MaryJane
Extraordinary Machine
Personally, I cannot agree more. While I readily admit I am a Kirby-lover, I think some of the decisions of the HC do leave me speechless, especially in the area of tort (perhaps the most important area of law to remedy a plaintiff).The Age said:High Court shifted to right, says Kirby
March 31, 2007
OVER the past decade the High Court has moved further to the right and away from legal innovation, particularly when it comes to human rights issues, High Court Justice Michael Kirby said last night.
Recent decisions such as the WorkChoices case "illustrated the rise and rise of the constitutional powers of the Commonwealth at the cost of those of the states", he said.
Research suggested that the last decade had not been good for plaintiffs, with more decisions in favour of defendants and their insurers.
And he congratulated pop singer Anthony Callea for having come out as gay, saying: "(He) has done a bold and correct thing. He is an admirable Australian. In terms of influencing popular culture and understanding of the reality of human sexual diversity, I would trade 10 judges for one popular singer."
Speaking at the first of a series of annual lectures in his name at Southern Cross University in Lismore, New South Wales, Justice Kirby painted himself as the odd man out on the High Court bench. He said his rate of dissension from majority decisions was now running at 48 per cent; the next most dissenting justice was only 16 per cent.
To judge whether he was "taking delight in being contrary", Justice Kirby had checked his dissent rate in his previous job as president of the NSW Court of Appeal: there, he was with the majority 85 per cent of the time.
Justice Kirby said the political furore of the Wik case on Aboriginal land rights, which triggered "unrelenting attacks" on the bench, represented "a decline in civic understandings between the branches of government".
Every justice appointed since Wik had been judged against the promise of politician Tim Fischer to appoint capital-C conservatives: "There can be no doubt that the philosophical balance of the High Court has shifted significantly since my appointment was announced at the end of 1995. Almost certainly, those who have supported the shift would not wish to deny it."
Justice Kirby believes the resentment over Wik helped fuel the political attack, under a misuse of parliamentary privilege, in which he was wrongly accused of using privileges of office to engage in improper sexual behaviour: "Having got a taste of blood, the attacks in 1996-97 were to be followed up by a personal attack on me in the Senate. This was a sorry episode in the relationship between the Parliament and the court."
Justice Kirby said his partner of 27 years, Johan van Vloten, was not protected under federal law as a spouse or de facto would be.
But Mr Van Vloten now comes to all High Court functions and attends lunches with the Queen, and dinners with the Governor-General and Prime Minister. "People are getting used to it," Justice Kirby said.
Source: http://www.hcourt.gov.au/publications
I am also in a bit of a anti-HC mood, because of the number of essays I have written of late, comparing our judiciary to those of other common law countries. Even the bloody UK have stepped up to the plate and have slowly started to follow the path of more progressive countries (namely Canada, I love La Forest J). Its like we are the black sheep (but not in the slightly-weird-but-still-cool kind of way)...
What are others thoughts?