I'm just glad the UK public wont stand for this! I'm sure there will be a Facebook group any minute now! That will show them.

I'm starting to love our police state, i'm sure it will all culminate in a lottery to go holiday on the 'special island'.
I'm just glad the UK public wont stand for this! I'm sure there will be a Facebook group any minute now! That will show them.
I see people are already starting to excuse the government's behaviour on this and blame the companies sponsoring the games...
I'm starting to love our police state, i'm sure it will all culminate in a lottery to go holiday on the 'special island'.
running man for sure
Welcome to Labour's wonderful new world...
Except by then it will probably be a Tory government. Hands up those who think they will have repealed any of these new "laws" by then? Or will do so at all?
M
Police will have powers to enter private homes and seize posters, and will be able to stop people carrying non-sponsor items to sporting events.
Not simply a demonstration, but anyone who displays a poster advertising something that isn't an official sponsor of the Olympics. So police powers are going to be used to help enforce commercialism as well.Presumably anyone that will be considering making a political message or demonstation during the games can expect to be harrassed by the police for a month or two.
Even if they made the offence that they are suggesting, an indictable offence?
Or, for example, if the posters that they are describing promoted some form of hate against a certain demographic to commit an offence under Section 4 of the Public Order Act? An offence that clearly does give power of entry under Section 17.
Saying that, since the start of PACE 1984 and the POA 1986 police have always had this power to enter and seize posters visible in a public place that may promote violence. I don't see any issue here.
Some sporting events already do this. I know people who have had to remove t-shirts as they had large sponsor logos or have had bottles of water removed on entry as they weren't the right manufacturer. Venues who already implement this are Wembley, Olympia and Wimbledon, so it comes as no surprise.
Anyone got a bit more information on this legislation? Theres vague reference to it in the article but no detail, and without detail its very easy to draw sweeping and inaccurate conclusions.
Sweeping and inaccurate conclusions sell papers.
Fact rarely does.
No real issue with sporting venues doing this, I would have issue with the police being able to confiscate posters from someone's home purely due to commercial pressures.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/wear/8544298.stm
Well sometimes fact does
('Also in the news' is the best part of the BBC news website.)
At the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Bavaria Brewery caused controversy as up to 1,000 fans of the Dutch national football team donned orange overalls, called Leeuwenhosen, with the brewery's logo on them. The Leeuwenhosen, given away with the purchase of Bavaria Brewery products prior to the World Cup, was deemed illegal by FIFA in that they employed 'ambush marketing' at an event where corporate sponsors pay large sums of money to be official partners. With pre-warning from FIFA officials, staff at the game versus Ivory Coast asked fans to remove the overalls upon entrance to the game and provided orange replacement shorts without the logo