Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

UK: Extending legal protection to political belief plays into the

Barry Mordsley

Personnel Today

Tuesday 01 May 2007

---
Extending protection to political beliefs is just handing the
fundamentalists another stick.

Since yesterday, supporters of the Teddy Bear Alliance Party and the
Church of the Militant Elvis Party (yes, these are real political
parties) have something to celebrate - their members may well be
protected from being discriminated against in the employment arena on
the grounds of their political beliefs.

I find it surprising that England has no protection for political
beliefs, when countries spanning the globe from Northern Ireland to New
Zealand have long protected employees and prospective employees in this
regard.

I would like to think that we are a tolerant and permissive society and
therefore such protection is not necessary. And however much I may
personally abhor extremist views, I still believe that people should be
protected against discrimination for holding those opinions.

Protected reason

Before these changes came into force, if you did not like the fact a
prospective employee was a member of the Liberal Party, the British
National Party (BNP) or indeed, the LEGALISE CANNABIS ALLIANCE, you just
did not hire them. Unless they could point to some other 'protected
reason' for not being taken on, such as race or sex discrimination, they
would not have been able to bring a claim. This may well be about to
change. And the changes will have the effect of bringing employers in
line with trade unions in respect of equality of treatment.

Until now, trade unions have been subject to tighter restriction in
respect of their membership than employers have been over their choice
of employees. Section 174 of the Trade Union and Labour Relations
(Consolidation) Act 1992 bans trade unions from recruiting a member on
the grounds that they are a member of a political party.

Having been told in 2003 by the UK court that it could not expel a
member of the BNP, the train drivers union Aslef recently succeeded in
its attempt to justify the expulsion, when the European Court of Human
Rights (ECHR) held that English legislation was in breach of Article 11
(freedom of association) of the Convention for the Protection of Human
Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.

On 30 April 2007, the Employment Equality (Religion or Belief)
Regulations 2003 were amended in a small but significant way. This may
give rise to protection from discrimination on the basis of political
opinion and also allows much more latitude for protection of employees
for their philosophical beliefs, for example believers in Scientology.

Defining moment

The regulations previously defined a 'belief' as any "religious belief
or similar philosophical belief". This definition required a
philosophical belief to be similar to a religious belief to qualify for
protection.

That was a tall order, as demonstrated most recently in another case
involving the BNP, in which one of its members failed to convince an
employment tribunal that fascism counted as a 'similar philosophical
belief'.

On 30 April 2007, the word 'similar' was removed from the definition.
This will considerably widen the scope of what might be regarded as a
'philosophical belief' so that any genuine philosophical belief is
covered by the regulations. And this includes political belief.

The question then will be what is included as a philosophical belief? In
discussing this amendment in the House of Lords, baroness Turner of
Camden, suggested that 'philosophical belief' should be interpreted in
line with case law at the ECHR and that the beliefs intended to be
protected are those that amount to "a world view or life stance".

Alien concept

Interestingly, therefore, it may well extend to beliefs that are not
political in nature and are purely philosophical. For example, it may
cover (flippantly) those in the Flat Earth Society (if there are still
members),or those who believe we are not alone in the universe and that
aliens walk among us, or-more seriously - Scientologists.

The changes may open up a whole new area of litigation. I fear that it
will be those holding extreme political opinions who will avail
themselves of this protection.

Barry Mordsley is also chairman of the International Bar Association
Discrimination Committee.

Barry Mordsley
Partner,
Salans

http://www.personneltoday.com/Articles/



 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!