Last week we had to threaten the Home Office with a judicial review claim – a process which typically costs £1000s – to get a refugee the £8 weekly allowance he’s bn owed since Oct 2020. They agreed at the last minute so we didn’t proceed. So why’s that of any wider interest? 1/
Well, the govt last week issued a “summary” of departments’ submissions to the Independent Review of Administrative Law which raises some, let’s say, controversial attitudes to the legal system within government 2/
lawgazette.co.uk/news/no-eviden…
It’s odd they’ve issued only this summary rather than telling us exactly how specific govt depts would like to control processes by which they’re held to account by members of the public via the legal system. We can only speculate on what’s being hidden 3/
assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/upl…
We do know the Home Office is concerned by the costs of legal processes (we don’t know if these figures include the costs they had to pay to successful applicants) but that concern doesn’t seem to have led it to think about how it might do things better 4/
Vital though it was for the person concerned, it’s of course absurd that we had to threaten to take the HO to court over £8 per week, but as so often with the HO there was no alternative – communications go unanswered & there’s no complaints process worth mentioning 5/
So if the HO feels the JR process is overused (as it clearly does), you’d think it might reflect on why over 80% of judicial review claims are brought against it and whether that says something about its culture & the lack of other ways of challenging its decisions 6/
For instance the HO doesn’t seem to have considered whether creating a less opaque, unresponsive & deliberately obstructive immigration process with full rights of appeal & a functioning complaints process might drastically reduce numbers of legal challenges & therefore costs 7/
Or perhaps it has considered that. Perhaps the Home Office values the benefits of a system where everyone involved drowns in red tape & impenetrable laws & rules, in which case you might think it ought to shut up about the legal costs involved in maintaining that system 8/
The “£8 weekly allowance” case I mentioned was a rare one where a threat of legal action caused the HO to act – in many cases it doesn’t respond to threats, or does so by folding its arms & defiantly defending its decisions, only to back down after the claim has been lodged 9/
Given how often it effectively treats the pre-action process as a “who blinks first” staring-match, again you’d think it was a bit hypocritical of the Home Office to criticise others for misusing it (in fact I don’t even understand what this part of its response means) 10/
Finally, given that many legal aid solicitors’ firms only survive financially by getting paid for defeating the Home Office in court, it’s pretty galling to see the Home Office complaining about having to pay up when it’s acted unlawfully, or boasting about not doing so 11/
The bare minimum we ought to be demanding of politicians is: simplify the immigration system, put people’s rights & needs at the centre, support people with quality legal advice, make the Home Office properly accountable.

It’s not asking for the moon, is it /

/end

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Alasdair Mackenzie

Alasdair Mackenzie Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @AlasdairMack66

24 Mar
Let’s say you are– for sake of argument – involved in a democracy movement in a post-Soviet dictatorship. Recently the police picked you up, beat the hell out of you & assaulted you in ways you’d rather not dwell on > 1/
Then they booted you out of the police station and told you to keep quiet if you value your life. Recovering at home, you’re aware of the blokes in parked cars outside the flat, & your neighbour’s friend in the police warns you you’re on the list next time it all kicks off 2/
You climb down a drainpipe in the middle of the night and make it to your aunt’s house.

What do you do now? 3/
Read 20 tweets
22 Mar
So Priti Patel is on the warpath again – about asylum seekers, their lawyers and the legal mechanisms they use to challenge the Home Office. Here’s a little thread to try & illustrate how honest she is being in presenting the government as the victims in all this. 1/
My asylum-seeking client – let’s call her Z – is a single woman with a small child. They applied to the Home Office for support & accommodation (“asylum support”) in March 2020. The HO agreed they’re destitute and therefore eligible for asylum support. 2/
Z and her child waited for that accommodation to be provided 3/
Read 15 tweets
10 Dec 20
Meet Mohammed al-Masari. He’s a former physics professor and leading critic of the Saudi Arabian royal family. In 1996 he fled to the UK and sought asylum. The Saudis demanded that the British should expel him. 1/ Image
This presented the then Tory government with the opportunity to show how much it cared for human rights, an opportunity which, obviously, it flunked. 2/
Now clearly Dr al-Masari would be tortured or killed if sent back, so how could the government placate the furious Saudis w/out breaking the law? They decided to send him to Dominica, in the Caribbean.
They offered the Dominicans large amounts in aid – so it’s widely assumed. 3/
Read 16 tweets
19 Oct 20
We regret once again to inform you that your taxes are being spent on misleading propaganda.

It’s important to appreciate just what’s going on here. >
This stat from the video is correct but out of context, bc a) most refugees in Europe don’t arrive via resettlement programmes but “spontaneously” ie independently of govt measures & b) the number taken by 🇬🇧 is a pinprick next to over 26 million refugees in the world in 2019>
But this is the real problem: the UK’s focus *isn’t* currently on resettlement - the 5600 accepted under that route compares to more than 13k accepted after arriving independently. So why does the Home Office want you to think this? >
Read 5 tweets
18 Oct 20
Of course we don’t yet know whether to take the Home Office’s latest idea any more seriously than wave machines or Ascension Island, but what seems likely it involves performative viciousness against some of the world’s most vulnerable people 1/ ImageImage
Inhuman & degrading treatment is banned by Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which also bans torture, but the controversial aspect (for the Tories) is the way it prevents people being expelled to die or suffer intensely from physical/ mental illness 2/
The principle that it’s inhuman to send seriously ill people to die or suffer great anguish was upheld recently by our Supreme Court, following a decision of the European Court of Human Rights called Paposhvili 3/
supremecourt.uk/cases/uksc-201…
Read 8 tweets
15 Oct 20
Seems reasonable to assume that if @uklabour’s stated reasons for supporting the CHIS (“Spycops”) Bill are as evasive as this piece by @ConorMcGinn (shadow security minister), either they’ve got no proper reasons or don’t want to admit what they are >
labourlist.org/2020/10/voting…
Ok, so starting with this, the behaviour of the security services is already subject to the Human Rights Act, as are all actions by public authorities. The CHIS Bill won’t affect that at all. >
Does this mean undercover sources will cease to be in the shadows? If so, they’re not really undercover, are they? Is that really what the CHIS Bill is trying to achieve? What does Conor McGinn even think he means by this?
Read 9 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!