Michael Gove supported the death penalty. Now he’s minister for justice

The Tory minister wrote in 1998 that it was wrong to abolish hanging

 

Newly appointed justice secretary Michael Gove wrote an article supporting the death penalty in 1998, saying it was wrong to abolish hanging for convicted criminals.

The former Tory education secretary and chief whip’s article for the Times, where he was a journalist, was reported by the Telegraph on Sunday after his new role was revealed.

Mr Gove will be in charge of scrapping the Human Rights Act as well as running Britain’s prisons.

His piece argued a fair trial with the death penalty was more just than prison sentences set by the home office and imposed by judges.

The Times reports:

“Mr Gove wrote in 1998 that Britain was wrong to abolish hanging in the 1960s.

Banning the noose had ‘led to a corruption of our criminal justice system, the erosion of all our freedoms and has made the punishment of the innocent more likely’ as it came with the home secretary being given the power to impose wholesale tariffs, he said.

He has not repeated his stance since.

The Telegraph reports Mr Gove also wrote:

Hanging may seem barbarous, but the greater barbarity lies in the slow abandonment of our common law traditions. Were I ever alone in the dock I would not want to be arraigned before our flawed tribunals, knowing my freedom could be forfeit as a result of political pressures. I would prefer a fair trial, under the shadow of the noose.”

The incoming Tory government has pledged to replace the Human Rights Act, which enshrined the European Convention on Human Rights into UK law in 2000, which a British bill of rights.

The Act was passed under the Labour government of Tony Blair in the same year Mr Gove wrote his article about hanging.

Mr Gove recently wrote a piece in the Spectator about the importance of Christianity in the UK.

Adam Barnett is a staff writer at Left Foot Forward. Follow MediaWatch on Twitter

 

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61 Responses to “Michael Gove supported the death penalty. Now he’s minister for justice”

  1. Leon Wolfeson

    Because he takes orders like a good right winger to go disrupt discussion, of course. Really, this needs to be asked? It’s not like he has a job…

  2. RNRDOCTOR

    Or, seeing as everyone here agrees with me and sees you for the moronic troll that your inbred parents raised you to be, you could piss-off!

  3. Leon Wolfeson

    No, it just shows how little they understand about why people reoffend. They get a lot more crime that way, but details.

  4. Leon Wolfeson

    So, adults in this case.
    Physical punishment…has one of the highest rates of encouraging re-offending by the stats. But hey, your idea. “Sort” them out of normal society and jobs, make them career criminals, etc.

    And then you suggest it for “young people” – that is, child abuse, something very different. And of course you’re afraid of all those gangs, those evil young violent people because it’s their nature, etc.

    Not to mention you’re talking about abusing a right you’d deny others. Again.

  5. Leon Wolfeson

    So now you’re everyone, Trot.

    Oh dear. Keep demanding my situation is like yours, as you cry because not *everyone* has your views. Disproving your contention. Logic, not your best point is it?

    Let me mock you further;

    http://www.marx-brothers.org/memo/stamps/abchasia.jpg

Comments are closed.