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Rights Now, sometimes written with an exclamation mark, was a British umbrella group of disabled people's organisations and
charities A charitable organization or charity is an organization whose primary objectives are philanthropy and social well-being (e.g. educational, religious or other activities serving the public interest or common good). The legal definition of a cha ...
which campaigned for a change in the law to prevent
discrimination Discrimination is the act of making unjustified distinctions between people based on the groups, classes, or other categories to which they belong or are perceived to belong. People may be discriminated on the basis of race, gender, age, relig ...
against disabled people and for a full civil rights law, even though the result was the flawed Disability Discrimination Act 1995. The biggest protest in numbers of people was in July 1994 at Trafalgar Square and Whitehall, London. It was a very broad-based campaign, including trade unions for example. Campaigning to improve the laws for full civil rights continued, but Rights Now as a group ended in 1995.


Before Rights Now


Silver Jubilee Access Committee - SJAC

To give it its full name, the Silver Jubilee Committee on Improving Access for Disabled People wa
established
in 1977 by
Alf Morris Alfred Morris, Baron Morris of Manchester, (23 March 1928 – 12 August 2012) was a British Labour Co-operative politician and disability rights campaigner. Political career Morris served as Member of Parliament for Manchester Wythenshawe fr ...
MP, the Minister for Disabled People, to report on access arrangements regarding the Silver Jubilee celebrations. He appointe
Peter Large
(Spinal Injuries Association, SIA) as its chair. It produced a report in 1979, ''Can Disabled People Go Where You Go?''


Committee on Restrictions Against Disabled People - CORAD

In 1979 Alf Morris established the Committee on Restrictions Against Disabled People, CORAD. He again asked Peter Large to be the chair. Colin Barnes identified the creation of CORAD as the start of the UK movement for disabled people's civil rights because CORAD, building on the work of the SJAC, analysed the restrictions against disabled people systematically, including education and employment. Its terms of reference, membership, and some meeting minutes ar
held
in the UK National Archives. Shortly after CORAD was established there was a general election and a Conservative government replaced the Labour government, so the committee reported to the new minister, Hugh Rossi MP, who reportedly ignored their findings. In written evidenc
submitted
to Parliament in 2004, Peter Large recalled the following:


First of many non-government bills

In 1983
Jack Ashley Jack Ashley, Baron Ashley of Stoke, (6 December 1922 – 20 April 2012) was a British politician. He was a Labour Member of Parliament in the House of Commons for Stoke-on-Trent South for 26 years, from 1966 to 1992, and subsequently sat in t ...
MP used the ten-minute rule and put forward the Civil Rights (Disabled Persons) Bill which would have established a commission with legal powers of enforcement. The Bill did not have government support and was lost. Various research writings claim or estimate the number of attempts to pass a civil rights bill for disabled people between 1980 and 1995, with numbers varying between nine and sixteen bills.


Voluntary Organisations for Anti-Discrimination Legislation - VOADL

Around 1985 a group of the large, national charities for disabled people, including RADAR (the Royal Association for Disability and Rehabilitation, as was), the
Spastics Society Scope (previously known as the National Spastics Society) is a disability charity in England and Wales that campaigns to change negative attitudes about disability, provides direct services, and educates the public. The organisation was found ...
(as was), came together to form a lobby group for anti-discrimination legislation, ADL, also known as civil rights for disabled people. The
British Council of Organisations of Disabled People The British Council of Organisations of Disabled People (BCODP) was a radical national voice of disabled people for legal, social and cultural change in Britain from 1981 to 2017, with a high profile in the 1980s and 1990s. Origins BCODP was foun ...
, BCODP (as was), around 1988 agreed to participate in VOADL as an observer organisation. VOADL established an advisory committee around 1989 which was chaired by Mike Oliver who supported Colin Barnes as the researcher formally linked to BCODP. Research interviews were held at the SIA offices led by Colin Barnes, Stephen Bradshaw, Jane Campbell, and Mike Oliver. In 1991 the results of this research was published as a definitive text on ADL in the UK. The closest successor organisation to VOADL would probably be VODG - the Voluntary Organisations Disability Group. Thei
website
states it "is a membership body representing organisations within the voluntary sector who work alongside disabled people."


Rights Now, 1992–1995

The Rights Now group was formed in 1992. Although VOADL had been successful in pulling together a number of the largest disability charities ("organisations for") they had found that disabled people's organisations ("organisations of") were distrustful and reluctant to join and share their knowledge and strategies. This changed when the creation of a new, combined organisation was suggested by the executive committee of BCODP and the charities involved in VOADL agreed to the 'merger'. Rights Now had a reported 83 member organisations, including trade unions as well as disabled people's organisations (DPOs) and disability charities, and a reported 10,000 individual members. Only disabled people who were representing a DPO could be an office-holder of Rights Now (sources include:
Rachel Hurst Rachel Mary Rosalind Hurst CBE is a British activist and former director of Disability Awareness in Action (DAA), an international network working on disability and human rights. Early training and employment Born in 1939, Hurst trained as an ac ...
Collection
Disabled People's Archive
box 41). The first Chair of Rights Now was Stephen Bradshaw, chief executive of the Spinal Injuries Association, followed by
Rachel Hurst Rachel Mary Rosalind Hurst CBE is a British activist and former director of Disability Awareness in Action (DAA), an international network working on disability and human rights. Early training and employment Born in 1939, Hurst trained as an ac ...
. The campaign reportedly had strong links with Parliamentarians though the All-Party Disability Group and its researcher Victoria Scott, who worked for RADAR, and the Rights Now Coordinator, Adam Thomas. In parallel, around the same time many disabled people and their organisations were becoming more vocally critical of charities and fundraising, and in particular, on the biennial Telethons run by ITV. A protest demo of around 200 disabled people outside ''Telethon 90'' was organised by the ''Campaign to Stop Patronage'' wit
Victoria Waddington
and Allan Sutherland doing the press liaison. The 1990 demo created the conditions for a larger-scale protest demo by an estimated 1000+ disabled people outside (and some inside) ''Telethon 92''. The organisational work for these demos had a background in the emerging disability arts scene rather than in elected politics, committees and lobbying, and it led to the creation of the
Disabled People's Direct Action Network The Disabled People's Direct Action Network (DAN) is a disability rights activist organization in England and Wales that campaigned for civil rights with high-profile street demonstrations involving civil disobedience, rallies and protests. Prio ...
, DAN, in early 1993. While DAN was more focused on inaccessible transport rather than civil rights laws in Parliament, nevertheless their highly visible protests on the streets across England and Wales caused a "media extravaganza" according to John Evans, saying also that it "no doubt highlighted the profile of the need for civil rights legislation".


1993

Although DAN was very focused on street campaigning against inaccessible public transport (mass transit), nevertheless it
first major action
was during the by-election in Christchurch, Dorset, in 1993 where Rob Hayward, the Conservative candidate, had previously been an MP for another area and had ' talked out' a bill for disabled people's civil rights. He failed to win this
safe seat A safe seat is an electoral district (constituency) in a legislative body (e.g. Congress, Parliament, City Council) which is regarded as fully secure, for either a certain political party, or the incumbent representative personally or a combinat ...
. In July 1993 Rights Now published its report, ''What Price Civil Rights?'', which provided "substantial evidence that the government adgrossly overestimated the cost of implementing the Civil Rights Bill", the government figure being £17bn (billion: a thousand million). The Rights Now report estimated the cost as no more than £5bn.


1994

In the 1993/1994 parliamentary session Roger Berry MP won a place in the ballot for a private members bill, and for at least the ninth time since Jack Ashley MP, a Civil Rights (Disabled Persons) Bill was put forward to become a law. The wording had evolved over the years, this version having been updated by the disabled lawyers Caroline Gooding and David Ruebain. A national political scandal emerged when it was revealed on 6 May 1994 that the Minister for Disabled People, Nicholas Scott MP (and father of Victoria Scott, who was a strong supporter of Rights Now, causing much press comment), had arranged for over 80 wrecking amendments to be put by five
backbench In Westminster and other parliamentary systems, a backbencher is a member of parliament (MP) or a legislator who occupies no governmental office and is not a frontbench spokesperson in the Opposition, being instead simply a member of the " ...
MPs who were hostile to the bill, while he maintained he was "neutral" on the matter; a miss-statement which caused him to have to be replaced soon afterwards by William Hague MP as the Minister for Disabled People. On 23 May 1994 "a group of disabled activists abandoned their wheelchairs and crawled into the House of Commons in an attempt to lobby their MPs. They were turned away at the normal public entrance - which is inaccessible to wheelchair users - and it took five hours before they were allowed into the parliamentary lobby." Perhaps th
largest attended protest
organised by ''Rights Now'' was on 9 July 1994 in Trafalgar Square and Whitehall, London, with an estimated 2,800 people protesting. DAN took part in the protest with their own action, delivering a giant 'letter' to
10 Downing Street 10 Downing Street in London, also known colloquially in the United Kingdom as Number 10, is the official residence and executive office of the first lord of the treasury, usually, by convention, the prime minister of the United Kingdom. Along wi ...
for
John Major Sir John Major (born 29 March 1943) is a British former politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Leader of the Conservative Party (UK), Leader of the Conservative Party from 1990 to 1997, and as Member of Parliament ...
MP, the prime minister (sources include:
Rachel Hurst Rachel Mary Rosalind Hurst CBE is a British activist and former director of Disability Awareness in Action (DAA), an international network working on disability and human rights. Early training and employment Born in 1939, Hurst trained as an ac ...
Collection
Disabled People's Archive
box 41).


1995

Following the failure of the Roger Berry bill, the next iteration for civil rights was the Harry Barnes bill. A report by the
House of Commons Library The House of Commons Library is the library and information resource of the lower house of the British Parliament. It was established in 1818, although its original 1828 construction was destroyed during the burning of Parliament in 1834. Th ...
on this bill, written by staff with no political axe to grind, stated, "The Bill has the overwhelming support of disability groups, who have been campaigning for 10-15 years to establish some form of anti-discrimination legislation." In an unusual move in Parliament, the government introduced its own bill - to become the DDA - to be debated in parallel with the Barnes bill. A report by the
House of Commons Library The House of Commons Library is the library and information resource of the lower house of the British Parliament. It was established in 1818, although its original 1828 construction was destroyed during the burning of Parliament in 1834. Th ...
on the DDA, while it was still a bill, stated that: Rights Now is explicitly referenced in this report as one of the 'disability groups' holding these views. The Disability Discrimination Act 1995 was passed into law; the Barnes Bill failed.


Criticisms and legacy

In the November 1994 edition of the ''Coalition'' magazine produced by the Greater Manchester Coalition of Disabled People concentrated on the campaign for civil rights in the wake of the Berry bill. An editorial article by Ian Stanton included the following concerns:Probably one legacy - other than the new law - was in the changes that took place in some of the major national charities for disabled people (disability organisations) where they started to address the concerns expressed by organisations of disabled people (disabled people's organisations). Examples of these changes included: employing more disabled people on their staff, involving disabled people more in their publicity plans, and by having more disabled people on their governing bodies controlling the charities. Nevertheless, some significant gaps were said to remain, not least in unequal access to funding. Others took a different view, for example Bob Williams Findlay in 2015 wrote:


References

{{Reflist Disability rights organizations Disability organisations based in the United Kingdom Organizations established in 1992 Organizations disestablished in 1995