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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Gill, R (on the application of) v UK Statistics Authority [2019] EWHC 3407 (Admin) (12 December 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/3407.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3407 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN on the application of AMRIK SINGH GILL (ON BEHALF OF THE SIKH FEDERATION UK) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CABINET OFFICE |
Defendant |
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UK STATISTICS AUTHORITY |
Interested Party |
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Neil Sheldon QC and Jonathan Auburn (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant and the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 12 & 13 November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lang :
Facts
The 2011 census
"The addition of the tick-box and/or revised terminology is clear and acceptable to respondents (both in wording and in the context of the question, for example providing mutually exclusive categories) and provides the required information to an acceptable level of quality."
The 2021 census
"Impact on public acceptability.
The census should not ask sensitive or potentially intrusive questions that have a negative impact on response or may lead to respondents giving socially acceptable rather than accurate answers. It should also not enquire about opinions or attitudes.
Additionally, the census is carried out for statistical purposes. It should not collect data that would deliberately promote political or sectarian groups, or sponsor particular causes."
"• ONS intends to undertake a review of the ethnic group response options, and will consider this alongside the national identity and religion response options. This will involve consultation with stakeholder groups that have expressed an interest in this question.
• The review will follow a similar format to that undertaken prior to the 2011 Census whereby response options were prioritised. This methodology is described in the Information Paper "Deciding which tick-boxes to add to the ethnic group question in the 2011 England and Wales Census". This methodology will be reviewed and updated to reflect current legislation. This will involve engagement with key stakeholders to ensure data needs to support the Public Sector Equality Duty under the Equality Act 2010 are well understood.
• Any changes to the response options, proposed as a result of this review, will then be tested to evaluate how well the response options are understood and how they work together as a set.
• There will also be consideration of the impact of any proposed changes on other users of the harmonised question on ethnic group.
• In parallel, there will be investigation of the best approach to presenting the current ethnic group question online on a range of devices …"
"1 Strength of user need for information on the ethnic group
1.1 Group is of particular interest for equality monitoring and/or for policy development (for example group is particularly vulnerable to disadvantage)
1.2 Group is of particular interest for service delivery and/or resource allocation
2 Lack of alternative sources of information
2.1 Write in answers are not adequate for measuring this group
2.2 Other census information is inadequate as a suitable proxy (for example country of birth, religion, national identity, citizenship, and main language)
3 Data quality of information collected
3.1 Without this tick box respondents would be unduly confused or burdened and so the quality of information would be reduced (for example if a large, well known, or highly distinct group was left out, and respondents from this group ticked a variety of options instead)
4 Comparability with 2011 data
4.1 There will be no adverse impact on comparability
5 Acceptability, clarity and quality
5.1 The addition of the tick-box and/or revised terminology is acceptable to respondents, clear (both in wording and in the context of the question, for example mutually exclusive categories), and provides the required information to an acceptable level of quality."
"Tick-boxes need to be acceptable and clear to the groups they are measuring, to elicit a high and consistent response and a data set that represents a distinct population."
"There is evidence to suggest that Sikhs are experiencing significant disadvantage in several areas of life including employment, housing, health and education. Having Census data on the ethnically Sikh population would allow improvements to service planning and commissioning to better meet the needs of the Sikh population."
"3.89 Following the topic consultation, a further exercise was held to gather evidence of the need for new response options within the ethnic group question. Requests were prioritised initially against strength of need, and further against additional criteria including the availability of alternative data sources, data quality, and comparability. In this exercise, 55 possible new response options were requested, with four of those taken forward for further investigation. The four areas with highest user need were Roma, Somali, Sikh and Jewish. The case for each of these has been examined in depth.
3.90 ONS recognises the needs from all four areas. ONS will meet the user needs for all four groups but in different ways following testing."
"For the Sikh population
3.101 ONS has always provided an "other, specify" box within the ethnic group question, to allow respondents to answer as they wish to (such as defining their ethnicity as Sikh). With the online census in 2021 ONS is developing the "search-as-you-type" capability which will make it easier to use this option, making it easier for respondents to self-define their ethnic group (when a specific response option is not available).
3.102 The 2021 Census will continue to include a religion question, with a specific Sikh response option. Flexible data outputs will allow analysis of those who define their religious affiliation as Sikh (through the religion response option) and those who define their ethnic group as Sikh through the use of the "search-as-you-type" capability on the online ethnic group question.
3.103 ONS will estimate the Sikh population using alternative data sources to assess the numbers who may declare themselves of Sikh background but not through the religion question. ONS will strengthen the harmonisation guidance on the collection of religion alongside ethnicity data across government. ONS will also increase the analytical offering and outputs for all ethnic groups, through flexible outputs.
3.104 The proposals on utilisation of the Digital Economy Act 2017 (see Chapter 3, paragraph 3.183) will ensure that data on the Sikh population is available across public services. ONS will work with members of the Sikh population to encourage wider participation in the census and raise awareness of the options of writing in their identity in the ethnic group question.
3.105 ONS does not propose adding an additional specific response option to the 2021 Census ethnic group question because of the evidence that this would not be acceptable to a proportion of the Sikh population. ONS considers that the estimates of the Sikh population can be met through data from the specific response option in the Sikh religion question.
3.106 The proposals meet the user needs expressed to ONS and follow extensive investigation. Leaders of Sikh groups have provided information which has fed into the analysis. There are differing views within the Sikh population as to whether a specific response option should be added to the 2021 Census, and views on each side are passionately held.
3.107 ONS received information from a survey of Gurdwaras enquiring about acceptance of a Sikh ethnic group tick-box, which showed a high acceptance for inclusion. The survey gave ONS more insight into the views of leaders of Sikh groups, alongside ONS's other research. Independent research was undertaken for ONS to further understand the acceptability of the Sikh response option within the ethnic group question.
3.108 Focus groups were conducted, with over 50 participants from Leicester, Birmingham and London who were spread across age, gender and life stages. These found:
• that the inclusion of Sikh tick-box, without other religion tick-boxes, within the ethnic group question was viewed as unacceptable – particularly amongst younger, second-generation participants
• younger second-generation participants wanted to express their Sikh background through the religion question as this was how they expected Sikh identity to be recorded
• a small number of older, male participants were keen to express their Sikh identity with an ethnicity Sikh tick-box and many stated that it was one of the most important aspects of their background
• there was increased respondent burden with some participants confused about having to choose between an Indian and Sikh identity, and felt that they were being asked to make a choice when they felt they were both
3.109 Additional, quantitative survey findings show there is no evidence that the religious affiliation and ethnic group questions are capturing different Sikh populations. All respondents who stated they were ethnically Sikh (in question versions with or without a specific Sikh response option) also stated their religious affiliation was Sikh. This is in line with findings from the 2011 Census data (where only 1.6% of those who had recorded themselves as ethnically Sikh had a religious affiliation other than Sikh)."
"Options for specific response options are evaluated by means of a prioritisation tool (first used in 2011 – see details in Annex B), alongside engagement with stakeholders to understand specific requirements, comparability of data and operational impacts of changing the question for collectors of data."
The criteria used in 2011 were set out in Annex B.
Statutory framework
"(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, it shall be lawful for His Majesty by Order in Council from time to time to direct that a census shall be taken for Great Britain, or for any part of Great Britain, and any Order under this section may prescribe—
(a) the date on which the census is to be taken; and
(b) the persons by whom and with respect to whom the returns for the purpose of the census are to be made; and
(c) the particulars to be stated in the returns:
Provided that—
(i) an order shall not be made under this section so as to require a census to be taken in any part of Great Britain in any year unless at the commencement of that year at least five years have elapsed since the commencement of the year in which a census was last taken in that part of Great Britain; and
(ii) no particulars shall be required to be stated other than particulars with respect to such matters as are mentioned in the Schedule to this Act."
"(2) Before any Order in Council is made under this section, a draft thereof shall be laid before each House of Parliament for a period of not less than twenty days on which that House has sat, and, if either House before the expiration of that period presents an address to His Majesty against the draft or any part thereof, no further proceedings shall be taken thereon, but without prejudice to the making of a new draft Order: Provided that, if by part of any such Order it is proposed to prescribe any particulars with respect to any of the matters mentioned in paragraph six of the Schedule to this Act, that part of the Order shall not have effect unless both Houses by resolution approve that part of the draft, or, if any modifications in that part are agreed to by both Houses, except as so modified."
Grounds of challenge
The Claimant's grounds
The Defendant's response
Parliamentary privilege
The Defendant's submission
i) prevent the Minister for the Cabinet Office from laying any draft Order and regulations before Parliament which accords with the recommendations in the White Paper by not including a Sikh ethnic group tick box in the census questionnaire;
ii) prevent Parliament from scrutinising any such draft Order and regulations, and voting upon it;
iii) prevent the Queen, sitting in the Privy Council, from making an Order in the terms of the Minister's draft.
The law
"It is a feature of the peculiarly British conception of the separation of powers that Parliament, the executive and the courts each have their distinct and largely exclusive domain. Parliament has a legally unchallengeable right to make whatever laws it thinks fit. The executive carries on the administration of the country in accordance with the powers conferred on it by law. The courts interpret the laws, and see that they are obeyed."
"Although the United Kingdom has no written constitution, it is a constitutional convention of the highest importance that the legislature and the judicature are separate and independent of one another …..It therefore behoves the court to be ever sensitive to the paramount need to refrain from trespassing upon the province of Parliament or, so far as this can be avoided, even appearing to do so…
Against that background, it would clearly be a breach of the constitutional conventions for this court, or any court, to express a view, let alone take any action, concerning the decision to lay this draft Order in Council before Parliament, or concerning the wisdom or otherwise of Parliament approving that draft."
"However, Mr. Laws, appearing for the Treasury, took the matter a little further when he submitted that, at the present stage when no Order in Council has been or could yet be made, it is premature for the court to consider Mr. Smedley's application. There is obvious force in this submission, but it requires some further examination. It is the function of Parliament to legislate and legislation is necessarily in written form. It is the function of the courts to construe and interpret that legislation. Putting it in popular language, it is for Parliament to make the laws and for the courts to tell the nation, including members of both Houses of Parliament, what those laws mean. Furthermore, whilst Parliament is entirely independent of the courts in its freedom to enact whatever legislation it sees fit, legislation by Order in Council, statutory instrument or other subordinate means is in a quite different category, not being Parliamentary legislation. This subordinate legislation is subject to some degree of judicial control in the sense that it is within the province and authority of the courts to hold that particular examples are not authorised by statute, or as the case may be by the common law, and so are without legal force or effect.
At the present moment, there is no Order in Council to which Mr. Smedley can object as being unauthorised. All that can be said is that it seems likely that if both Houses of Parliament approve the draft Order in Council, Her Majesty will be advised to make and will make an Order in the terms of the draft, whereupon the courts would without doubt be competent to consider whether or not the Order was properly made in the sense of being intra vires.
In many, and possibly most, circumstances the proper course would undoubtedly be for the courts to invite the applicant to renew his application if and when an order was made, but in some circumstances an expression of view on questions of law which would arise for decision if Parliament were to approve a draft may be of service not only to the parties, but also to each House of Parliament itself. This course was adopted in Rex v. Electricity Commissioners, Ex parte London Electricity Joint Committee Co. (1920) Ltd. [1924] 1 K.B. 171. In that case an inquiry was in progress, the cost of which would have been wholly wasted if, thereafter, the Minister and Parliament had approved the scheme only to be told at that late stage that the scheme was ultra vires.
Similar considerations apply in the present case. It is apparent from the terms of the Undertaking that the provision of the money is considered a matter of urgency. If we defer consideration of Mr. Smedley's application until after both Houses of Parliament have considered the somewhat different question of whether each approves the draft Order in Council, we shall only have contributed an avoidable period of delay should the correct view be that an Order in Council in the terms of the draft would be valid and should only have contributed to what might be thought to be a waste of Parliamentary time if the correct view is that such an Order in Council would be invalid."
"46. These authorities demonstrate that the law of parliamentary privilege is essentially based on two principles. The first is the need to avoid any risk of interference with free speech in Parliament. The second is the principle of the separation of powers, which in our constitution is restricted to the judicial function of government, and requires the executive and the legislature to abstain from interference with the judicial function, and conversely requires the judiciary not to interfere with or to criticise the proceedings of the legislature…."
"47. The first of those principles is particularly relevant to the use to which certain Parliamentary material may be put, and is considered later. The second goes to the core of the claimant's case. In R v Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, ex p Al Fayed [1998] 1 WLR 669, 670, Lord Woolf MR said it was clearly established that "the courts exercise a self-denying ordinance in relation to interfering with the proceedings of Parliament". In R v Her Majesty's Treasury, ex p Smedley [1985] QB 657, 666C–E, Sir John Donaldson MR said that "it behoves the courts to be ever sensitive to the paramount need to refrain from trespassing upon the province of Parliament or, so far as this can be avoided, even appearing to do so"; and against that background he went on to say, in relation to the particular Order in Council under challenge in those proceedings, that "it would clearly be a breach of the constitutional conventions for this court, or any court, to express a view, let alone take any action, concerning the decision to lay this draft Order in Council before Parliament or concerning the wisdom or otherwise of Parliament approving the draft". The court in that case was willing to consider whether such an Order, if approved by Parliament, would be ultra vires the enabling statute, but made very clear the care that needed to be exercised in relation to the limits of the court's role.
…
49. In our judgment, it is clear that the introduction of a Bill into Parliament forms part of the proceedings within Parliament. It is governed by the Standing Orders of the House of Commons (see, in particular, standing order 57(1)). It is done by a Member of Parliament in his capacity as such, not in any capacity he may have as a Secretary of State or other member of the government. Prebble (cited above) supports the view that the introduction of legislation into Parliament forms part the legislative process protected by Parliamentary privilege. To order the defendants to introduce a Bill into Parliament would therefore be to order them to do an act within Parliament in their capacity as Members of Parliament and would plainly be to trespass impermissibly on the province of Parliament. Nor can the point be met by the grant of a declaration, as sought by the claimant, instead of a mandatory order. A declaration tailored to give effect to the claimant's case would necessarily involve some indication by the court that the defendants were under a public law duty to introduce a Bill into Parliament to provide for a referendum. The practical effect of a declaration would be the same as a mandatory order even if, in accordance with long-standing convention, it relied on the executive to respect and give effect to the decision of the court without the need for compulsion."
"9 The ground rules are not controversial. The courts cannot question the legitimacy of an Act of Parliament or the means by which its enactment was procured: see British Railways Board v Pickin [1974] AC 765, and as to proceedings in Parliament, Article 9 of the Bill of Rights). Nor may they require a bill to be laid before Parliament: see Wheeler v Office of the Prime Minister and others [2008] EWHC 1409 Admin, paragraph 49 [see above]
"In our judgment, it is clear that the introduction of a Bill into Parliament forms part of the proceedings within Parliament. It is governed by the Standing Orders of the House of Commons (see, in particular, standing order 57(1)). It is done by a Member of Parliament in his capacity as such, not in any capacity he may have as a Secretary of State or other member of the government. Prebble (cited above) supports the view that the introduction of legislation into Parliament forms part the legislative process protected by Parliamentary privilege. To order the defendants to introduce a Bill into Parliament would therefore be to order them to do an act within Parliament in their capacity as Members of Parliament and would plainly be to trespass impermissibly on the province of Parliament."
10 The converse must also be true. The courts cannot forbid a Member of Parliament from introducing a Bill. To do so would be just as much an interference with Parliamentary proceedings as to require the introduction of a Bill.
11 The Unison challenge is not so blunt, but if successful it would require the Secretary of State to defer or delay introducing the Health Bill until he had consulted on its principle. Any court ordered prohibition would be conditional, but it would nevertheless be a prohibition. I consider that it would go against the restraint exercised by the judiciary in relation to Parliamentary functions, for the reasons explained by Sir John Donaldson MR in Her Majesty's Treasury v Smedley [1985] QB 657 at 666C to E. For that reason alone, I would decline to make a prohibitory or mandatory order which in any way inhibited the Secretary of State from introducing legislation to Parliament at a time and of a nature of his choosing."
"51. I accept the Defendant's submission that these principles apply equally to the Claimant's case. Under Ground 1, the Claimant's case was that the Defendant was acting unlawfully by failing to lay an order before Parliament to relax the release test. If the Court upheld this ground, the Defendant would be obliged to lay an order to relax the release test, in order to comply with his legal obligation as found by the Court. Parliament would then be obliged to consider it, as an indirect consequence of the judgment of the Court. Under Ground 2, the Claimant's case was that the Defendant was legally obliged to consult before exercising his power to lay an order before Parliament. If the Court upheld this ground, it would have the effect of preventing the Defendant from laying an order before Parliament unless or until he had undertaken a consultation exercise, even though there was no statutory duty to consult, because otherwise he would be acting unlawfully. Thus, the consequence of allowing the Claimant's claim was an interference by the Court with Parliamentary proceedings, which was contrary to Parliamentary privilege and the separation of powers.
52. I do not consider that the Claimant has overcome this fundamental obstacle by abandoning his claim for mandatory relief and seeking declarations instead, for precisely the reasons which Richards LJ gave in Wheeler:
"49 ……Nor can the point be met by the grant of a declaration, as sought by the claimant, instead of a mandatory order. A declaration tailored to give effect to the claimant's case, would necessarily involve some indication by the court that the defendants were under a public law duty to introduce a bill into Parliament to provide for a referendum. The practical effect of a declaration would be the same as a mandatory order even if, in accordance with long-standing convention, it relied on the executive to respect and give effect to the decision of the court without the need for compulsion."
53. Although Wheeler and Unison were both concerned with the introduction of primary legislation, these principles apply equally to the introduction of secondary legislation. In R v HM Treasury ex p. Smedley [1985] 1 QB 657, in which the claimant challenged as ultra vires a draft Order in Council which had been laid before Parliament by the Treasury, but not yet approved, the Divisional Court accepted that it had jurisdiction to hold that subordinate legislation was unlawful. However, Sir John Donaldson MR said "it would clearly be a breach of the constitutional conventions for this court, or any court, to express a view, let alone take any action, concerning the decision to lay this draft Order in Council before Parliament or concerning the wisdom or otherwise of Parliament approving this draft" (at 666E)."
"17. Following the decision in Miller, a bill has been introduced into Parliament which, if enacted in the terms of the draft, will authorise ministers to give notice of withdrawal pursuant to Article 50 of the TEU…..
18. It is also understood that a Bill will be introduced which, if enacted, will repeal or amend the 1972 Act. It may be (we do not know) that the Bill or another Bill will be introduced to deal with the remaining provisions of the 1993 Act, which makes other provision in relation to the implementation of the EEA Agreement in domestic law.
19. We emphasise that whether any legislation is to be introduced and the form that any such legislation should take is entirely a matter for Parliament itself and not a matter for the courts. Article 9 of the Bill of Rights provides that the freedom of speech and debates or proceedings in Parliament ought not to be impeached or questioned in any court or place out of Parliament.
20. In this regard, we also draw attention to paragraph 122 of Miller, to R (on the application of) Wheeler v The Prime Minister and the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs [2008] EWHC 1409 (Admin) and Wheeler v the Office of the Prime Minister and Others [2015] 1 CMLR 15.
21. As it was expressed by the then Master of the Rolls, Sir John Donaldson, in R v Her Majesty's Treasury, Ex parte Smedley [1985] QB 657 at page 666B to D:
"Although the United Kingdom has no written constitution, it is a constitutional convention of the highest importance that the legislature and the judicature are separate and independent of one another, subject to certain ultimate rights of Parliament over the judicature which are immaterial for present purposes. It, therefore, behoves the courts to be ever sensitive to the paramount need to refrain from trespassing upon the province of Parliament or, so far as this can be avoided, even appearing to do so. Although it is not a matter for me, I would hope and expect that Parliament would be similarly sensitive to the need to refrain from trespassing upon the province of the courts."
……
23. As a general rule, the courts are concerned in judicial review with adjudicating on issues of law that have already arisen for decision and where the facts are established. The courts will not generally consider cases which are brought prematurely because, at the time the claim is made, the relevant legal or factual events to which the claim relates have not yet occurred.
24. The courts may have jurisdiction to grant what is sometimes referred to as advisory declarations. That is declarations on points of law of general importance where there are important reasons in the public interest for doing so. Even here, the courts proceed with caution.
25. It will rarely be appropriate to consider such issues when they may depend in part on factual matters or future events since until those factual matters are established or the events occur, the courts will not be in a position to know with sufficient certainty what issues do arise in a particular case. Similarly, when matters may depend upon or be affected by future legislation, it would generally not be appropriate to make rulings on questions of law until the precise terms of any legislation are known."
Conclusions
"a declaration that it would be unlawful for the Cabinet Office to lay before Parliament …. a draft census Order on the basis of the proposals … set out in the December 2018 White Paper …"
"….. a number of high profile lobbies, Early Day Motions and Parliamentary Questions have been raised in support of separate Sikh monitoring. Over 200 MPs from across the political spectrum have publicly indicated their support. The Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties and many Labour MPs have also expressed their support for the need for a separate ethnic category tick box for Sikhs that ONS appear to have ignored…"