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Require government ministers who break the law to be removed from post

Submitted by Aayaan Patel on Thursday 25th February 2021

Published on Wednesday 14th April 2021

Current status: Closed

Closed: Thursday 14th October 2021

Signatures: 17,032

Relevant Departments

Tagged with

Citizens ~ Danger ~ Equal ~ Forced ~ Forces ~ Law ~ Ministers ~ Positions ~ Power ~ Rule ~ Time

Petition Action

Require government ministers who break the law to be removed from post

Petition Details

Government ministers and lawmakers have an utmost duty to uphold the rule of law at all times. Accountability before the law for all citizens is important, and therefore government ministers must also be forced to take responsibility when they break the law.

Additional Information

Equality and accountability before the law for all citizens is very important. It enables our society to function better and prevents and punishes abuses of power. If government ministers in particular are able to get away with breaking the law, then that sets a dangerous precedent for future governments and other powerful positions. Everyone should have take responsibility if they break the law, and that includes members of government.


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Government Response

The Government responded to this petition on Wednesday 28th July 2021

Ministers are under an overarching duty to comply with the law. It is for the courts to determine whether an act is unlawful and the appropriate remedy or consequences.

Government Ministers are under a duty to comply with the law.

Government decisions, and the process by which powers are exercised, can be reviewed by the High Court. In judicial review, the Court will consider the Government’s exercise of public powers by reference to procedural fairness, reasonableness or rationality and compatibility with legal obligations.

Where a legal challenge is brought against the Government, these will often be brought against "the Secretary of State" as the legal embodiment of the department. The challenge is brought against a department corporately, whether or not a decision or action was taken by a particular Minister or by officials acting on behalf of Ministers. Many operational decisions in Government are in practice made by civil servants. Ministers take their decisions having received and considered advice from civil servants. Legally and constitutionally, however, the acts of officials and Ministers in the department are in the name of the head of the department, usually the Secretary of State, who is ultimately accountable for all decisions by the Department.

Where the Court finds against the Government, this is about the department having acted in a manner which is determined not to have been lawful. Whilst Ministers are the legal embodiment of their department, this is not an indication that individuals have knowingly or intentionally broken the law. Where the Court finds an act to have been unlawful it is for the courts to determine the remedy.
Where a Minister has broken the law in a personal capacity, that is also a matter for the Courts.

Where there is an allegation relating to conduct as a Minister that is undertaken by the Minister personally, then that is a conduct matter to be considered under the Ministerial Code.

Cabinet Office

This is a revised response. The Petitions Committee requested a response which more directly addressed the request of the petition. You can find the original response towards the bottom of the petition page: https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/577013

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