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Charities Bill expected to lose out to election but others set to succeed

Posted: 07 April 2005 | Subscribe Online


The voluntary sector described this week as "one of the most disappointing for the UK charity sector for a long time" after the Charities Bill was expected to be dropped.

As Community Care went to press, the bill was set to become a casualty of the dissolution of parliament after prime minister Tony Blair announced a general election on 5 May.

Chief executive of the National Council for Voluntary Organisations Stuart Etherington said: "The failure of the three parties to find the time and the agreement to make this excellent bill a law is very frustrating."
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He added that the NCVO would be seeking "cast iron guarantees" from all the parties during the general election campaign that the Charities Bill would be brought back in the next Queen's speech.

It was expected that the Mental Capacity Bill would make it onto the statute book in time.

Last week The Making Decisions Alliance, a coalition of organisations that have pushed for the legislation, wrote to MPs urging them not to table last-minute amendments that could throw the bill off track. The bill was due to complete its parliamentary journey in an hour-long debate in the Lords earlier this week.

The Disability Discrimination Bill was also predicted to make it through. A spokesperson for the Disability Rights Commission said it was "99.9 per cent certain" the bill would go through because the government had shown its commitment to passing it.
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On the Drugs Bill, drugs think-tank Transform said a deal had been struck between Labour and the Conservatives and it was "very likely" to go through unless it was "torpedoed" by a few Lords.

But information officer Steve Rolles added that the time allotted to the bill had been "grossly inadequate" and charities were angry that it had not been properly debated or consulted on. He said there were rumours of a "part 2" of the bill after the election.

Despite Home Office denials last week that it was planning to sacrifice plans to criminalise incitement to religious hatred, a clause introducing these measures was expected to be removed from the Serious Organised Crime and Police Bill this week to allow it to complete its passage through parliament before dissolution.


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