The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill was introduced on 9 March 2021, discussed here. This bill will, essentially, make it illegal to protest in any meaningful way and make the Gypsy, Roma and Traveller way of life illegal. More specifically, protests that cause causes disruption, noise, distress or even "impact" to others will be criminalised. The bill also widens the definition of trespass to essentially any land you don't own and criminalises anyone who stops on that land with "an intent to reside". So anyone who lives in a static home is fine, but for anyone whose home is mobile and has two or more vehicles (say, a caravan and a motorbike), they would be criminally trespassing should they stop on the side of the road even if their vehicle had broken down.
The Elections Bill was introduced on 5 June 2021, discussed here. This bill will, among other things, making it photo ID a requirement to vote, disenfranchising many voters all because of concerns over non-existent threats of voter fraud.
The Nationality and Borders Bill was introduced on 6 July 2021, discussed here. This bill will, among other things, create a two-tier system of asylum seekers based on how they arrive in the country, criminalise anyone who helps an asylum seeker reach the UK, whether or not they are benefiting financially, allow asylum seekers to be held outside the UK while their applications are being processed, and make it harder for asylum seekers to be successful in their applications and restrict their ability to appeal decisions.
Legislation to Counter State Threats is being updated. The consultation opened on 13 May 2021 and closed on 22 July 2021, discussed here. The proposals include conflating whistleblower leaks with espionage and therefore treating whistleblowers and any journalists reporting on their leaks as spies.
The Judicial Review and Courts Bill was introduced on 21 July 2021. This bill limits the right for parties in immigration and asylum cases to seek a judicial review when other avenues have failed, though it should be pointed out that the feared changes do not seem to have come to pass.
The Human Rights Act is currently under review. The Conservative party has long pledged to remove or radically alter the HRA and its 2019 Manifesto promised to "update" it, which is what is now happening. From here,
...civil rights groups fear the policy is aimed at severely limiting the scope of legal protections for asylum seekers, victims and other vulnerable groups.
The review will examine the relationship between UK courts and the European court of human rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg and whether dialogue between domestic courts and the ECHR works effectively.
It will also consider the impact of the HRA on the relationship between the judiciary, executive and parliament, and “whether domestic courts are being unduly drawn into areas of policy”.