Why the United Kingdom government cannot leave the ECHR without either breaching or re-negotiating the Good Friday Agreement
The overlooked obstacle to the United Kingdom withdrawing from the ECHR
From time to time the demand comes from a government minister, or from one of their political and media supporters, for the United Kingdom to leave the European Convention of Human Rights.
This short blogpost sets out the most obvious obstacle for the government in doing this.
The obstacle – if that is the correct word – is the Good Friday Agreement.
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That thirty-six page document – which is not as read as widely as it should be – contains a number of express provisions in respect of the ECHR:
“The British Government will complete incorporation into Northern Ireland law of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), with direct access to the courts, and remedies for breach of the Convention, including power for the courts to overrule Assembly legislation on grounds of inconsistency.
[…]
“There will be safeguards to ensure that all sections of the community can participate and work together successfully in the operation of these institutions and that all sections of the community are protected, including: […]
“(b) the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and any Bill of Rights for Northern Ireland supplementing it, which neither the Assembly nor public bodies can infringe, together with a Human Rights Commission
[…]
“The Assembly will have authority to pass primary legislation for Northern Ireland in devolved areas, subject to: (a) the ECHR […]”
And so on.
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The ECHR is not just mentioned in passing in a recital.
Instead the ECHR is integral to the Good Friday Agreement.
Rights under the ECHR that can be relied upon in Northern Ireland are a fundamental part of the agreement.
It was important to Ireland - and to the nationalist community - that there were rights beyond the reach of Westminster and Whitehall (and Stormont) that could be enforced directly against the state of the United Kingdom, including against the police and security services.
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When this obstacle is pointed out, sometimes the response is “Aha! Why not just have the ECHR applicable in Northern Ireland?”
Of course, there is nothing in the Good Friday Agreement which expressly requires rights under the ECHR to be directly enforceable elsewhere in the United Kingdom.
But.
Article 1 of the ECHR provides:
It may thereby not be open to the United Kingdom to be a party to the ECHR and pick-and-choose who within its jurisdiction can have the benefit of the rights.
This would be in addition to the political issues about having a further legal “border down the Irish Sea”, which presumably would not be welcome to unionists.
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Perhaps the government of the United Kingdom could seek to renegotiate the Good Friday Agreement?
This would mean Ireland agreeing that those - especially nationalists - in Northern Ireland should have their existing legal rights against the United Kingdom state removed.
It would also mean Ireland agreeing that it would not be able to take the United Kingdom to court in Strasbourg.
And it would also mean - in practice - the United States and the nationalist community agreeing that legal rights and protections are removed.
This is not at all realistic.
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And the difficulty cannot be resolved by simply copying and pasting the Convention rights into a domestic statute for Northern Ireland.
For unless the rights are as constructed and interpreted by the Strasbourg court, and unless a disappointed party can petition the Strasbourg court directly, they are not “convention rights” - even if identically worded.
(This is partly why even Dominic Raab’s “Bill of Rights” that was to repeal the Human Rights Act had the convention rights in a schedule and a duty on public authorities to comply with those rights.)
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Part of the difficulty of Brexit was because some did not know or did not care about the particular situation of Northern Ireland. Some also pretended it was not an issue, but as we now know it needed special care and attention - and it still has not been fully resolved.
Similarly those who believe just leaving the ECHR would be easy may again be overlooking the Irish and Northern Irish dimensions.
And unless the Good Friday Agreement is re-negotiated, the United Kingdom leaving the ECHR would place the United Kingdom in breach in Good Friday Agreement.
Well, at least as long as Northern Ireland remains part of the United Kingdom.
And that would be another story.
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This post is partly drawn from this earlier blogpost.
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