Britain | Government v judges

Judicial independence is under threat in Britain

Tory claims that judges intrude too much into politics are wrong and dangerous

MINISTERS NEVER like seeing their decisions overturned. But in a rules-based system, they must usually live with it. Yet Britain’s government has concluded that such reversals happen too often—and wants to change the rules to curb one purported cause, an obstructive judiciary. This raises constitutional concerns.

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Government v judges”

One year on

From the November 6th 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Britain

Double exposure photo of the British Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves.

Why have Britain’s bond yields jumped sharply?

Mostly, blame Donald Trump. But Labour’s policies haven’t helped

Illustration of a woman with the trace of a hand on her neck.

The phenomenon of sexual strangulation in Britain

A survey suggests the risky practice is more common than you might think


Sky Gardens/Midland Mills under construction in Leeds.

The decline in remote working hits Britain’s housing market

A return to the office means a return to town


Britons are keener than ever to bring back lost and rare species

Immigrants that everyone can get behind

A much-praised British scheme to help disabled workers is failing them

It lavishes spending on some, and unfairly deprives others