Ken Clarke’s announcement that the government will accept a major House of Lords amendment to the Justice and Security Bill might ease the legislation’s passage through the Commons. The Lib Dems and several senior Conservative figures, including Andrew Tyrie, have been pressing the government to accept the amendment, which gives judges more discretion on whether a court should sit in secret. So those parliamentarians will be happy.
But there is still a fight on the cards, albeit not in either chamber of Parliament. The Liberal Democrat grassroots remain horrified by the Bill’s proposals for secret courts in general, even though they aren’t currently getting much traction with their MPs when it comes to scrapping the legislation entirely. This is what party members voted for at its autumn conference in Brighton, and campaigners are continuing to pursue it with some vigour.
Nick Thornsby, a founding member of the party’s Liberal Reform group, says:
‘It is of course welcome that Ken Clarke has recognised some of the flaws contained in the original bill.

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