Courts would block Farage’s ‘mass deportation’ plan using common law, says former attorney general
That seems to be from an interview in the Independent with Dominic Grieve.
It leads on from the other example I gave yesterday. In this case, there is nothing to stop Parliament passing a bill saying they will return people to countries where they face torture and execution. Basically, Parliament can pass any law it wants. Even when there isn't a majority in the House of Lords. There is a mechanism called the Parliament Act which means that, if the Lords object, then the government just has to wait a year for that law to come into effect.
What Domininc Grieve is saying is that there is a possibility that the courts might be able to stop a deportation in the most extreme examples. For instance, in a case where a life was in danger or a person would face torture.
But what Dominic Grieve doesn't say is that, if the law has been drafted very tightly, to cover all those scenarios, then the courts won't be able to stop such deportations..
But on what the courts might still do, he added: “You still can’t rule out that a court might – in the case of somebody where it was quite clear they were going to be deported, in circumstances where their lives would be seriously at risk in their home country – intervene to stop deportation under customary law or even the common law.”
Courts would block Farage’s ‘mass deportation’ plan, says former attorney general
Exclusive: Dominic Grieve has issued a scathing critique of Reform’s immigration plans ahead of a speech by the party’s leader
