So that was one of the things the commission looked at is how long does the concept of an emergency last? Because the government stretched it and stretched it and stretched it over a two year period. And naturally, what the commission concluded was we need a trigger for what constitutes an urgent health situation that then acts as a sort of a gateway to the use of these urgent powers.
00:17:09:18 - 00:17:38:23
We want a few more constraints on how ministers can use them, and they have to get a renewal of this concept of an urgent health situation, an urgent health declaration to continue to use powers in the future. Because when we took evidence in the commission, that was one of the big concerns that quite a number of people had, including parliamentarians, that if there's no constraint on the use of the powers, ministers can just effectively leave them there and continue to use them in situations in which is just not justified.
00:17:39:00 - 00:18:01:10
So in effect, there would be a kind of declaration of a state of health emergency or something of that nature before these powers could start being invoked by ministers. That's the basic idea behind this. Yeah. And that would lapse after a certain period. It would require evidence or an opinion from the chief medical officer, and that opinion from the chief medical officer would have to be provided to Parliament.
00:18:01:10 - 00:18:22:11
So there'd be a parliamentary debate. Yes, there would be a parliamentary debate for it to be approved. And so that would be the authority that would then be taken and used by ministers to tell us all to stay at home, or tell us all to wear masks or to shut the schools or whatever it was. Yeah. But then following that, there would be a stricter regime of scrutiny.
00:18:22:16 - 00:18:57:24
So there's a few different measures that we recommended. We don't recommend that the regulations can be amended by Parliament, which is actually available in the Civil Contingencies Act. So we didn't go that far because I think we thought it would cause too much trouble and make things too difficult. But what we do recommend is that the period for the regulations to be approved would be reduced from 28 days to 14, and that there would be a special committee set up, which would be cross-party and which would scrutinize the regulations, as happened in Scotland, but didn't happen in other parts of the UK.
00:18:58:02 - 00:19:21:07
Yeah. I mean, essentially this this concept of having a joint committee, both houses if they wish, or it could be in each house, but a dedicated public health emergency committee to take a cross-departmental look at things and to be able to respond quite quickly to the issues as they arise. So at Westminster, during the pandemic, each departmental select committee looked in that particular area.
00:19:21:07 - 00:19:40:24
So Department of Health committee looked at health regulations, you know, transport theirs. But what seemed to be missing was a sort of coherent, holistic approach to scrutiny and to consider things in the round and to consider the knock on effects of regulations in one area compared to another. And that's something that's probably better done in a committee than attempting to do it at a question time
00:19:41:01 - 00:19:56:05
or a statement on the floor of the House of Commons. Yes. And convening a smaller group of MPs quite quickly is easier than trying to get the entire house together. And obviously there are all sorts of questions about what type of health emergency we'd face. You know, the concept of a parliament is that it assembles, that it gathers together.
00:19:56:07 - 00:20:28:14
And obviously during Covid, that wasn't possible when we had to adapt to virtual proceedings. We don't know what the health emergency would look like next time and whether we'd be back in the same situation. But being able to convene a small group of MPs and peers who keep a watching eye on this and scrutinize it across departments we thought was more sensible, looking at what had been done in Scotland, looking at what had been done internationally, and importantly, this concept of an urgent health situation declaration would be the trigger for the setting up of the committee.
00:20:28:14 - 00:21:03:00
It wouldn't be for government to decide whether it should be set up. It should be automatic that once that declaration comes into force, then that committee has to be established. So I don't know how much difference would that make? I think it would make a difference. I know from my own experience that I was special adviser to the Joint Committee on Human Rights, the Covid 19 inquiry that it did for a year, and we were producing pretty live scrutiny, actually, of the legislation from a human rights perspective and raising a lot of the issues which now form part of this report, but also will form part of the Covid 19 inquiry reports.
00:21:03:06 - 00:21:23:24
What we were raising about the clarity of legislation, which is something we've raised, we were raising about protest rights, about the rights of people to see their partners, which was coming up. And we were part of a ecosystem of a number of committees, the Health Committee, the Home Affairs Committee, the Secondary Legislation Committee that were doing a huge amount of scrutiny work.
00:21:24:01 - 00:21:46:15
It was valuable, but it wasn't joined up. I don't think the government was particularly paying attention, was my impression. They sort of came back with responses, but it was all ex post facto. And I think that that work should be consolidated into a single committee. That would also, I think, get public interest and allow these issues to be aired in a similar way to SAGE.
00:21:46:17 - 00:22:14:03
You know, SAGE is a sort of obscure committee that wasn't heard publicly. It just they produced minutes, but it became hugely significant because it was quite obviously the only committee that the government decided that it had to listen to and was constantly saying, you know, justifying its actions that SAGE said this, SAGE said that. And I think that demonstrates that the importance that these committees can have for scrutiny purposes. We should just explain SAGE is not a parliamentary committee.
00:22:14:07 - 00:22:38:01
It was a gathering of the scientists, the health experts and so on. And so should an incoming government, because as we're talking, there's a general election underway, should an incoming government, as a matter of urgency, pick up these recommendations and stick them into a passing piece of health legislation so that these changes are on the books? Or is this stuff still controversial enough that an incoming government might think, we probably want our own ideas.
00:22:38:03 - 00:23:02:23
We're not proposing anything particularly radical. We're not saying you've got to get rid of the Public Health Act or the Civil Contingencies Act. What we're proposing is a series of relative limited, but actually really significant changes that I don't think should be controversial. And I think we should have cross-party support because they reflect issues that were raised by people in both parties throughout the pandemic.
00:23:03:00 - 00:23:28:17
And I think it would be very prudent to get these changes done as quickly as possible so that when the next pandemic or the next public health emergency arises, and it could be at any time, this isn't all just picked off a shelf and lumped together in with other changes. Now, one of the proposals we've made is that actually the pandemic showed the importance of the role of the legislature in an emergency.
00:23:28:19 - 00:23:50:14
And actually Parliament and indeed the devolved legislatures are not part of or have not historically been part of emergency planning by the Cabinet Office. So one of the recommendations we've got is that they should be in future in order to sort of get a better approach to how you manage the legislative and democratic accountability aspects of an emergency.
00:23:50:16 - 00:24:10:21
And I think that's why it's important that the next government does pick it up, because it's going to have to obviously respond to the Covid inquiry. They’re not looking at these aspects of what happened. So it's important that that's part of the discussion. But we expect the next government to have to respond to the findings of the Covid inquiry, but they're going to have to get on with emergency planning themselves.
00:24:10:21 - 00:24:37:18
They're going to have to review what the Cabinet Office’s emergency plans are and be thinking about what happens if this happens on our watch next time. We need to be prepared. So there's that aspect of it. But there's also, of course, Parliament itself. We're going to have a whole set of select committees with new members, new chairs. And I would hope that the Public Administration committee in the House of Commons in particular, possibly the Constitution Committee in the House of Lords as well, would want to revisit this.
00:24:37:21 - 00:25:01:24
Select committees in the last Parliament have looked at these issues. They've made their own recommendations. Ours are not out with those. You know, they're fairly reasonably consistent. And I'd hope that those committees would want to revisit, to keep the pressure on the government to ensure that emergency planning is done for the future effectively.