RT.png

 

 

Labour Party purging can be challenged

 

Labour Party's election vetting 'may be open to challenge' on legal grounds

 

 

RT, Moscow, 26 August 2015

 

Labour's leadership election vetting process could be open to legal
challenge as the practice of rejecting voters without a detailed reason or
an opportunity to appeal may be considered unfair, a legal expert has said.

 

Registered supporters of the party barred from casting their ballot in the
leadership race are currently given no explanation beyond the claim they do
not support the party's aims.

 

An appeal is only possible if they apply to become a full member of the
Labour Party, a process which comes at a greater cost and is unlikely to be
processed until after the election.

Speaking to RT, consultant solicitor Oliver Smith, of Keystone Law, said
this could be unlawful, but any complaint to the Information Commissioner of
the Courts will probably not be ruled on until after the result of the
leadership election is announced on September 12.

 

Labour officials have been accused of initiating a "purge" against
supporters of the contest's frontrunner, left-wing candidate Jeremy Corbyn.

Interim party leader Harriet Harman faced criticism on Tuesday after
claiming that up to 100,000 registered supporters could be blocked from
voting in the leadership election.

 

To date, 3,000 registered supporters have been blocked over fears of
so-called "entryism."

 

Smith, an intellectual property lawyer, told RT that to make the vetting
process fair, Labour "should probably give details of why a person has been
rejected i.e. you told a canvasser in 2014 that you supported the
Conservatives, and have a fair appeal process."

 

He added: "I understand the current practice is just to say they have
information that the person does not support their aims and principles but
not give any details and that no appeal is allowed unless they apply to
become a full member of the Labour Party, which will probably not be
processed until after the leadership election."

Smith described this as "arguably not a fair process [that] may be open to
legal challenge. However any complaint to the Information Commissioner or
the Courts is unlikely to be resolved until after the election has taken
place," he said.

Data protection

Labour officials were accused on Wednesday of unlawfully using people's
private data gathered during door-to-door canvassing in order to root out
would-be voters.

The Morning Star said party sources confirmed that Labour had used the
sensitive data for cross-referencing despite the procedure being banned
under internal rules.

If this is the case, Labour officials could face questions over whether the
data was used lawfully.

 

Speaking to RT, Smith said that under the Data Protection Act 1998,
information about people's political opinions is considered "sensitive
personal information" and any organization using the data must comply with
certain safeguards.

 

The "user" of the data - in this case Labour - can only use the information
if the person consented to it being used for a specific purpose, or if it is
necessary for the "legitimate interests" of Labour and there is no
"unwarranted prejudice" to the person.

According to Smith, Labour would probably have to prove such data use was in
their "legitimate interests."

"Assuming that when the information collected on the doorstep the person was
not told it would be used to vet them if they applied to vote in the Labour
leadership election contest then they would not have given consent for this
purpose," said Smith.

"The user [Labour] would therefore have to argue its use was necessary to
screen out ineligible voters and that any prejudice to the voter was fair as
they did not correctly answer the declaration that they supported the aims
and principles of the Labour Party.

"They would also have to argue that the person had regular contact with the
Labour Party. It is likely they would have been in contact at least twice,
once on the doorstep and once when they applied to vote, so this is probably
fulfilled," he added.

 

With some 100,000 registered supporters potentially barred from voting, it
is possible Labour could face a series of legal challenges in the near
future.

Although only 3,000 registered supporters have so far been blocked for
alleged "entryism," the figure could soon rise, meaning only half a million
may be permitted to vote - more than 100,000 fewer than the total number
registered.

Speaking after a meeting with the four leadership candidates on Tuesday,
Harman said the Tories and other individuals who had attempted to enter the
ballot to sabotage the outcome were neither "funny nor clever."

Asked how many registered supporters would be allowed to vote, Harman said
it would be fewer than 600,000 and more than half a million.

 

 

From:  <http://www.rt.com/uk/313517-labour-election-vetting-legal/>
http://www.rt.com/uk/313517-labour-election-vetting-legal/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

-- 
-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"YCLSA Discussion Forum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to