The Freedom Bill must restore the right to campaign
By Jim Cranshaw, who works for People & Planet this piece was first posted at Open Democracy and we’ve been ask to re-publish.
It is commonly accepted that a basic tenet of democratic society is the ability of its citizens hold those in power to account. Many people’s first engagement with doing so will be the simple act of collecting petitions in the street.
Right to campaign curtailed from Felix Gonzales on Vimeo.
Yet this basic form of democratic engagement is gradually being made illegal. As shopping streets are increasingly owned by private companies, landowners are using the laws of trespass to ban any activity on their property that does not make them a profit.
For example, from 2006 – 2008, People & Planet ran a campaign asking Topshop to guarantee that no forced child labour is used in the production of their garments, following a spate of reports showing that clothes made from cotton picked by child labour in Uzbekistan was being sold in the UK.
Reasonably enough, small groups of students gathered outside Topshops to politely gather petitions from customers. When shops were situated on the high street, this passed without incident. When shops were part of shopping centre complexes, students were forced out, sometimes physically, by private security.
Therefore, the recently released video (above) of a group of campaigners being ejected from Birmingham Bullring shopping centre after just 38 seconds of attempting to collect petitions was unsurprising, but no less shocking. So too the stories circulating the internet of the library assistants outside their workplace being moved on by Westfield heavies, the Jubilee Debt Campaign activists requested to move a street stall 40 centimetres forward and countless others.
However now there is something that can be done about it. The government has announced a Freedom (Great Repeal) Bill in their legislative programme, which, amongst other things, promises to restore the right to campaign.
People & Planet is supporting a petition, hosted by 38degrees.org.uk for the inclusion in the Freedom Bill of a legal right to protest in areas which are freely open to the public but which are privately owned, such as the walkways of shopping centres.
Please do sign the petition and join the campaign for the right to campaign.
So by “freedom”, you mean the right to invade private property?
I do not think that word means what you think it means.
In what sense is it ‘invading’ private property to walk into a shopping centre or car park and collect a few signatures? I don’t think you understand what that word means.
Urallscum did you read the blog post above at all?
This article is about the simple act of collecting petitions which has become illegal in many city centres!
The right to campaign is not the right to drop fire extinguishers on people, smash their windows, intimidate them, and advocate violence.
Did you spot that this happened in Leith recently?
http://www.greenerleith.org/greener-leith-news/2010/10/16/the-problem-with-privatised-public-spaces.html
And UNISON campaigners in London were banned from campaigning outside their own library – prompting London Assembly member Nicky Gavron to investigate – http://www.bbc.co.uk/i/vv7z0/?t=18m58s
Something Scottish Green councillors could look at?