The Bill of Rights remains in statute and continues to be cited in legal proceedings in the United Kingdom and other
Commonwealth realms, particularly Article 9 on
parliamentary freedom of speech. Following the
Perth Agreement in 2011, legislation amending the Bill of Rights and the Act of Settlement 1701 came into effect across the Commonwealth realms on 26 March 2015 which changed the laws of succession to the British throne.
Australia The Bill of Rights 1689 remains a part of Australian law, however in some states the Bill has been re-enacted in local legislation. The ninth article, regarding parliamentary freedom of speech, was inherited by
Federal Parliament in 1901 under section 49 of the
Australian Constitution. It was incorporated into the
Parliamentary Privileges Act 1987 which "preserves the application of the traditional expression of this privilege, but spells out in some detail just what may be covered by the term 'proceedings in Parliament.
Canada In Canada, the Bill of Rights remains in statute, although it has been largely superseded by domestic constitutional legislation. The ninth article on parliamentary freedom of speech remains in active use.
Ireland The application of the Bill of Rights to the
Kingdom of Ireland was uncertain. While the English Parliament sometimes passed acts relating to Ireland, the
Irish Patriot Party regarded this as illegitimate, and others felt that English acts only extended to Ireland when explicitly stated to do so, which was not the case for the Bill of Rights. The
Crown of Ireland Act 1542 meant the Bill's changes to the royal succession extended to Ireland.
Bills modelled on the Bill of Rights were introduced in the
Parliament of Ireland in 1695 and 1697 but not enacted. After the
Acts of Union 1800, provisions relating to the rights of Parliament implicitly extended to Ireland, but provisions relating to the rights of the individual were a grey area. Some jurists regarded the bill not as
positive law but as
declaratory of the
common law, and as such applicable to Ireland. The
Constitution of the Irish Free State, and the subsequent
Constitution of Ireland, carry over laws in force in the former
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland to the extent they were not repugnant to those constitutions. The Bill of Rights was not referred to in subsequent Irish legislation until the
Statute Law Revision Act 2007, which retained it, changed its short title to "Bill of Rights 1688" and repealed most of section 1 (the preamble) as being religiously discriminatory, which included: all words down to "Upon which Letters Elections having been accordingly made"; Article 7, which allowed Protestants to bear arms; and all words from "And they doe Claime Demand and Insist". The
Houses of the Oireachtas (Inquiries, Privileges and Procedures) Act 2013 repealed Article 9 on "freedom of speech and debates or proceedings in Parliament" as part of a consolidation of the law on
parliamentary privilege.
New Zealand The Bill of Rights is part of the laws of New Zealand. The Act was invoked in the 1976 case of
Fitzgerald v Muldoon and Others, which centred on the purporting of newly appointed Prime Minister
Robert Muldoon that he would advise the
Governor-General to abolish a
superannuation scheme established by the New Zealand Superannuation Act 1974, without new legislation. Muldoon felt that the dissolution would be immediate and he would later introduce a bill in parliament to retroactively make the abolition legal. This claim was challenged in court and the
Chief Justice declared that Muldoon's actions were illegal as they had violated Article 1 of the Bill of Rights, which provides "that the pretended power of dispensing with laws or the execution of laws by regal authority ... is illegal."
United Kingdom of the Bill of Rights, with
Britannia presenting the Bill to
William and
Mary The Bill of Rights applies in England and Wales; it was enacted in the
Kingdom of England which at the time included Wales. Scotland has its own legislation, the
Claim of Right Act 1689, passed before the
Acts of Union between England and Scotland. There are doubts as to whether, or to what extent, the Bill of Rights applies in
Northern Ireland, reflecting
earlier doubts as regards Ireland. Section 3 of the act was repealed by section 1 of, and the schedule to, the
Statute Law Revision Act 1867 (
30 & 31 Vict. c. 59), which came into force on 15 July 1867. The requirement that jurors be freeholders in cases of high treason was abolished in England and Wales by the
Juries Act 1825, and in Northern Ireland (to the extent it applied) by the
Statute Law Revision Act 1950.
Natural justice, the right to a fair trial, is in constitutional law held to temper unfair exploitation of parliamentary privilege. On 21 July 1995 a
libel case,
Neil Hamilton, MP v The Guardian, collapsed as the High Court ruled that the Bill of Rights' total bar on bringing into question anything said or done in the House prevented
The Guardian from obtaining a
fair hearing. Hamilton could otherwise have carte blanche to allege any background or meaning to his words, and no contradicting direct evidence, inference, extra submission or cross-examination of his words could take place due to the tight strictures of the Bill of Rights. Equally, the House of Lords decided that, absent a 1996 statutory provision, the Bill of Rights' entrenched parliamentary privilege would have prevented a fair trial for Hamilton in the 2001 defamation action of
Hamilton v Al-Fayed which went through the two tiers of appeal to like effect. That provision was section 13 of the
Defamation Act 1996, which permits
MPs to waive their
parliamentary privilege and thus cite and have examined their own speeches if relevant to litigation. Following the
United Kingdom European Union membership referendum in 2016, the Bill of Rights was cited by the Supreme Court in the
Miller case, in which the court ruled that triggering EU exit must first be authorised by an act of Parliament, because not doing so would abrogate rights secured by an Act of Parliament (namely, rights of EU citizens arising from the EU treaties given effect in UK law by the
European Communities Act 1972, as amended). It was cited again by the Supreme Court in its
2019 ruling that the prorogation of parliament was unlawful. The Court disagreed with the Government's assertion that prorogation could not be questioned under the Bill of Rights 1689 as a "proceeding of Parliament"; it ruled the opposite assertion, that prorogation "cannot sensibly be described as a 'proceeding in Parliament, as it was imposed upon and not debatable by Parliament, and could bring "core or essential business of Parliament" to an end without debate. ==Recognition==