The Council of the National Secular Society has adopted this secular charter (1.2MB pdf file, p16):
The National Secular Society seeks a society in which religion and the State are distinctly separated, and where
Human Rights always take precedence over religious demands. We would like to see the following ten objectives
incorporated into a written, secular constitution:
There should be no established state religion.
The state should not fund religious activities.
The state should not fund religious proselytising in any form and the provision of all services using public
money should be religiously neutral.
The state should not prescribe, proscribe, or amend religious doctrine.
The state should not interfere in religious hierarchies, nor interfere in issues strictly related to membership.
No action by the state should have the primary effect of engaging in religious practice.
No state action should have the primary effect of restricting religious practice.
The state should not express any religious beliefs in any publication, speech or implement of state power
such as currency, sworn testimony, oath of fealty to the state, or endorsements of national pride. The state
should not imply any derivation of authority from any religious authority, nor should it express temporal
supremacy in relation to religious belief or practice.
Political leaders should not express religious preferences in the course of their duties.
No religion or denomination should have the power to prescribe, proscribe, or amend civil or common law.