David Anderson, Baron Anderson of Ipswich
David William Kinloch Anderson, Baron Anderson of Ipswich, is a British barrister and life peer, who was the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation in the United Kingdom between 2011 and 2017. On 8 June 2018 it was announced that he would be introduced to the House of Lords as a cross-bench working peer. On the same day he was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire, for services to national security and civil liberties, in the Queen's 2018 Birthday Honours.
His father was Sir Eric Anderson, former Headmaster of Eton College, who taught Prince Charles, Tony Blair, David Cameron and Boris Johnson.
Career
Legal practice
Anderson came to the English Bar after spells in Washington DC at Covington and Burling and in Brussels in the private office of Lord Cockfield, the European Commissioner tasked with completing the Internal Market.As a practitioner since 1988 at Brick Court Chambers in London and Queen's Counsel since 1999, Anderson is best known for his 150 cases in the Court of Justice of the European Union, including his appearances for the applicants in the landmark constitutional cases Factortame and Kadi. He also practises in the full range of English courts, where he contested the free speech case ProLife Alliance v BBC. Among more than 30 cases that he has presented to the European Court of Human Rights are Bowman v UK, McGonnell v UK, Hatton v UK, Demopoulos v Turkey and Gaunt v UK.
Anderson is a Bencher of Middle Temple, sat as a Recorder of the Crown Court from 2004 to 2013, and has since 2014 been a Judge of the Courts of Appeal of Guernsey and Jersey, where he is also the Investigatory Powers Commissioner. Among other professional honours, Anderson was described as the UK's "Legal Personality of the Year" in 2015, and as one of London's 1000 most influential people in 2017.
National security
Anderson succeeded Lord Carlile of Berriew CBE QC as the UK's Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation in February 2011. He stepped down after two three-year terms as Independent Reviewer, and was succeeded in post by Max Hill QC on 1 March 2017. All but one of his 20 reports as Independent Reviewer were laid before Parliament and published in full.Counter-terrorism law
Both Government and opposition credited Anderson for his influence on the Justice and Security Act 2013, which governs the use of closed material procedures in UK courts. His reports and evidence to Parliament also influenced the law governing Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures, which were reformulated in accordance with his recommendations in 2015; the scope of the power to stop and detain travellers under Schedule 7 to the Terrorism Act 2000; and the practice of asset-freezing. Other reports concerned the deprivation of citizenship and the practice of deportation with assurances.The UK Supreme Court referred to Anderson's work with approval in R v Gul and Beghal v DPP, as did the European Court of Human Rights in Beghal v UK. He wrote in 2014 and 2017 on the channels by which the Independent Reviewer may hope to influence the law and policy of counter-terrorism. Some broader reflections on terrorism and the law were published in 2013 and 2018, and on reporting terrorism in 2019.
Surveillance
"A Question of Trust", Anderson's June 2015 report of his Investigatory Powers Review, described the obscurity of the then law as "undemocratic, unnecessary and - in the long run - intolerable". Its 125 recommendations aimed to replace it with "a clear, coherent and accessible scheme, adapted to the world of internet-based communications and encryption". The report has been described in an opinion piece by an editor at the Guardian as "the turning point that policymakers have looked for and missed ever since 9/11", and was a blueprint for the Investigatory Powers Act 2016. Following publication of the report, Anderson was shortlisted in 2015 by for its "Internet Hero of the Year" award.In August 2016 followed the report of Anderson's Bulk Powers Review, with 60 case studies, which examined the operational case for the bulk retention of data by MI5, MI6 and GCHQ and is a significant factual resource for debates on "mass surveillance". Both these reports were relied upon by the European Court of Human Rights in its ' judgment of September 2018. Anderson's expert evidence in the Irish High Court on police use of communications data was relied upon by the Supreme Court in its ' judgment of February 2020.
Counter-extremism
Anderson has criticised the UK's broad definition of terrorism, and warned in September 2015 of potential dangers in the Government's proposed Counter-Extremism Bill, subsequently shelved. He published a lecture on "Extremism and the Law" in 2019. He has also written and broadcast on the Prevent strategy, and on human rights as an aid to the fight against terrorism and extremism. He was a member of the Expert Group advising the from July 2018 to July 2019.Intelligence-handling
On 28 June 2017, after stepping down from the post of Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation, Anderson was commissioned by Home Secretary Amber Rudd to provide independent assurance of the detailed review work commissioned by MI5 and Counter-Terrorism Police into their handling of intelligence prior to the four terrorist attacks in London and Manchester between March and June 2017. His report, which quality-assured the conclusions and operational improvements arrived at by MI5 and the police with his input, was published in December 2017, with a follow-up in June 2019.House of Lords
Having applied to be a "people's peer", Anderson was nominated for a life peerage by the independent House of Lords Appointments Commission in June 2018. He was created Baron Anderson of Ipswich, of Ipswich in the County of Suffolk, on 10 July, and sits as a cross-bencher. He gave his maiden speech on 19 July 2018 in a debate on the impact of referendums on parliamentary democracy. Since then he has been active inside and outside Parliament on national security issues, on internet-related issues and on constitutional and EU-related matters. He moved the amendment in July 2019 that limited the Government's scope to prorogue Parliament, and has spoken and written against the dangers of populism and of a no-deal Brexit. He is a member of the EU Justice Sub-Committee of the House of Lords.Anderson's parliamentary speeches and questions are collected .
Professional and charitable interests
Since 2000 Anderson has at various times been a trustee or a member of the advisory/editorial board of legal and educational institutions including the Centre of European Law at the Dickson Poon School of Law, the , the UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies, the Slynn Foundation, the , the and the . He is the author of References to the European Court, many other articles in learned journals. He is a Visiting Professor at King's College London and a former General Editor of the OUP's Oxford European Union Law Library. Between 2000 and 2004 he was appointed by the Secretary General of the Council of Europe to monitor and report on the freedom of the media in Georgia, Russia, Turkey and Ukraine.Since July 2019 he has chaired , a charity engaged in mediation and negotiation which focuses on some of the most difficult, dangerous and complex conflicts worldwide.