- Sat Feb 11, 2023 9:04 pm
#39270
Christ on a bike. Braverman finally managed to say something, and it blamed the victims.
A High Court judgement that regulations affecting more than 2.5m EU citizens living in the UK are unlawful will not be challenged by the government.
The Home Office has confirmed it will not appeal against the ruling, despite previously indicating it would do so.
Many EU citizens could have faced losing their right to residence if they did not further apply for settled or pre-settled status within five years.
The case was brought by a watchdog for EU citizens' rights after Brexit.
The watchdog Independent Monitoring Authority (IMA) was supported by the European Commission and the3million, a group representing EU citizens in the UK. It said the High Court ruling had "averted a ticking time bomb"...
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-64663795.amp
Yug wrote: ↑Thu Feb 16, 2023 5:16 pm Funny how those "out of touch"™ "enemies of the people"™ always seem to be on the side of the good guys. It's like the government keeps trying to break the law, or something.This is tremendous news to halt the pointless misery EU citizens went through. And most know from their Leave voting work colleagues why the government isn’t pursuing this one; “Oh, we didn’t mean you.”
A High Court judgement that regulations affecting more than 2.5m EU citizens living in the UK are unlawful will not be challenged by the government.
The Home Office has confirmed it will not appeal against the ruling, despite previously indicating it would do so.
Many EU citizens could have faced losing their right to residence if they did not further apply for settled or pre-settled status within five years.
The case was brought by a watchdog for EU citizens' rights after Brexit.
The watchdog Independent Monitoring Authority (IMA) was supported by the European Commission and the3million, a group representing EU citizens in the UK. It said the High Court ruling had "averted a ticking time bomb"...
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-64663795.amp
Proposed legislation aimed at curbing tactics used by protest groups has suffered eight defeats in the House of Lords.At a time when trust in the police is at its lowest point since Robert Peel was Home Secretary, giving coppers sweeping powers to harass and sanction innocent people probably wouldn't have increased said trust, not was it likely to win many votes for the Tories.
Peers rejected key measures of the controversial public order bill, including ditching a measure to let police exercise stop and search without suspicion to tackle disruptive demonstrations.
In other setbacks for the government during the bill’s passage through the upper chamber, peers backed restrictions on the use of protest banning orders and removed a provision that would have allowed the sanction to be imposed against people who had not been convicted of any offence.
A separate government attempt aimed at cracking down on disruption caused by protesters slow marching was also rejected by peers. However, as the measure was only introduced when the bill reached the Lords, it cannot return as it was not in the original legislation passed by MPs...
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... e-of-lords
Andy McDandy wrote: ↑Thu Feb 23, 2023 9:07 am A while ago someone neatly summed up incels, pickup artists and such as people convinced that there are cheat codes to life and all you need to do is find them.‘Press [F] to pay respects’ made real
I'd extend that metaphor, and say that there are politicians, Braverman a great example of them, who think that life's a computer game, and there's a "sorry" button. And that all they have to do is click it and move on.
Surge in number of Britons fighting to hold on to their citizenshipI should be shocked, but nothing this racist government does is particularly shocking any more.
At least 75 people successfully overturned Home Office orders to strip them of their British citizenship last year, according to records obtained by the Observer, which reveal a dramatic increase in challenges to the government’s use of the controversial powers.
On Wednesday, Shamima Begum, 23, lost her appeal against the Home Office’s decision to remove her British citizenship and is stranded in Syria, barred from returning to the UK.
New figures show that, between January and September 2022, there were 354 other legal challenges against the government’s citizenship deprivation orders, less than a fifth of which were successful. The figures, by far the highest on record, suggest a steep increase in these orders.
Last week’s decision by the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (Siac) to reject the appeal by Begum, who left the UK aged 15 to join Islamic State, continues to prompt outrage.
Yesterday, a former intelligence officer for the Canadian security services, which employed a double agent to smuggle Begum into Isis territory, condemned it as a “travesty of justice”.
Huda Mukbil, who worked with MI5, said the verdict defied belief. “They even recognise she was a child and was trafficked into Syria; there was a breach of duty on behalf of the state [the UK] to make sure she doesn’t leave the country,” she said.
Concern has been rising after the government introduced reforms, making it easier to strip people of their citizenship without warning, in the Nationality and Borders Act, which received royal assent last April...
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