.

      That is dangerous territory, as the government flirts with impropriety over procurement practices, appointments and spending allocations. The civil service needs to be able to challenge without having to fear the personal consequences.

      There is a danger, too, if decisions about the future of the civil service are seen as driven by politics not principle. The abolition of the departments of Exiting the EU and International Development were announced with minimal advance warning to staff.

      In the location battle within the Treasury, the chancellor seems to have won out over his officials with his decision to send them to Darlington. The risk is that too much of the government’s reform programme is seen instead as revenge on a civil service that the prime minister’s new deputy chief of staff called “aloof”.

      The Rutnam case with the Home Office may have been settled. But there is still a lot of work needed to rebuild the damage of the last year to relations between ministers and their civil servants.

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  5. The police officer arrested on suspicion of the kidnapping and murder of Sarah Everard has also been arrested on suspicion of a sexual offence (indecent exposure) alleged to have been committed three days before Sarah went missing. The indecent exposure offence, relating to another woman, has been referred to the Independent Office for Police Conduct as concerns have been raised about whether two police officers acted 'appropriately' in relation to the sexual offence. It may transpire that an opportunity to arrest was missed that could have possibly altered the course of subsequent events.

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  6. https://www-bbc-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/technology-56362170?amp_js_v=a6&amp_gsa=1&usqp=mq331AQFKAGwASA%3D#aoh=16155597280301&csi=0&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s

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    1. Two UK internet providers have been helping the Home Office and National Crime Agency track the websites visited by customers. A trial of new powers granted by the controversial Investigatory Powers Act of 2016 has been going on for months. It involves the internet providers creating internet connection records (ICRs), which can be used to show which websites a person visited and when.

      Digital rights campaigners have raised privacy concerns. "It's needles in haystacks, and this is collecting the entire haystack," said Heather Burns, policy manager with the Open Rights Group. "We should have the right to not have every single click of what we do online hoovered up into a surveillance net on the assumption that there might be criminal activity taking place."

      The Home Office said the trial was small in scale and in its early stages. It is exploring what kind of data could be retrieved under the law and how useful - or not - it might be, it said. But due to the nature of the trial, its exact workings are shrouded in secrecy, and it is not clear how many internet records are being collected for testing purposes, or to whom they belong.

      The test's existence was first reported by Wired. The power to spy on the websites people visit comes from the Investigatory Powers Act, which critics call a "snoopers' charter" due to widespread concerns about its scope. The act gives the secretary of state the power, with a judge's approval, to order internet providers to keep their records for up to a year. The definition is so broad that critics believe all ISPs will simply be issued with such orders to cover all their customers. Those records can include which websites a customer visits, when, and how much data they download, as well as the relevant IP (internet protocol) addresses - but not what pages or exactly what content they read on those sites. But that so-called "metadata" can still reveal a lot about a person's habits - from what political sites they visit to their use of pornography . There are, however, restrictions on who can access the ICRs and for what reasons.

      The trial involves the two UK internet providers, which have not been named, the Home Office, and the National Crime Agency. The internet providers themselves are prevented from saying if they are involved, as the law bans "disclosing" the existence of a data retention notice to anyone else. The trial's existence was never formally announced or publicised, but was instead contained in two short paragraphs in a 168-page annual report from the Investigatory Powers Commissioner's Office (Ipco), published in December.

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    2. A spokeswoman for Ipco said the trial was continuing, and "regular reviews" were being carried out to make sure the data collection was "necessary and proportionate" Once a full assessment of the trial has been carried out, a decision will be made on whether there is a case for national rollout," she said.

      But Ms Burns said the level of secrecy involved was a cause for concern. "Yes, they're ticking the boxes about the oversight and the judicial approval every way they can," she said. "But there's still an aspect of transparency which is crucially missing here." She said questions remained around the scope of the law, which had been a key concern for critics as it was being debated in Parliament.

      The Ipco report's brief reference to the trial revealed that it began in July 2019, when a judge approved a "retention notice" on a telecoms company. Another was granted in October that year, for a different telecoms company. Both are, it said, for "testing purposes only" - so it is not clear whether they are linked to criminal suspects.

      The National Crime Agency said it uses what it calls "data exploitation" to tackle crime. "We are supporting the Home-Office-sponsored trial of internet connection record capability to determine the technical, operational, legal and policy considerations associated with delivery of this capability," it said in a statement.

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    3. The extract quoted below is the most disturbing aspect of the story for me, as is the stealthy introduction of the police, crime, sentencing & courts bill referred to above. Its the sneakiness, the dishonesty, the arrogance & the control by bullying that typifies the behaviour of this government.

      They are the abusive bullying partner in any and every relationship they have, whether its with the electorate, the EU, the civil service - whoever.

      It is textbook coercive control.

      Choose your subject - brexit, pandemic, probation, nhs, teachers...

      And they've normalised it.

      Some years ago, around the time of TR implementation, I posted comments that the trend in organisational behaviour was moving headlong towards exactly this kind of abusive behaviour. I seem to recall it attracted comments that I was being 'silly'. How 'silly', I wonder, in the context of Ian Dunt's comments in today's blog?

      Here's that quote:

      "The internet providers themselves are prevented from saying if they are involved, as the law bans "disclosing" the existence of a data retention notice to anyone else. The trial's existence was never formally announced or publicised, but was instead contained in two short paragraphs in a 168-page annual report from the Investigatory Powers Commissioner's Office (Ipco), published in December."

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  7. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/mar/12/what-happened-women-uk-harassed-street

    This is an article by Marina Hyde of the Guardian, writing about her most recent experience of harassment. She says it was 'nothing' but it says everything about women feeling unsafe on the streets.

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  8. Continuing with the theme, this recently from Tim Stanley:

    "If you’ve ever wondered how civilised societies succumb to fascism or communism, now you know. Emergency. Panic. Control. Some readers will find it distasteful to compare lockdown Britain to Lenin or Mussolini, but even if the justification for our pandemic response operated on a far higher moral plain, the result was still totalitarian in structure. Think about it. An entire population was banned from going out. The economy was controlled by the Government. Protesters were arrested. 

    There were nights when people stood outside their front doors to applaud the heroes of coronavirus labour, an act of cathartic mass participation that was never mandated but was policed by ordinary men and women – the frighteningly keen enforcers of lockdown, happy to shop neighbours to the police for breaking the rules. Journalists were permitted free speech, which was nice, but we were warned of its consequences, that our words could kill others or lead to our ostracism from polite society. Never in my lifetime has speaking one’s mind felt so dangerous."

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    1. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4686844/

      May I suggest everyone watches it tonight :)

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    2. 'Death of Stalin' - Excellent film but no idea which channel or when.

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    3. Cold war Steve remember him great talent captures the mood . Dont forget he is a PO from w/mids doing a job and good stuff with his year off. Take a look and supporting comments on his talented works

      https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1310044682699013&set=a.775237282846425

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  9. Absolutely everything the arrogant fuckers say & do is covered up with lies, misdirection & any other form of deceit, whilst they all think its funny.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/mar/12/no-10-plague-pit-how-covid-brought-westminster-to-its-knees

    Lies & misdirection; self-serving, greedy, spoilt brats.

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    1. Westminster is an infectious place. A tiny germ of controversy or rebellion can spread across parliament, through Whitehall and into the prime minister’s office within hours. The windowless offices are cramped, MPs sit elbow to elbow in a Commons chamber that can only squeeze just over 400 MPs into its seats, two-thirds of the number in parliament.

      It is also a place of macho presenteeism, where the Greggs in Westminster tube station often serves as a nightly dinner spot for some of the most senior office-holders in the land.

      This was the situation when Covid-19 arrived in the UK. The Guardian has spoken to a number of people who were there at the time. They revealed that the virus spread far more widely than has been reported, and spoke about the sense of panic across Whitehall as Covid threatened to paralyse government.

      Horrified staff and ministers, dealing with the worst crisis in decades, had to reckon with how the country could be run when everyone in charge was getting ill.

      Famously, Boris Johnson, Matt Hancock and Dominic Cummings contracted the virus. So did England’s chief medical officer, Prof Chris Whitty, and the then cabinet secretary, Mark Sedwill. Ministers and their staff had it. Almost all the staff in Downing Street, too.

      It spread to special advisers across Whitehall and to parliamentary lobby journalists. Although the Palace of Westminster escaped any mass outbreaks among staff, several MPs caught Covid. Many in the office of the Labour leader, including Seumas Milne, had it. Jeremy Corbyn may have had it, although he was never tested and so has never been sure.

      But the situation was at its worst at the heart of Downing Street. For a number of days aides looked almost entirely to the then director of communications, Lee Cain, for direction.

      “No 10 was a plague pit,” one adviser recalls. “No one outside the postcode quite knows how bad it got in there.”

      Another said: “Lee was running the country, genuinely, for quite some time.”

      According to many of those present, almost the entire staff team in Downing Street caught Covid-19 at some point during those weeks, with James Slack, the prime minister’s spokesperson, a notable exception.

      “You’d got to a meeting expecting to see someone important and they were gone – and you knew why,” another adviser said. “It started off more surreal than scary, but it became very scary once the PM was so ill.”

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  10. I'm guessing it won't just be the Black Lives Matter and Extinction Rebellion and similar movements that will be affected by the Bill.
    I'm guessing (predicting?) that its powers will extend to picket lines and those involved in strike action?
    Bad news for trade unions and by extention workers rights?

    'Getafix

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  11. No protests. And now, no comedy on the government's channel:

    "The Mash Report: BBC satirical comedy cancelled after four years"

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  12. I agree, Getafix. I pondered these things this morning when I read the guest blog. There's a review of the Human Rights Act taking place - can't see that going our way. Most people aren't aware of what the Brexit Act gives away in relation to workers rights. People were too busy trying to work out the impact on trade and didn't get to the back of the act. The temporary Covid powers for the government? Well, they're temporary for now.....In their place would you give them up?

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  13. Priti seems to have been caught telling a few porkies, and misleading the select committee.

    https://www-independent-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/priti-patel-barracks-asylum-seekers-yvette-cooper-b1815973.html?amp_js_v=a6&amp_gsa=1&amp&usqp=mq331AQHKAFQArABIA%3D%3D#aoh=16155756353310&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.independent.co.uk%2Fnews%2Fuk%2Fhome-news%2Fpriti-patel-barracks-asylum-seekers-yvette-cooper-b1815973.html

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    1. "MPs have demanded an explanation from the home secretary for the apparently “misleading” evidence she gave in Parliament about the conditions in two controversial military sites housing asylum seekers.

      An inspection by the UK’s immigration and prison watchdogs of Napier Barracks, in Folkestone, and Penally Barracks, in Pembrokeshire – both of which were repurposed as asylum accommodation in September – found that the sites did not comply with official health and safety guidance.

      Preliminary findings of the inspection, published on Tuesday, stated that recommendations and concerns from Public Health England (PHE) and Public Health Wales (PHW) were “not actioned” before hundreds of asylum seekers were placed there."

      Why should she follow the advice of wet-blanket public health officials? In her opinion they're simply troublesome asylum seekers that shouldn't even be here and they should be grateful for a free roof over their heads.

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