
Former MSP Tommy Sheridan loses social worker job legal challenge
Lord Young wrote: "It makes no difference that, in this case, the petitioner's complaint relates to a refusal by the respondent to consider entering into a contract of employment."He added that Mr Sheridan "enjoys no private law right" to be considered for employment by the city council and was trying to apply broad public law concepts to fashion the right to be considered for such jobs.Lord Young ruled: "If the petitioner's argument was accepted, then it would follow that every applicant for a public sector job in Scotland could potentially challenge the job application process using the judicial review procedure."I find that the petition is incompetent for the reasons advanced by the respondent and it falls to be dismissed."The Court of Session is Scotland's highest civil court
Mr Sheridan had applied to become a criminal justice social worker with the council.In his job application, he disclosed he had been given a three year prison sentence in 2011 for perjury after a jury at the High Court in Glasgow concluded he lied on oath during his successful defamation action against the News of the World newspaper.But he was sent a rejection letter in August 2024 and later informed any future applications would not be progressed.At earlier proceedings, his lawyer Mike Dailly said the body which regulates social work in Scotland - the Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC) - had assessed Mr Sheridan as being a suitable candidate to work in the profession.He argued the decision to reject the application was therefore "irrational". Lord Young ruled against this, saying the registration with the SSSC simply meant he met the minimum statutory requirement for employment.He added an employer was entitled to use "additional criteria" when deciding who to interview or offer jobs to, such as prior convictions. Mr Sheridan served as an MSP for Glasgow between 1999 and 2007.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


North Wales Chronicle
40 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
For Women Scotland launches legal action against Scottish ministers on gender
For Women Scotland's legal battle with Scottish ministers on the definition of a woman ended in the UK Supreme Court, which ruled in April that the words 'woman' and 'sex' in the Equality Act 2010 refer to a biological woman and biological sex. However, the group said that it now has 'little choice' but to take further legal action as some policies regarding transgender pupils in schools and transgender people in custody remain in place – which the group said is 'in clear breach of the law'. The schools guidance for single-sex toilets says it is important that young people 'where possible, are able to use the facilities they feel most comfortable with'. The prison guidance allows for a transgender woman to be admitted into the women's estate if the person does not meet the violence against women and girls criteria, and there is no other basis to suppose that she poses an unacceptable risk of harm to those housed in the women's estate. For Women Scotland has now applied to the Court of Session seeking to quash the policies, which it says are 'inconsistent with the UK Supreme Court judgment of April 16 2025'. It has raised an ordinary action for reduction (quashing) of the policies relating to schools and prisons, with the news first reported by Sunday Times Scotland. In a statement, the group said: 'Nothing has persuaded the government to take action and both policies remain stubbornly in place, to the detriment of vulnerable women and girls, leaving us little choice but to initiate further legal action. 'The Scottish ministers have 21 days to respond to the summons. If the policies have not been withdrawn by then we will lodge the summons for calling, and the government will have to defend its policies in court. 'We are asking the court to issue a declarator that the school guidance and the prison guidance are unlawful and that they be reduced in whole. 'We are also asking that both policies are suspended in the meantime.' A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'It would be inappropriate to comment on live court proceedings.' For Women Scotland previously brought a series of challenges over the definition of 'woman' in Scottish legislation mandating 50% female representation on public boards. The last step of these ended in the Supreme Court ruling, which the campaign group's supporters hailed as a 'watershed for women'.


Times
an hour ago
- Times
Pensions commission must resist being warned off triple lock
T owards the end of last month, the government launched a new pensions commission. The last one, which reported nearly 20 years ago, carried out one of the most effective and impactful of all independent reviews done for governments. It led directly to automatic enrolment into pensions, consensus on the need to increase pension ages and increases in the level of the state pension. It is not surprising that this new body is badged as a 'revival' of the original commission. Its remit is to look at ways of raising income levels for future generations of pensioners, particularly those at risk of poverty and with low lifetime incomes, while taking account of the sustainability of the system. Excellent. While, on the surface, things seem to be going pretty well, there are some serious challenges coming down the road.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Jack Straw urges Labour not to panic about threat of Nigel Farage
Keir Starmer and his ministers must not 'panic' about the threat of Nigel Farage, the former home secretary Jack Straw has said, adding that the prime minister had impressed on the world stage and should show more of that side of himself at home. In an interview with the Guardian, he praised Starmer's intention to recognise a Palestinian state after an ultimatum to Israel – but defended the home secretary, Yvette Cooper, saying he would also have proscribed the direct action group Palestine Action. The British political veteran said he believed Starmer and his cabinet were 'head and shoulders' above opposition politicians and would reap the rewards of a gradual improvement in the economy and public services, which would not come immediately. And he said the poll lead of Reform UK should not be taken as a foregone conclusion. 'We have been here before in terms of an insurgent party leading in the polls. So I think it is the famous phrase – don't panic,' he said. The former cabinet minister said Labour faced not only a terrible economic inheritance, but fundamental damage to the fabric of democracy by the previous Conservative governments, primarily Boris Johnson. 'Johnson polluted British politics and although he's left the stage, that pollution carries on, and has been very profound,' he said. 'People look at the first Blair period with kind of rose-tinted spectacles. It didn't always feel that it was easy at the time, but the inheritance was much easier.' Straw said there had at least been an appreciation in 1997 that his predecessors had been competent people. 'These people [in the last Tory government] were not competent. They couldn't do the job. In the space of four years, I think there were five home secretaries,' he said. Straw, who was foreign secretary during the invasion of Iraq, which he later admitted had been a mistake, said he had spent time in the run-up to last year's general election with David Lammy and dismissed the idea Labour that had not been adequately prepared to enter government. 'The issues that they're dealing with have become much more intense,' he said. 'I was talking to someone who worked for years in the Treasury, he was saying how these ministers are head and shoulders above what he described as the Fourth XI of the previous government.' Straw represented his Blackburn constituency for 33 years, and has often talked about how he had been proud that a Labour government had helped to heal racial and social divisions in Britain, which many in Westminster now feel have fractured with tensions exploited by Farage and others. His seat is now held by Adnan Hussain, a pro-Gaza independent. Straw, who until recently still chaired a youth centre in the town and still chairs a chain of academies including Muslim faith schools in Blackburn, said it was hardly surprising given the strength of feeling about Gaza. He said he knew Hussain and thought he was 'throughly decent' and added: 'Politics there has always been complicated.' But he said it was clear that politics was fracturing in a way that would start to produce unpredictable results – particularly under first past the post, which he favoured abolishing. 'The party needs to think about that,' he said of electoral reform. 'And it would get through, I think people understand that in a multi-party situation, first past the post is potentially unfair. It can produce really quirky results. Farage could come through on that.' Could he envisage Farage as PM? 'There is a chance. I think it's a small chance, smaller than he thinks. The Tory party appears to me to just be collapsing,' he said. Although he admitted he did not expect such a plummet in popularity for Starmer and Labour, he urged the party to remain calm. 'In 2000 of course we lost the mayoral election to Ken Livingstone; that was regarded as a great humiliation for Labour. 'So, not being Pollyanna-ish about this, but my instinct is that things will gradually improve.' He said he hoped a sceptical UK public would begin to make the connection between Starmer's successful diplomacy, especially with Donald Trump, and the kind of statesman he could be at home. 'The way Starmer has navigated the challenge from America has been extraordinary,' he said. 'This government has made missteps, which all governments do, and not least about things like [welfare]. 'But at some stage I think that people will start to make the connection between the stalwart international statesman and Starmer the domestic prime minister, and realise that we're talking about the same person and the character.' In one of his first acts as home secretary Straw was the architect of the Human Rights Act 1998, incorporating the European convention on human rights (ECHR) into UK domestic law. His ruthless approach to crime and law and order was often contrasted with his commitment to the act – which survived threats of abolition under the Conservatives. But Straw has become increasingly sceptical of the sweeping reach of the Strasbourg court – and said the justice secretary, Shabana Mahmood, should consider legislating to stop such an interventionist approach on asylum, which rightwing parties have denounced. 'I'm not remotely in the position of people on the right who say just abolish the Human Rights Act and withdraw from the ECHR,' he said. 'But we need to look at two things. One, if you can persuade the court in Strasbourg that they have to be less interventionist, and that if they're not, they will write themselves out of the script. 'The second thing is considering ways in which you progressively decouple the Human Rights Act from Strasbourg. The Human Rights Act says British courts should 'take account' of the decisions of the ECHR. But that's basically been interpreted as 'to follow'. And that was never, never our intention.' He said the court should be 'concentrating on the original purposes, which was to stop really serious breaches of rights, not everyday asylum issues.' As home secretary, it was also Straw's Terrorism Act that introduced the proscription of terror groups – used against al-Qaida and others. At the time, addressing concerns that it would affect civil disobedience by organisations such as Greenpeace, Straw said there was 'no evidence whatever' they would be affected. But he said now he was fully behind the decision to proscribe Palestine Action, because of the attack on military planes at RAF Brize Norton. 'This was a very, very serious breach of the security of the base. And if I'd have been in Yvette's position, which I have been, I would have done exactly what she's done,' he said. 'You can't proscribe on a whim. And you need clear evidence. Much of that evidence is based on intelligence, but also just the fact that they are attacking our military assets and military bases. I think we certainly would have taken the action that she has taken.' But Straw said he had been delighted to see Starmer take the decision to recognise a Palestinian state – saying it was 'barefaced cheek' of the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to say it was playing into the hands of Hamas. 'I applaud the decision which Keir Starmer has taken. I'm really glad that he's done that. I think that the conditions imposed were quite skilful,' he said. Straw said he did not know yet whether the Israeli offensive in Gaza would ultimately be deemed a genocide. 'Whatever label you put on it, it's absolutely amoral and unacceptable and just terrible.