Fury as Labour law chief Lord Hermer insists UK must stay in ECHR | Politics | News
Keir Starmerโs law chief has ruled out leaving the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR), despite warnings from Labour colleagues that it is protecting criminals and undermining the fight against illegal immigration. Attorney General Lord Hermer insisted nothing is โoff the tableโ in efforts to stop small boats – but added that the Prime Minister has been โabsolutely crystal clearโ that the UK will not be leaving the ECHR.
Conservatives said the comment showed Labour was not serious about ending illegal immigration. Tory Shadow Justice Secretary Robert Jenrick said: โLord Hermer is spouting a load of nonsense. The EU returns tens of thousands of migrants to non-ECHR countries every year. Thatโs what normal counties do. The argument to stay in the broken ECHR is collapsing.โ
Several deportation attempts have been halted by how Article 8 of the ECHR, the right to private and family life, has been interpreted in UK law.
It has prompted a Government review of the human rights law in relation to immigration cases.
Lord Hermer said there should be โno tensionโ between taking โtough and necessary measuresโ dealing with immigration, asylum and small boat crossings, and emphasising the country has an โextraordinarily diverse multicultural societyโ.
He added: โI think it behoves us all in our language to be very clear about that, because we have seen in recent weeks some of the dangers when we are notโฆ of our minority communities feeling fear and under threat.
โThatโs not this country. This country is one that embraces our extraordinary success story of diversity and multiculturalism, and it behoves us all to make plain weโre going to be robust to deal with the problem, but weโre doing it in a British way.โ
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has warned that the ECHR is damaging public confidence in the rule of law. Speaking in June, in her previous role as Justice Secretary, she said: โThe successes of our Convention cannot be taken for granted. Because when rules are broken with impunity, trust collapses โ not just in states, but in the idea of democracy itself.
โAnd across Europe, public confidence in the rule of law is fraying. There is a growing perception โ sometimes mistaken, sometimes grounded in reality โ that human rights are no longer a shield for the vulnerable, but a tool for criminals to avoid responsibility.
โThat the law too often protects those who break the rules, rather than those who follow them.โ
She said: โIf a foreign national commits a serious crime, they should expect to be removed from the country. But we see cases where individuals invoke the right to family life โ even after neglecting or harming those very family ties.โ
