Extreme measures: There are more than 1,000 laws which give officials the right to enter private property
‘Day by day under Labour, the rights and liberties of law-abiding citizens are being eroded.’
By Simon Walters
The march of the Big Brother state under Labour was highlighted last night as it was revealed that there are now 1,043 laws that give the authorities the power to enter a home or business.
Nearly half have been introduced since Labour came to power 11 years ago. They include the right to:
• Invade your home to see if your pot plants have pests or do not have a ‘plant passport’ (Plant Health England Order 2005).
• Survey your home and garden to see if your hedge is too high (Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003).
• Check that accommodation given to asylum seekers is not being lived in by non-asylum seekers (Immigration and Asylum Act 1999).
• Raid a house to check if unlicensed gambling is taking place (Gambling Act 2005 Inspection Regulations 2007).
• Seize fridges without the correct energy rating (Energy Information Household Refrigerators and Freezers Regulations 2004).
The rise in clipboard-wielding state inspectors flies in the face of repeated pledges by Ministers to curb the power of bureaucrats.
The full extent of the state’s ‘powers of entry’ is revealed in documents slipped out quietly by the Government last week.
The information was posted on the Home Office website, but in a highly unusual move, the computer file was locked to prevent it being copied or printed. A secret Home Office password was required to access the file.
A Home Office spokeswoman denied the restrictions were an attempt to stop the state’s powers being circulated more widely.
She claimed it was a ‘mistake’ and the file would be unlocked tomorrow.
Some 420 new powers of entry are the product of laws introduced since 1997. A further 16 are in laws due to be approved by Parliament in the next few weeks.
A recent study by the Centre for Policy Studies think-tank warned that the ‘proliferation and variety’ of such laws mean householders can no longer ‘realistically be aware’ of their rights and legal obligations.
Gordon Brown last year announced a review of ‘powers of entry’ laws and said they would be subjected to a ‘liberty test’ to stop abuses by the state.
However, new powers set to be approved by Parliament include inspecting for non-human genetic material, for looted cultural property from Iraq and for ‘undeclared’ carbon dioxide, as well as enforcing bin tax.
Town hall ‘bin police’ already have the right to enter homes, take photographs, seize contents of bins, and ‘investigate as required’.
Householders can be fined up to £5,000 if they refuse entry or ‘obstruct’ an official.
Shadow Communities Secretary Eric Pickles said: ‘Day by day under Labour, the rights and liberties of law-abiding citizens are being eroded.’

3 responses so far ↓
wil // August 10, 2008 at 5:39 pm
But if you have nothing to hide…?
My parents would get hysterical if they felt something–anything–I was keeping from them. Because if I didn’t want to cheerfully share something/anything/everything–why then it must be horrible–and I’d be frantically badgered even more. And badgered if/when they found out–because it whatever it was–was never quite right and must be worked on.
Concept of privacy was usually non existent.
LiberalsCaused9.11 // November 17, 2008 at 3:01 pm
Labour is socialist. Inherent in any socialist state is the fascist presumption that people are inferior to the government. They must be forced to comply, since socialism is antithetical to freedom and nothing belongs to them but through the “grace” of government. In short, denying the government anything is “anti-social” and is grounds for brute force and intimidation.
pjwalker911 // November 17, 2008 at 3:53 pm
Absolutely, they believe they are our feudal masters, headed at the top by the “gods” of aristocracy. If people just finally decide to stop bowing down to them and stop believing so strongly in government, then they will be forced into another line of work.