May 'disappointed' at upskirting law block
Theresa May says she is "disappointed" an attempt to make upskirting a criminal offence in England and Wales did not progress through Parliament after one of her own MPs blocked it. Conservatives have criticised Sir Christopher Chope for objecting to the private member's bill.
If passed, it could see someone who has secretly taken a photo under a victim's skirt face up to two years in prison. The PM said she wanted to see it pass soon "with government support". Minister for Women, Victoria Atkins, said the government will allocate time for the bill in Parliament to ensure it does not get pushed down the list of private members' bills, which would mean it could some time to return to the Commons.
[...] Sir Christopher has yet to speak out about why he blocked the bill but upskirting victim Gina Martin - who started the campaign for the new law - said he had told her he objected to it "on principle" because it "wasn't debated". She also told the BBC that he said he "wasn't really sure" what upskirting was. "I said, 'well, I can help you with that'," Ms Martin added.
The bill was expected to sail through the Commons on Friday, but parliamentary rules mean it only required one MP to shout "object" to block its progress. Sir Christopher's intervention was met with shouts of "shame" from other MPs.
(Score: 2, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 18 2018, @12:23PM (1 child)
Naive. It's not just about what "upskirting" is, but what specifically is in the law. Politicians sometimes slip in authoritarian drivel where it doesn't belong. Maybe certain parts of the law are written incorrectly. Or maybe the severity of the punishments are in need of debate. Either way, there should be ample debate before passing any law.
(Score: 2) by FakeBeldin on Tuesday June 19 2018, @06:36PM
You'd be right... except that that has absolutely nothing to do with the reason the MP objected.
From the fine article:
As far as I can tell, before you came along, no one claimed anything was slipped into the law - not even the MP who objected.