What the Palestine Action judgment means – and what it does not mean

13th February 2026

The High Court rules against the government, but not with enthusiasm

This morning the High Court handed down its judgment in the Palestine Action proscription challenge.

I wrote a quick commissioned piece at Prospect within a couple of hours of the judgment being handed down – and I just want to add and develop a few thoughts.

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First, the judgment shows the independence of the High Court in two ways.

A ruling against the government by definition indicates the independence of the judiciary from the executive.

(For what it is worth, I thought a decision against the government was possible when it switched from being a single judge to a three judge panel headed by the President of the King’s Bench Division – a “strong bench” – for a strong bench would be more likely to rule against the government on a matter of national security than a single judge. That said one can never “read” any High Court judge(s).)

But the judgment shows the independence of the court in another refreshing way.

For if you look at the judgment it is plain that the court is not impressed by Palestine Action.

It is always heartening to see a court side with a party with which it has little or no sympathy. It means the court has not got carried away with motivated reasoning in favour of the party it wants to win.

The court said bluntly:

“[Palestine Action’s] campaign is intended to close down the operations of a company pursuing a lawful business. The campaign has not been pursued with restraint. The wide range of targets is significant. It lays bare that Palestine Action’s campaign and pursuit of criminal damage is designed to intimidate the persons and businesses targeted so they end their commercial relationships with Elbit. Palestine Action is not engaged in any exercise of persuasion, or at least not the type of persuasion that is consistent with democratic values and the rule of law.”

Anyone coming across that passage early on in a judgment might have expected Palestine Action to have lost the case.

But no.

The court found in favour of Palestine Action anyway.

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Second, it was an impressive legal win – even if the court was not impressed by Palestine Action.

To win any judicial review against the government on a terrorism-related matter is difficult.

And to win any challenge to any statutory instrument (such as the one which proscribed Palestine Action) is difficult, as opposed to challenging a mere exercise of discretion by an official or a minister.

To do both is remarkable.

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Third, the government really only has itself to blame.

Here I mean both the government in general as well as the current administration.

In 2019 the government widened the scope of the relevant Terrorism law to include expressions of support for a proscribed organisation. (Technically this was done by parliament, but at the government’s behest.)

It must have seemed a good, illiberal idea at the time.

But it meant if an organisation was proscribed for one purpose – to target its organisation, membership and fund-raisers – it also criminalised expression of support too.

It became a one-size fits all provision which meant any proscription automatically infringed the right to free expression of those who were not organisers, members or fund-raisers.

This in turn meant that a court – like today – would look at any proscription with anxious scrutiny.

By wanting to prohibit more and more, the government made any proscription more exposed to legal challenge.

It was a very daft move by the then government.

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The government has also only got itself to blame in another way – and here it is the current administration.

It is hard to read the judgment and see the then Home Secretary and her officials as anything other than hapless.

For although legally the High Court decided against the Home Office on two pleaded grounds – in reality the reason the Home Office lost the case was because the proscription was botched.

One gets the sense from the judgment (and from the surrounding news of the time) that those at the Home Office wanted to push terrorism law to its limit – against a group which, even if not peaceful protesters, did not really fit the definition of terrorism – knowing that this would, at a stroke, criminalise not only those involved but anyone who expressed support for the group.

Those at the Home Office knew this was a stretch.

It must have been obvious that the information before them did not substantiate the proscription.

And the court today ruled it was a stretch too far.

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Fourth, the judgment today – in and of itself – does not change anything.

The law is the same today as it was yesterday – and at the time of the various mass arrests for those expressing support of Palestine Action.

The reason for this is that the court has not yet made an Order giving effect to its judgment.

And until and and unless an Order is made the legal positions of all involved stay the same.

This is because judgments – per se – do not normally have any legal effect until they are encapsulated by an Order.

(Orders are the sausages which come out of the judicial sausage factory, in the same way statutes are the sausages which come out of the parliamentary sausage factory.)

The court deliberately has delayed making an Order, and it would seem that the law may stand until and unless the government seeks an appeal.

And so Palestine Action remains a proscribed criminal organisation and expressing support for it remains a criminal offence.

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Finally, the government will no doubt throw everything at the appeal.

But the government threw everything at this hearing – and it still lost.

Perhaps the government will win on appeal.

The judgment today was balanced on both grounds on which the Home Office lost – it may not take much to shift those balances.

But a more sensible government would not appeal.

As I set out back in September 2025, the government is over-reaching with using terrorism law in this case.

But if the government really wants to proscribe Palestine Action it should put a two-clause bill through parliament making it that a proscription of an organisation, its members and fund-raisers does not automatically criminalise expressions of support for that organisation.

If the government keeps over-reaching, it may fall flat again.

And an adverse appeal judgment will be more damaging for the government than this judgment at first instance.

Nothing the Home Office will throw at the appeal will take away the fact that this was a botched proscription based on incomplete material.

The Home Office mucked up.

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9 thoughts on “What the Palestine Action judgment means – and what it does not mean”

  1. Does the involvement of Parliament in the Order have any effect on the ruling or the lawfulness?
    Thankyou

    1. Yes and no.

      The court will be more hesitant when parliament has had a role – though here the Commons were prevented from voting on PA itself being proscribed.

      But ultimately the lawfulness of any statutory instrument is a matter for a court – though the terms of Acts of Parliament themselves cannot be quashed under current constitutional theory.

  2. A welcome ruling – the idea you can’t express a view on whether this was a case when property damage was morally justifiable was fundamentally illiberal.

    It is depressing to see the freaze peach crowd already demanding the law be made more repressive.

    It strikes me that a delayed quashing order is an odd beast here – a thing that is currently a crime will not only cease to be criminal but cease to have ever been a crime. Get your head round that.

  3. There’s a Palestine Action judicial review case going through the Scots court that I believe may be decided very shortly. I read articles that argued the Scots court was more likely to decide against the government than was the English court.

    If the Scots and English courts both rule against the government, how likely is it that the government would win an appeal to the Supreme Court, please? And if the government lost both cases, is the POLITICAL fallout in then taking the case to the Supreme Court likely to be so horrendous as to deter Starmer and the Home Office from doing so?

  4. “If the government really wants to proscribe Palestine Action it should put a two-clause bill through parliament making it that a proscription of an organisation, its members and fund-raisers does not automatically criminalise expressions of support for that organisation.” To my mind the over-reach that could clearly make anyone (let alone a court) uncomfortable was that in the real world it seemed that the legislation was being used to criminalise not just expressions of support for the organisation but expressions of support for the causes espoused by the organisation. Thus ‘Elbit is bad’ or ‘Free Palestine’ taken as support for the organisation and putting one at risk of police action whether directly or indirectly (e.g. by recording information about you). It’s been said often enough before that being a dog-lover or a vegetarian doesn’t make one a supporter of Hitler. It can’t possibly be right that an opinion I might have can no longer be expressed because some bad person has said it too, or that it’s been said by others for some bad purpose.

    1. These are excellent points. Support for the ends a political group espouses is far from the same as supporting violent methods used by that group. I taught politics during Northern Ireland’s troubles and had students from across the divide, with wildly different points of view. In the 1980s one of the Republican students I taught told me that he had been censured by the Sinn Fein party leaders for telling them candidly that the party would secure many more votes if the IRA ended its violence. His analysis (drawing on canvassing) turned out to be correct and, of course, Sinn Fein’s leaders eventually reached this conclusion themselves. It was a significant factor in leading to the IRA ceasefire in 1994 and then the political settlement of 1998. A major drawback of the way the legislation on terrorism is framed is that it has a chilling effect on even debating the issues that have given rise to violent conflict. Suppression of this kind is not the route to a durable and mutually agreed resolution of any conflict. By signalling that some conflicts in the world should not be the subject of frank and open domestic debate within the UK, it also contributes to this country’s ignorance about the outside world (and in the past it has even led to ignorance about what has been happening within the borders of the UK itself).

  5. It would be an interesting exercise to form a list of actions the Home Office has not mucked up over the past couple of decades – the back of a postcard may turn out to be an excessive use of resources.

  6. That basically is in line with what Sumption said on Radio 4 yesterday. Eminently sensible and obvious, even for a non-lawyer like me. How do we ensure that the Government takes the sensible line?

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