cross-posted from: feddit.org/post/25749999
LONDON (AP) — Britain’s High Court ruled Friday that the government’s decision to outlaw the protest group Palestine Action as a terrorist organization was unlawful, but it kept the ban in place pending an appeal.
GreenBeanMachine@lemmy.world 4 days ago
When I do something illegal, I get punished. So does that mean the people who banned the group, are going to be punished, right? Right?!
FishFace@piefed.social 4 days ago
Well no, there are many situations where you will not be punished if you do something illegal (even if caught). If you do something illegal in the course of your job, it is quite likely that it is your employer who is taken to court, not you personally. If you don’t pay the correct amount of tax, you won’t be punished if it was found to have been an honest mistake. If caught speeding but not by much, and you aren’t a dick to the police, you may be let off with a warning.
There is also a relevant pedantic distinction between “unlawful” and “illegal”. The latter means in breach of the law. The former means otherwise than in accordance than the law. What’s the difference? If the law says “don’t drive over 30mph when the number 30 appears in the red circle” and you drive at 40, you broke the law and did something illegal. If the law says, “the local authority shall consider the conditions of the road when applying speed limits” and the local authority instead assigns speed limits at random, they didn’t do something specifically forbidden, but they didn’t do what they’re supposed to. That’s unlawful, and is treated differently.
Ultimately though the difference comes down to a presumption of good faith and the idea that if politicians or civil servants were prosecuted every time they got something wrong, we’d run out pretty quickly.
HumanPenguin@feddit.uk 4 days ago
Honestly. Would you really want the law to work that way.
The result would be a government that is impossible to legally fault. As doing so would be to expensive for the people in power.
But the answer is. No the acts of any MP in parliament are not within thremit of any legal authority other then parliament.
The original reason for this was to prevent each party trying to make the actions of the last gov a crime. It really dose not take long to imagine the harm that would cause,
GreenBeanMachine@lemmy.world 4 days ago
Except it’s the same government, not the previous one that banned it.