The Right to Protest Under Threat: A Recipe for Disaster
Imran Khan KC argues that Britain's right to protest is facing its greatest challenge yet. The upcoming review of public order and hate-crime legislation has left many concerned that the law will be used to silence dissenting voices.
The home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, recently appointed Lord MacDonald to lead the review, citing the need for "consistent application" of the law. However, those familiar with the inner workings of the justice system know that consistency is a luxury rarely afforded to minority communities.
Racialized groups continue to bear the brunt of uneven enforcement, with repeated calls from Muslim communities going largely unheeded in addressing Islamophobia. The threshold for religious discrimination remains too narrow, treating Muslims as a monolithic group despite individual differences in belief and behavior.
This racialization affects protesters, who face preemptive restrictions, heightened policing, and public warnings that blur the line between protest and criminality. Counterterrorism language seeps into decisions about policing, conditions, and enforcement, justifying extraordinary measures such as false imprisonment and terrorism charges.
A similar pattern has been observed in Black communities, where assumptions about aggression and disorder are used to shape stop-and-search practices, public-order policing, and criminal-justice outcomes across generations. These assumptions rarely appear in statute but exert powerful influence over discretion exercised on the ground.
The looming review's focus on constraining protest is a worrying trend. It fails to recognize that protest is not a collective nuisance but rather an exercise of protected freedom. The idea that repeated action causes inconvenience justifies restriction ignores the power of sustained pressure, as seen in the suffragettes' and civil rights movements' use of persistent protest to secure change.
If left unchecked, this review threatens to entrench existing inequalities and restrict the rights of some to preserve the comfort of others. Free speech becomes a matter of political permission rather than a fundamental right. This is a moment that requires us all to speak out against such a draconian approach, lest we sacrifice our collective freedoms for the sake of convenience.
As we consider this review, it is essential to remember that protest is not just a privilege but a democratic right. We must stand united in defending this right, even when faced with attempts to restrict it. The future of free speech and peaceful assembly hangs in the balance.
Imran Khan KC argues that Britain's right to protest is facing its greatest challenge yet. The upcoming review of public order and hate-crime legislation has left many concerned that the law will be used to silence dissenting voices.
The home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, recently appointed Lord MacDonald to lead the review, citing the need for "consistent application" of the law. However, those familiar with the inner workings of the justice system know that consistency is a luxury rarely afforded to minority communities.
Racialized groups continue to bear the brunt of uneven enforcement, with repeated calls from Muslim communities going largely unheeded in addressing Islamophobia. The threshold for religious discrimination remains too narrow, treating Muslims as a monolithic group despite individual differences in belief and behavior.
This racialization affects protesters, who face preemptive restrictions, heightened policing, and public warnings that blur the line between protest and criminality. Counterterrorism language seeps into decisions about policing, conditions, and enforcement, justifying extraordinary measures such as false imprisonment and terrorism charges.
A similar pattern has been observed in Black communities, where assumptions about aggression and disorder are used to shape stop-and-search practices, public-order policing, and criminal-justice outcomes across generations. These assumptions rarely appear in statute but exert powerful influence over discretion exercised on the ground.
The looming review's focus on constraining protest is a worrying trend. It fails to recognize that protest is not a collective nuisance but rather an exercise of protected freedom. The idea that repeated action causes inconvenience justifies restriction ignores the power of sustained pressure, as seen in the suffragettes' and civil rights movements' use of persistent protest to secure change.
If left unchecked, this review threatens to entrench existing inequalities and restrict the rights of some to preserve the comfort of others. Free speech becomes a matter of political permission rather than a fundamental right. This is a moment that requires us all to speak out against such a draconian approach, lest we sacrifice our collective freedoms for the sake of convenience.
As we consider this review, it is essential to remember that protest is not just a privilege but a democratic right. We must stand united in defending this right, even when faced with attempts to restrict it. The future of free speech and peaceful assembly hangs in the balance.