Lord Chancellor Archives - Legal Cheek https://www.legalcheek.com/tag/lord-chancellor/ Legal news, insider insight and careers advice Mon, 08 Sep 2025 11:24:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://www.legalcheek.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/cropped-legal-cheek-logo-up-and-down-32x32.jpeg Lord Chancellor Archives - Legal Cheek https://www.legalcheek.com/tag/lord-chancellor/ 32 32 David Lammy appointed new Lord Chancellor https://www.legalcheek.com/2025/09/david-lammy-appointed-new-lord-chancellor/ https://www.legalcheek.com/2025/09/david-lammy-appointed-new-lord-chancellor/#comments Mon, 08 Sep 2025 11:24:52 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=223894 Prime Minister Keir Starmer has appointed David Lammy as Lord Chancellor in the mini-reshuffle

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Prime Minister Keir Starmer has appointed David Lammy as Lord Chancellor in the mini-reshuffle

David Lammy MP

Barrister-turned-politician David Lammy has been appointed Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice in Keir Starmer’s latest mini-reshuffle.

The shake-up follows Angela Rayner’s resignation as Deputy Prime Minister on Friday, after it emerged she had underpaid around £40,000 in stamp duty on her £800,000 Hove flat — a failure to seek specialist tax advice which breached the ministerial code.

Lammy — who has also been named Deputy Prime Minister — replaces barrister Shabana Mahmood MP, who held the justice role for just over a year. Mahmood was only the second woman, and the first Muslim, to serve in the position.

The Tottenham MP, previously Foreign Secretary, becomes the tenth Lord Chancellor in a decade. A trained barrister, he was called to the bar at Lincoln’s Inn in 1994 before completing an LLM at Harvard Law School.

Top of his agenda will likely be the rising prison population and the Crown Court backlog — long-standing challenges that have thwarted his predecessors.

Elsewhere in the reshuffle, Baroness Levitt (Alison Levitt KC) replaces Lord Ponsonby of Shulbrede as Labour’s justice spokesperson in the Lords. Called to the bar in 1988, Levitt served as principal legal adviser to Keir Starmer during his tenure as Director of Public Prosecutions.

Meanwhile, barrister Ellie Reeves MP has been appointed Solicitor General, succeeding former Slaughter and May lawyer Lucy Rigby, who moves to the Treasury as Economic Secretary.

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Historic firsts mark swearing-in of new Lord Chancellor https://www.legalcheek.com/2024/07/historic-firsts-mark-swearing-in-of-new-lord-chancellor/ https://www.legalcheek.com/2024/07/historic-firsts-mark-swearing-in-of-new-lord-chancellor/#comments Tue, 16 Jul 2024 10:35:15 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=207051 Shabana Mahmood swore oath on the Qur’an in ceremony conducted by Lady Chief Justice

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Shabana Mahmood swore oath on the Qur’an in ceremony conducted by Lady Chief Justice

The Lady Chief Justice, the Lord Chancellor and Attorney General – Credit: Ministry of Justice

It was a day of firsts yesterday at the swearing-in ceremony of the new Lord Chancellor, Attorney General and Solicitor General.

Shabana Mahmood MP, the first Muslim to become Lord Chancellor, was sworn in using the Qur’an, marking a historic milestone. She is also the first female Lord Chancellor to be inducted by a female Lady Chief Justice, Dame Sue Carr, another significant first.

Mahmood is also the only person to hold the position of Lord Chancellor who entered politics from the employed bar, making it her third notable first. She worked for BLM (which has since merged with Clyde & Co) before being elected as an MP in 2010.

While conducting the ceremony, the LCJ noted, “As is often the case on these historic occasions, your appointment marks a first—a triple first, in fact.”

After detailing Mahmood’s career and praising her “shrewd advocacy”, “deep knowledge of professional ethics”, and “commitment to helping others”, Baroness Carr added that:

“There will no doubt be challenges and choices to be made today and tomorrow. That is an inevitable feature of governing. We will work with you and your Ministers as you face these demands. I very much look forward to forging a stable, long-term partnership with you as Lord Chancellor within — of course — constitutional bounds, in the service of justice and the achievement of justice.”

Also sworn in were the new Attorney General, Richard Hermer KC, and Solicitor General Sarah Sackman MP. In what appears to be yet another first, both barristers are members at the same set, Matrix Chambers.

Rounding off the ceremony, Baroness Carr added: “My Lord Chancellor, Mr Attorney and Madam Solicitor, on behalf of the judiciary of England and Wales may I congratulate each of you on your appointments and wish you well in the discharge of your constitutional responsibilities. We look forward to working with you constructively to secure the proper administration of justice and maintain the rule of law.”

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Starmer selects new Lord Chancellor and Attorney General https://www.legalcheek.com/2024/07/starmer-selects-new-lord-chancellor-and-attorney-general/ Mon, 08 Jul 2024 10:46:08 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=206802 Barristers Shabana Mahmood MP and Richard Hermer KC

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Barristers Shabana Mahmood MP and Richard Hermer KC

Shabana Mahmood MP and Richard Hermer KC

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has appointed a pair of fellow barristers to take over the roles of Lord Chancellor and Attorney General after last week’s landslide election victory.

Shabana Mahmood, MP for Birmingham Ladywood, will take up the role of Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice. Prior to becoming an MP in 2010 she practiced as a barrister specialising in professional indemnity.

Mahmood was awarded a scholarship to study the bar course and was called to the bar by Gray’s Inn in 2003 She will become only the second woman to hold the post and the first observant Muslim to do so.

Congratulating Mahmood on her appointment, president of the Law Society Nick Emmerson said:

“The appointment of the new justice secretary Shabana Mahmood is a unique opportunity to bring much-needed change to our justice system and address the longstanding neglect and underinvestment that have left it on the verge of collapse. The challenges ahead are significant and demand urgent attention.”

“It’s crucial to acknowledge that transforming the justice system is a long-term project, requiring a collaborative effort, Emmerson continued. “We look forward to working with Shabana Mahmood over the coming parliament and sharing the insight and experience of our members to rebuild our justice system, harness the economic power of legal services and ensure access to justice for all.”

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For his new Attorney General, Starmer has appointed Richard Hermer KC from Matrix Chambers, who will be granted a life peerage in the House of Lords.

The experienced silk was called to the bar in 1993 before reaching the prestigious rank of silk in 2009. He is also a Deputy High Court Judge assigned to the King’s Bench Division and the Administrative Court, and specialises in all areas of private and public international law, as well as domestic public and private law.

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Lord Chancellor among big names taking part in tomorrow’s London Legal Walk https://www.legalcheek.com/2023/06/lord-chancellor-among-big-legal-names-for-tomorrows-london-legal-walk/ Mon, 12 Jun 2023 09:35:47 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=187948 16,000 walkers prepare to hit the streets to raise money for legal advice charities

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16,000 walkers prepare to hit the streets to raise money for legal advice charities

Credit Twitter: @SarahIngram_Law

The London Legal Walk through central London takes place tomorrow and the new Lord Chancellor will be there.

Former criminal barrister and recently appointed LC, Alex Chalk MP, will join a host of key figures including the Lord Chief Justice, the president of the Law Society, the Director of Public Prosecutions and the Treasury Solicitor and Permanent Secretary to the Government Legal Department.

Chalk’s participation will be the first time a Lord Chancellor has joined the walk in several years. He will be accompanied by the 16,000 walkers that have signed up for the event so far.

The London Legal Support Trust organises the 10km circuit, attracting huge numbers of solo walkers and teams raising money for legal advice charities. In previous years the money raised has helped fund over 100 organisations in London and the South East to provide free specialist legal advice.

Now in its 19th year, it is hoping to reach the £1 million mark for the first time.

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Law Society of England and Wales president, Lubna Shuja, commented:

“I am thrilled to be taking part in the London Legal Walk on 13 June with many others from the legal profession to help raise funds for free legal advice charities. The legal help these charities provide to those in need is more important than ever given the cost-of-living crisis. I encourage everyone who can to join the walk and help raise as much money as possible for access to justice.”

The event is open to everyone and members of the Legal Cheek team will of course be taking part.

Registration for the walk has closed but you can still donate to the LLST’s cause here.

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Criminal barrister appointed new Lord Chancellor as Bar Council brands Raab resignation ‘fresh start’ for justice https://www.legalcheek.com/2023/04/criminal-barrister-appointed-new-lord-chancellor-as-bar-council-brands-raab-resignation-fresh-start-for-justice/ https://www.legalcheek.com/2023/04/criminal-barrister-appointed-new-lord-chancellor-as-bar-council-brands-raab-resignation-fresh-start-for-justice/#comments Mon, 24 Apr 2023 11:20:53 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=186488 Alex Chalk KC takes top justice role

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Alex Chalk KC takes top justice role

Alex Chalk KC MP

A criminal barrister has become the latest Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice following the resignation of Dominic Raab.

Alex Chalk KC, a tenant at 6KBW College Hill and the member of parliament for Cheltenham was given the role on Friday afternoon, a few hours after Raab quit following a report from barrister Adam Tolley KC on allegations of bullying from civil servants.

Chalk studied modern history at Magdalen College, Oxford and completed a Graduate Diploma in Law (GDL) at City University London. He qualified as a barrister at the Inns of Court School of Law in 2001, practising for 14 years before moving to politics and winning his parliamentary seat in 2015.

Chalk took the role of Solicitor General in 2021, but resigned the following year in protest over Boris Johnson’s handling of Partygate (amongst other things). He has also served as Prisons Minister, Legal Aid Minister, Minister of State, Assistant Government Whip and Parliamentary Under Secretary of State.

He is an advocate for legal aid and access to justice and worked on many high-profile cases prior to his political career, including pro bono work for human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh who is currently imprisoned in Iran.

The Bar Council issued a response to Raab’s resignation on Friday, calling it a “fresh start” for justice.

In the statement Nick Vineall KC, chair of the bar, said: “Dominic Raab leaves the Ministry of Justice with the criminal justice system in a parlous state and long delays in the family courts. It is time for a fresh start.”

Vineall KC blamed court backlogs for “hindering timely access to justice for thousands” and causing “misery for all those working in the justice system, while anti-lawyer rhetoric undermines public confidence and adherence to the rule of law”.

Incoming Lord Chancellors take an oath to respect the rule of law and to ensure the courts have the resources they need to run efficiently, which is something many will be hoping to see fulfilled moving forward.

He continued:

“The Bar Council wants to see a properly funded justice system and greater emphasis on early diversion to reduce the pressures on the system. We need a Lord Chancellor who is prepared to focus on detail and systems and getting sustainable funding for those involved in publicly funded work. We also hope the appointment of a new Lord Chancellor will prompt a rethink of proposed Bill of Rights Bill, which is a poor piece of legislation.”

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Love Island: Ex-Lord Chancellor throws support behind former MoJ colleague https://www.legalcheek.com/2021/07/love-island-ex-lord-chancellor-throws-support-behind-former-moj-colleague/ Thu, 01 Jul 2021 13:02:58 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=164799 David Gauke said he might tune in to follow progress of Sharon Gaffka

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David Gauke said he might tune in to follow progress of Birkbeck law student Sharon Gaffka

David Gauke and Sharon Gaffka

Love Island law student Sharon Gaffka’s former boss, ex Lord Chancellor David Gauke, has wished her well on the dating show, “whatever that might involve”.

Days after he expressed his “surprise” to see the civil servant on the ITV2 programme — which returned on Monday — Gauke was asked if he had been following her progress.

In an interview on Sky News yesterday, he said: “I haven’t been watching. My focus has been very much on the football but I wish her well.”

Gauke added: “I hope she does well in Love Island, whatever that might involve.”

When asked if he had ever watched the show, Gauke responded: “I haven’t, no. But maybe I will tune in just to see how she’s getting on at some point.”

Gaffka, who was until recently operations lead for the Department of Transport, worked in the Ministry of Justice while Gauke was Lord Chancellor, in 2018.

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Gaffka, 25, is currently coupled up with PE teacher Hugo Hammond, 22, on the reality show. The pair haven’t had the best of starts; Gaffka pulled Hammond aside for a chat in yesterday’s episode to question why he had been “avoiding her”.

“I knew from the word go that I wasn’t your type and that’s perfectly fine,” the Birkbeck law student and “future lawyer” said. “What annoyed me is I feel like you avoid me and you don’t talk to me.”

Hammond defended his lack of communication, saying “there hasn’t been time”. He then apologised for making her feel as if he were giving her the “cold shoulder”.

“I definitely wasn’t avoiding you and I don’t want you to feel like that,” he said.

Two new male contestants are set to enter the Spanish villa tonight — could this mean Gaffka’s head gets turned?

Gauke admitted earlier this week he was “very surprised” to see the beauty queen announced in this year’s line-up. He also thanked Gaffka for her praise of him as “very human, very natural and very funny”.

“Being a cabinet minister can be a pretty serious business most of the time, but there are the occasional lighter moments,” the former solicitor turned Macfarlanes public policy head told the Mirror. “I suppose, as Lord Chancellor, I was trying to cultivate a reputation for authority and gravitas, but if I came across as fun, I won’t complain.”

Gauke may not be a Love Island man, but he was in attendance at our virtual awards ceremony this year to present the prize for Best Legal Cheek Journal submission. In 2019, we had former Love Island star and solicitor Rosie Williams do the same in London’s iconic ‘Cheesegrater’ building, but for our social media award.

Love Island continues tonight on ITV2 at 9pm.

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Lord Chancellor raises alarm over ‘rule of law’ being ‘open to hijack from politically-motivated interests’ https://www.legalcheek.com/2021/06/buckland-raises-alarm-over-rule-of-law-being-open-to-hijack-from-politically-motivated-interests/ Mon, 21 Jun 2021 08:25:40 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=164381 Announces even more constitutional changes

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Announces even more constitutional changes

Robert Buckland (via Wikimedia Commons)

It reads like an essay competition.

The Lord Chancellor Robert Buckland wants to restore the concept of the ‘rule of law’ to what he sees as its proper place. As part of his push for sweeping reforms, including of judicial review and the Human Rights Act, he argues that the rule of law is a concept of “political morality” but that it “must be above party politics”. Discuss.

Citing the furore over the Internal Markets Bill last autumn when the government was widely accused of attacking the rule of law because the bill modified provisions of the withdrawal agreement with the EU (you may remember this was the bit where the government said it was only breaking the law in a “specific and limited way”), at a UCL conference last week, Buckland said:

“Some of the arguments around it were political ones …[and] observations about the rule of law soon descended into allegations of ‘breaking the law’ which is an entirely different thing!”

Buckland argues that the rule of law has been subject to “conceptual creep”, is “open to hijack from politically-motivated interests”, and that his job is to ensure that “the rule of law itself cannot be misused to in effect weaponise the courts against political decision making”.

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Much has been written about what the rule of law is and isn’t (and most students will grapple with it in their first year of uni), but it has never been absolutely defined. Though a few have tried, such as Lord Bingham. Indeed, the Bingham Centre for the Rule of Law (set up by him) has even compiled a comic-style video to try and explain what it is:

It looks like the Lord Chancellor is certainly on a mission to get through the constitutional wish list set out in the manifesto of 2019. We are expecting judicial review legislation following the government appointing a panel to write a report on it which they published in March but which was then weirdly sidestepped by a subsequent consultation.

Buckland is now also talking about changing the role of Lord Chancellor itself. At a number of recent public appearances, he has taken the opportunity to talk about how the role used to be a “linchpin” between the three parts of state: the executive, judiciary and legislature, until 2005 when the position was pulled apart by the Labour government in the Constitutional Reform Act of that year, and brought to an end the Lord Chancellor’s role as head of the judiciary (the judicial role) and speaker in the House of Lords (the parliamentarian role). He wants to re-examine the 2005 changes and see: “whether there is scope to clarify its responsibilities to make it more workable in the future.”

There would be considerable support from the legal community for reform, properly done, as concerns have been raised over the current state of affairs. For instance, barrister Jake Richards recently put forward a strongly-argued case for the need for a Lord Chancellor with the power to be a “necessary protective force” in Prospect Magazine last year.

The Secret Barrister tweeted his agreement:

We’ll have to wait to see what busy Buckland comes up with.

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Lord Chancellor David Gauke prepares to quit cabinet over Boris Johnson’s no deal Brexit promise https://www.legalcheek.com/2019/07/lord-chancellor-david-gauke-prepares-to-quit-cabinet-over-boris-johnsons-no-deal-brexit-promise/ Mon, 22 Jul 2019 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=133016 Former City lawyer will reportedly hand in resignation on Wednesday

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Former City lawyer will reportedly hand in resignation on Wednesday

Lord Chancellor David Gauke has confirmed he will resign from the cabinet on Wednesday because he cannot serve under Boris Johnson if he wins the race to become prime minister.

The Justice Secretary, who took the top government legal post in January last year, said he could not sit on the frontbench while Johnson pursued a no deal Brexit. Johnson, who has pledged to pull Britain out of the bloc “do or die” come 31 October (the UK’s rescheduled EU departure date), is expected to be confirmed as the new Tory leader tomorrow.

Gauke, a prominent no deal critic who has voiced his concerns that a departure as such would be a national “humiliation”, told The Sunday Times he will stand down before May’s successor takes over. “Given that I’ve been in the cabinet since Theresa May came to power, I think the appropriate thing is for me to resign to her,” he said.

He added: “If the test of loyalty to stay in the cabinet is a commitment to support no deal on October 31 — which, to be fair to him, Boris has consistently said — then that’s not something I’m prepared to sign up to.”

The legal profession paid tribute to Gauke once news of his departure broke. Philip Marshall QC, joint head of chambers at family law set 1KBW, said: “If true, this is a great shame. David Gauke has been an excellent Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice. Sadly that now counts for nothing. It’s all about Brexit. His principled opposition to no deal is to be applauded. Heaven only knows who his successor will be.”

Meanwhile legal commentator Joshua Rozenberg bid farewell to Gauke, “friend of the judiciary”, in a recent article anticipating his departure.

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Gauke, who began his career as a trainee solicitor with Reed Smith before joining Macfarlanes and then making the move into politics, has been a well-liked Justice Secretary (not least for his use of amusing GIFs and self-deprecating humour!). He is perhaps most well-known for introducing the far-reaching ‘no fault’ divorce bill into parliament which has just passed its second reading in the House of Commons.

Gauke took over from non-lawyer David Lidington whose six-month stint in the post (the shortest serving Lord Chancellor since the late 1980s) was even less time than his much-disliked predecessor Elizabeth Truss. Truss spent 11 months in the top job and was, of course, heavily criticised for her failure to defend judges against scathing tabloid headlines such as the notorious Daily Mail ‘ENEMIES OF THE PEOPLE’ one following the Article 50 High Court ruling in 2016.

The Lord Chancellor role has, historically, been a well-respected one filled exclusively by lawyers. In recent years we have seen numerous chancellorships in quick succession, leaving one Twitter user to quip: “One day, everyone will be Lord Chancellor for 15 minutes”. It remains to be seen who Johnson (if he wins the leadership contest) will appoint as Justice Secretary, with former Linklaters lawyer Dominic Raab being tipped for the post.

Gauke — the MP for South West Hertfordshire since 2005 — voted Remain in the EU referendum. His resignation, along with several other key ministers keen to avoid a no deal scenario, has been dubbed the ‘Gaukeward squad’. At 47, Gauke has signalled his intention to stay in politics and serve again once Brexit is settled.

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Judge tells cocaine user he ‘should suffer no more than former Lord Chancellor’ https://www.legalcheek.com/2019/06/judge-tells-cocaine-user-he-should-suffer-no-more-than-former-lord-chancellor/ Wed, 19 Jun 2019 11:10:38 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=131552 Even the courts are mocking Michael Gove's coke admission

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Even the courts are mocking Michael Gove’s coke admission

Former Lord Chancellor Michael Gove’s admission that he took cocaine in the 1990s may have damaged his Conservative leadership prospects — but the scandal seems to have benefitted one lucky coke user.

Judge Owen Davies QC, sentencing a 28-year-old man for cocaine possession at Inner London Crown Court this week, reportedly let him off with a conditional discharge — saying that he shouldn’t go through worse consequences than a government minister who did the same thing.

Criminal barrister Tim Kiely of Red Lion Chambers first tweeted the comment, which was aimed at his client, reporting that the judge said “He should suffer no more for dabbling in cocaine than should a former Lord Chancellor”.

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A conditional discharge gives someone a criminal record, but no punishment unless they re-offend within a particular period of time. As a class A drug, possession of cocaine is in theory punishable by up to seven years in prison, an unlimited fine, or both.

While Kiely didn’t reveal any further details, the Sun reports that the judge was Judge Owen Davies QC, formerly of Garden Court Chambers. The paper also names the defendant as Giedrius Arbaciauskas, 28.

Gove, now environment secretary, has said that he was “fortunate” to avoid prison for his own drug use as a journalist on the Times. Despite his felonious past, the MP for Surrey Heath was widely seen as a good Lord Chancellor during his brief stint in the job, and is still a contender to face off against Boris Johnson in the final ballot for a new Conservative leader.

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Lady Hale among judicial celebs to watch new Lord Chancellor sworn in https://www.legalcheek.com/2018/01/lady-hale-among-judicial-celebs-to-watch-new-lord-chancellor-sworn-in/ Thu, 18 Jan 2018 11:30:26 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=107609 We learnt he once spent a night in a prison cell

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We learnt he once spent a night in a prison cell

The Royal Courts of Justice today. David Gauke is pictured far right.

A swathe of judicial bigwigs, including president of the Supreme Court Lady Hale and Lord Chief Justice Lord Burnett, gathered in the Royal Courts of Justice today to see David Gauke sworn in as Lord Chancellor.

The ex-Macfarlanes lawyer is the first ever solicitor to hold the government post — a fact Gauke said he learnt about on Twitter. He’s also the first lawyer in six years to do the same: none of the past four Justice Secretaries — Chris Grayling, Michael Gove, Liz Truss and David Lidington — were qualified solicitors or barristers.

But Ipswich-born Gauke (arriving at the RCJ above) does have something in common with his non-lawyer predecessors: his aversion to horse hair. Gauke becomes the fifth Lord Chancellor in a row to shun wearing a wig in his swearing-in ceremony this morning. He was joined in doing so by law student favourite Hale.

Lady Hale pictured with Lord Burnett

As is often the case in swearing-in ceremonies, backslapping was aplenty.

Gauke described his appointment as a “huge honour and deeply humbling”, even a “little daunting” given the high calibre of person that, historically, filled the post. Seemingly trying to mend relations between the judiciary and the government — which soured under Truss’ recent Lord Chancellorship — he heaped praise on the judges present and vowed to protect their independence. He has plenty of other things on his to-do list, including: reforming and modernising the courts, getting a good EU deal for the legal profession, and promoting legal services on the world’s stage. (Legal aid, it seems, isn’t so high on the agenda.)

Jeremy Wright QC

The praise-heaping was mutual. Burnett, for example, said Oxford law graduate Gauke’s ‘first ever solicitor Lord Chancellor’ status is a “distinct achievement of which both [he] and the profession can be justly proud”. While Attorney General Jeremy Wright QC said:

“My Lord, David and I were elected to parliament on the same day. And over the last 12 years we’ve spent in parliament together, I’ve been able to observe his impressive intellect, his sound judgement and his application to the roles in which he has served.”

In and among all the gushing, Wright’s speech provided us with an interesting Gauke titbit: that he has spent the night in a cell. Despite this not following an arrest but to raise money for a local hospice, Wright still thinks the experience will help him when it comes to prison policy. We’ll see.

Watch the ceremony in full below:

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Former Macfarlanes solicitor is the new Lord Chancellor https://www.legalcheek.com/2018/01/former-macfarlanes-solicitor-is-the-new-lord-chancellor/ Mon, 08 Jan 2018 17:43:51 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=107065 Top government legal post occupied by a lawyer again

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Top government legal post occupied by a lawyer again

The new Lord Chancellor is a lawyer for the first time since 2012. David Gauke, who began his career as a trainee solicitor with Reed Smith and then joined Macfarlanes before moving into politics, replaces non-lawyer David Lidington.

Lidington has lasted even less time in the Lord Chancellor post than his much-disliked predecessor Liz Truss, being moved in Theresa May’s Cabinet reshuffle just six months after appointment. He replaces Damian Green as Cabinet Office minister, the latter sacked from office after making “misleading statements” about porn found on his work computer.

Like his predecessor, Gauke — the MP for South West Hertfordshire since 2005 — voted Remain in the EU referendum. It’s notable that he is a solicitor rather than a barrister, with the bar traditionally being the recruiting ground for senior legal roles in government.

Lidington has, generally speaking of course, been a well-liked Justice Secretary. His smooth October Justice Committee session was a world apart from performances given by Truss throughout her short chancellorship. (Truss was, of course, known more for her mealy-mouthed response to the ‘ENEMIES OF PEOPLE’ headline during the Article 50 High Court hearing than she ever was for commitment to justice.)

So while some will be sad to see Lidington go (albeit just to another Cabinet seat), others are more concerned by the effect the past few years have had on the Lord Chancellor title.

The role has, historically, been a well-respected one filled exclusively by lawyers. However, a recent change in law saw much-hated Chris Grayling, a non-lawyer, take the post, leading to a swathe of legal aid cuts we’re still very much feeling the effects of.

Grayling lasted about two-and-a-half years in the post, before being replaced by Michael Gove. The notable Brexiter is hardly the most liked MP in the House of Commons, but in his 14 months in the role he quelled lawyers’ Grayling-directed anger by revoking a number of his predecessor’s policies. Then came Truss in July 2016 — she spent 11 months in the role before being kicked to the curb. Lidington filled her boots in June 2017, his six-month stint making him the shortest serving Lord Chancellor since the late 1980s.

These quick changes are in stark contrast to Lord Chancellors gone by.

James Mackay QC was Lord Chancellor from 1987 to 1997, for example, while more recently Charles Falconer managed four years in the mid-noughties, while Jack Straw served from 2007 to 2010 and Kenneth Clarke from 2010 to 2012.

So, while changes in the Cabinet are exciting for politics enthusiasts, lawyers can’t help but sigh as yet another Lord Chancellor takes the stand. With prisons crumbling and legal aid cuts ravaging both criminal and civil law, we hope that Gauke — who held his previous post of Secretary of State for Work and Pensions for just over six months — will stay in the post long enough to make a considerable difference.

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Prime Minister ‘broke the law’ in making Liz Truss Lord Chancellor, says ex-Lord Chancellor https://www.legalcheek.com/2017/10/prime-minister-broke-the-law-in-making-liz-truss-lord-chancellor-says-ex-lord-chancellor/ Fri, 06 Oct 2017 10:53:19 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=101986 Theresa May's bad week continues...

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Theresa May’s bad week continues…

Lord Falconer, a former, well-respected Lord Chancellor, has attacked his Conservative successors’ commitment to the rule of law.

Speaking at the University of Cambridge earlier this week, Falconer said that the Prime Minister “broke the law” under section 2 of the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 by failing to ensure that Liz Truss was qualified to be appointed Lord Chancellor.

Later, he took the government to task for failing to defend High Court judges when the Daily Mail called them “ENEMIES OF THE PEOPLE” because of their ruling in the Gina Miller case. Falconer said that Truss’s fate — being sacked by a Prime Minister who was too politically weak to sack anybody else — should be “a warning” to future Lord Chancellors of what happens if they lose the confidence of the judiciary.

The May-directed element of this sting is, unfortunately for the PM, one of a series of unfortunate events she’s experienced this week. A much-anticipated speech she gave at the Tory party conference will be remembered less for its substance and more for May’s coughing and spluttering throughout, a letter on the sign behind her falling down, and for its interruption by a prankster who tried to hand her a P45.

However, despite calling Truss and her predecessor as Lord Chancellor, Chris Grayling, “absolute duffers”, Falconer did defend the decision to open up the position of Lord Chancellor to non-lawyers. This was made possible by the Constitutional Reform Act, which Falconer steered through parliament when he himself was in the Cabinet.

Speaking more widely on the effects of the Constitutional Reform Act at the third annual Queen’s College Distinguished Lecture in Law at the Oxbridge university, Falconer said that it had “insulated” judges from government influence. While he noted there was “no going back”, he did say judicial independence needs political support. Take note David Lidington.

Jack Williams is studying a two-year BA in law at the University of Cambridge.

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There’s now a David Lidington parody account, and it’s just as good as the Liz Truss one https://www.legalcheek.com/2017/07/theres-now-a-david-lidington-parody-account-and-its-just-as-good-as-the-liz-truss-one/ Fri, 07 Jul 2017 08:13:19 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=95410 Is any Lord Chancellor safe?

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Is any Lord Chancellor safe?

David Lidington being sworn in, alongside Sir Terence Etherton (L) and Lord Thomas (R). Image via @JudiciaryUK

Weeks after being handed the Cabinet position by Theresa May, new Justice Secretary David Lidington has been hung out to dry by a brilliant new parody account.

The unknown tweeter, who at the time of writing has just 250 followers, documents the day-to-day struggles faced by Lidington. You’ll notice instantly there’s a particular focus on dry cleaning, this because the MP hit headlines some years back when he claimed over £1,000 in dry cleaning expenses. Here are a couple of examples:

Away from his laundry escapades, parody Dave also spends a lot of time tweeting about his enthusiasm for bettering the prison service:

Lidington is not the only Lord Chancellor to be graced with a parody account. @RealLizTruss had us, and thousands more followers, in stitches during Truss’ very short tenure as head of the Ministry of Justice.

The high calibre of Truss-y tweets gives us confidence Lidington will be just as funny: the accounts are run by the same person! They told us Truss was “an absolute dream to parody”, but that Dave will pose more challenges. They continued:

Whereas Liz provided much of the material herself — some of her comments really are beyond parody — Dave is a very different character. I voiced Liz as being nice, but a bit dim and ignorant of the law, prisons, etc, as well as being pretty self-centered and lazy. Dave is still in development, but his main characteristics are being a bit domestic (in his real tweets he calls his wife ‘Mrs L’, so I’m doing the same) and slightly obsessive about dry cleaning.

Let’s hope the anonymous comedy marvel enjoys documenting Lidington’s antics as much as he has Truss’.

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What the Dickens? New courts abandon ‘arcane’ titles https://www.legalcheek.com/2017/07/what-the-dickens-new-courts-abandon-arcane-titles/ Thu, 06 Jul 2017 09:33:07 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=95409 Chancery and Mercantile courts make way for more 'user-friendly' monikers

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Chancery and Mercantile courts make way for more ‘user-friendly’ monikers

Charles Dickens

The legal world is often accused of being old-fashioned (wigs!). But this week, the High Court of England and Wales is launching itself de novo.

In futuro, its Chancery Division will be better known as the Business and Property Courts of England and Wales. This grouping will act as a single umbrella for all the business specialist courts including the ye olde-titled Mercantile Court, which will now be part of the Commercial Court.

The new division also encompasses the Technology and Construction Court and the courts of the Chancery Division dealing with financial services, intellectual property, competition, and insolvency.

The new Lord Chancellor, David Lidington MP, is in favour of this plain-speaking approach. Addressing an audience at the Rolls Building in London this week, he said:

Today’s launch demonstrates beyond any doubt that our bench is responsive, forward-thinking and clear in their purpose.

He added:

The new umbrella name… is squarely to the school of ‘Does What It Says On The Tin’.

Elsewhere in his speech, Lidington’s notes some of our courts’ names have persisted for centuries (“‘Chancery’, for instance, about which Dickens wrote with such scathing relish”). His citation of Charles Dickens references a fictional Chancery Division case of Jarndyce v Jarndyce at the centre of his novel, Bleak House. According to one academic, however, many of the worst aspects of Chancery had been resolved by the time the final instalment of the book was published.

Prima facie, this looks to be part and parcel of the UK legal community’s aim to keep up its reputation on the international stage, particularly as Brexit negotiations continue. As Lidington put it:

It’s a user-friendly choice, it’s easy to understand no matter what part of the world someone comes from.

The new arrangements will not affect any of the practices and procedures of the courts, and the judiciary is anticipating that it will make way for “more flexible cross-deployment of judges” between the courts and between the regions.

The question on everyone’s lips, however, must surely be: what about the title of ‘Lord Chancellor’, Lord Chancellor?

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An open letter to the new Lord Chancellor from Joshua Rozenberg https://www.legalcheek.com/lc-journal-posts/an-open-letter-to-the-new-lord-chancellor-david-lidington/ https://www.legalcheek.com/lc-journal-posts/an-open-letter-to-the-new-lord-chancellor-david-lidington/#respond Mon, 19 Jun 2017 09:42:33 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?post_type=lc-journal-posts&p=94356 David Lidington can learn from Liz Truss’ mistakes

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David Lidington can learn from Liz Truss’ mistakes

Dear David,

I hope you won’t mind me addressing you by your first name. You may not remember but we were last in touch 30 years ago, when I was covering home affairs for BBC radio news and you were special adviser to the reforming Home Secretary Douglas Hurd.

I’m a bit older than you and I have known all your predecessors since Lord Hailsham of St Marylebone, whose sacking in 1987 I also covered. So I hope you will not be too offended if I offer you a word or two of friendly advice.

This afternoon you will take your judicial seat in the Lord Chief Justice’s court and swear your oath of office. You will be familiar with men in tights from your 11 months as leader of the House of Commons and Lord President of the Privy Council. But this ceremony is rather different. You are sitting there today because Elizabeth Truss, your predecessor, failed to understand its true significance when she was sworn in as Lord Chancellor less than a year ago.

After you have taken the bible in your hand, you will swear to “respect the rule of law, defend the independence of the judiciary and… ensure the provision of resources for the efficient and effective support of the courts”. If you are in any doubt as to what these oaths mean you should have a word with the Lord Chief Justice, who will be sitting alongside you. Lord Thomas has been the most senior judge in England and Wales for less than four years but you will be the fourth Lord Chancellor he has worked with.

Last Thursday, Lord Thomas delivered the second of two major lectures on the governance of the judiciary and its relationship with the executive. In it, he said that you, as Lord Chancellor, were “not simply a Secretary of State with a separate title resonant of our long history”, such as the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Your job is “manifestly different from that of any other minister”.

Explaining your statutory duty to defend the independence of the judiciary, he referred to the Daily Mail headline last November that described him and two of his senior judicial colleagues as “enemies of the people” (pictured below). This, he said, was “language used most commonly by totalitarian dictators”. The Lord Chancellor had been “under an obligation to speak out firmly” against such abuse, he said, because judges like Lord Thomas himself “were not able to do so”.

And why hadn’t Liz Truss spoken out? Lord Thomas offered two thoughts. First, the Lord Chancellor needed to be a person of special quality and ability. And, secondly, the Lord Chancellor needed to be the sort of person who could stand up to the Prime Minister. He seemed to be suggesting that she had failed on both counts.

Parliament has not tried to specify the qualities required of a Lord Chancellor. All it has said is that a candidate for appointment must appear to the Prime Minister to be qualified by experience. The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 adds that the Prime Minister may take into account a candidate’s experience as a minster or as an MP. Surely all your predecessors since 2005 have satisfied that requirement?

Not according to Lord Thomas. He implied that David Cameron had treated the need for experience as “ineffective” in 2012 when he appointed Chris Grayling, who had not previously held Cabinet office.

And what about Liz Truss? Lord Thomas was more circumspect about her last week than he has been in the past. It’s widely believed her response to the Daily Mail headline last year was too little and too late because she had not received clearance from Downing Street to say anything. We are now told that communications from Cabinet ministers to the Prime Minister were filtered through — and sometimes blocked by — her chiefs of staff, Nick Timothy and Fiona Hill, who resigned after the election result this month.

But you are in a much stronger position than Liz Truss — and not just because Theresa May is so much weaker than she was before the election. You have been an MP for 25 years. Before becoming leader of the Commons, you managed to clock up six years as Minister of State for Europe. So you should have no trouble following the blueprint set out for you by Lord Thomas last week.

The Lord Chancellor’s duties “may require the holder of the office to act against the wishes of other members of the Cabinet or the Prime Minister,” he said. “The duties are an essential part of the proper interdependence inherent in the operation of our constitution and an essential safeguard to the independence of the judiciary which is fundamental to the maintenance of the rule of law, our democracy and the prosperity and good order of our state.”

And what in particular do those duties demand of you? First, you might like to have a word with your fellow MPs. Lord Thomas disclosed that some of your colleagues have been writing to judges on behalf of constituents involved in proceedings. “There has been a suggestion, no doubt inadvertent, that the letters should or could be taken account of by the judge dealing with the proceedings,” he said. It must have been inadvertent, he said with studied irony, because he was “sure that no member of parliament would deliberately seek to influence a judicial decision”.

Secondly, you might remind your ministerial colleagues that judges cannot give them legal advice. In particular, they cannot tell ministers in advance whether particular proposals (such as planned counter-terrorism measures) would be consistent with human rights. Charles Clarke, Labour Home Secretary from 2004 to 2006, could never understand this.

But what the judges can do is give ministers practical and technical advice. “A current example of this is the advice being given in relation to the technical issues that will arise in relation to legislation consequent on Brexit,” Lord Thomas disclosed. But political choices remain firmly with the government and parliament.

Even senior judges sometimes find it difficult to draw the line, though. There had been some recent occasions when judges had overstepped the mark and entered the realm of political comment, he observed. Unsurprisingly, the Lord Chief Justice didn’t name names.

As Justice Secretary you will face many other challenges. I hope you have been given Cabinet authority to reintroduce the Prisons and Courts Bill, which lapsed at the election. Most of the bill is regarded as uncontroversial although lawyers fear — wrongly, I believe — that it will take the bread out of their mouths.

The bill sets out, for the first time, what prison is for. But do not make the mistake of thinking it will make prisons easier to run. For that, you will have to persuade colleagues that the prison population should be reduced. You will find that the bill also paves the way for so-called online courts. Again, though, the legislation will do little by itself. Provided you can maintain the existing Treasury funding for court modernisation, though, you will begin to reap the benefits and discover that courts can be run much more efficiently and effectively than they have been in the past.

But your biggest challenge is to win over the judiciary. They can see that you’re quite a brainy fellow, which is an excellent starting point when dealing with a group of people who set great store by intellect. What they will be waiting to see now is whether you have the sort of empathy that your boss so clearly lacks.

Nobody is expecting you to put your arms round the judges you will be meeting this afternoon — at least, not literally. But what they do expect you to understand is how undervalued they feel and how worried they are that you will not be able to fill some 25 vacancies in the High Court, leading to a dangerous drop in standards.

It’s not just that Chris Grayling cut the judges’ benefits to the point at which, for some new recruits, judicial pensions were effectively worthless. It is not just that judges sitting in crime face an unremitting diet of child abuse and sexual assault. It is not just that in an increasingly egalitarian age the honours and distinctions that arrive with the rations seem less attractive than they once were. And it is not just the lack of resources — seen just as much in the shortage of court ushers as in the demand from Lord Thomas last month that the judiciary should have a “clear and effective governance structure”. It is all of the above.

In just over two weeks’ time you will have to address senior judges at their annual work outing: a dinner at Mansion House hosted by the City of London. You will find the judges courteous, anxious — and disappointed to find that you are another non-lawyer.

I don’t suggest you shatter their illusions by telling them that the Lord Chancellor is not — and never was — their champion in Cabinet. But you have ten minutes or so to win them over, to demonstrate your commitment to the rule of law and to the independence of the judiciary, to persuade them that you understand your responsibilities and will do your best for them.

You will be judged by your words, your tone and your credibility — that, after all, is what judges do for a living. They will be listening carefully, hoping that you will be able to rescue and revive the judiciary of England and Wales, along with the entire system of justice that depends on it.

So do we all.

Yours ever,

Joshua

Joshua Rozenberg is Britain’s best-known commentator on the law. He is the only full-time journalist to have been appointed as Queen’s Counsel honoris causa. You can read his previous Legal Cheek articles here.

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David who? Theresa May selects relatively unknown non-lawyer to replace embattled Liz Truss as new Justice Secretary https://www.legalcheek.com/2017/06/david-who-theresa-may-selects-relatively-unknown-non-lawyer-to-replace-embattled-liz-truss-as-new-justice-secretary/ Mon, 12 Jun 2017 10:49:38 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=94010 *Googles David Lidington*

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*Googles David Lidington*

It was raised eyebrows all round yesterday afternoon as Prime Minister Theresa May punted for a relatively unknown MP with no legal background to become the new Lord Chancellor and Justice Secretary.

David Lidington, a Tory MP for Aylesbury since 1992, studied history as an undergraduate at Cambridge’s Sidney Sussex College, before going on to complete a PhD in 1988. Interestingly, the title of his PhD — “The enforcement of the penal statutes at the court of the Exchequer c.1558-c.1576” — appears to be his only connection with law.

Spending the early part of his career at large multinationals including BP and Rio Tinto, Lidington — a former University Challenge champion — made the move into politics in the late 80s. He spent three years as special advisor to the then Home Secretary Douglas Hurd before becoming minister for Europe in 2010. He spent six years in the role, and regularly spoke out against Brexit.

However, our mystery man’s voting history may leave some lawyers concerned. The website TheyWorkForYou shows how MPs voted on particular issues. It reveals that Lidington voted in favour of repealing the Human Rights Act 1998, restricting the scope of legal aid and limiting fees paid to solicitors in no-win no-fee cases. The website also says Lidington generally voted against equal gay rights.

Lidington’s surprise promotion has received a mixed response on social media. Legal affairs journalist and Legal Cheek contributor Joshua Rozenberg seemed optimistic about the appointment:

Elsewhere, lawyer and journalist David Allen Green — echoing Rozenberg’s positivity — described Lidington’s background as a “good start”:

While others, including ourselves, didn’t have a clue who Lidington was:

Commenting on his appointment, Lidington said:

Democracy and freedom are built on the rule of law, and are protected by a strong and independent judiciary. I look forward to taking my oath as Lord Chancellor, and to working with the Lord Chief Justice and his fellow judges in the months ahead, to ensure that justice is fairly administered and robustly defended.

As focus shifts towards our new Justice Sec, spare a thought for poor old Liz Truss. The first female Lord Chancellor ever, Truss — who, like Lidington, has no legal background — lasted just 11 months in the job, the shortest tenure since the post was created. She has now been demoted to Chief Secretary to the Treasury.

Are we surprised? The embattled ex-Cabinet minister was recently criticised by the Lord Chief Justice, the head of the judiciary, for not understanding new rules concerning pre-recorded evidence in rape cases. Truss was also lambasted for her mealy-mouthed response to the ‘ENEMIES OF THE PEOPLE’ headline during the Article 50 High Court hearing. This controversy, and more, led Rozenberg to predict Truss would not last a year in the job.

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There are rumours that Education Secretary Justine Greening will be our next Lord Chancellor https://www.legalcheek.com/2017/06/there-are-rumours-that-education-secretary-justine-greening-will-be-our-next-lord-chancellor/ Wed, 07 Jun 2017 09:24:58 +0000 https://www.legalcheek.com/?p=93799 A straight swap with Liz Truss? Joshua Rozenberg and LBC’s Iain Dale speculate

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A straight swap with Liz Truss? Joshua Rozenberg and LBC’s Iain Dale speculate

Justice Secretary Liz Truss and Education Secretary Justine Greening may soon be swapping roles, if rumours are to be believed.

With a Theresa May win forecasted for 8 June the public is braced for a Cabinet reshuffle, and Truss’ position is surely up for debate.

Her short time in the government post has been undeniably marred by controversy, perhaps the most notable being that ‘ENEMIES OF THE PEOPLE’ headline (pictured below) and her lack of response to it. Here, Truss was slammed by lawyers for failing to shield the judges involved in the Brexit litigation against the wrath of the tabloid newspapers.

More recently Truss was lambasted by the Lord Chief Justice, the head of the judiciary. He took issue with (among other things) her understanding of new rules surrounding pre-recorded evidence in rape cases and her handling of the ‘ENEMIES OF THE PEOPLE’ hoo-ha. On the latter, he went as far as to describe her as “completely and utterly wrong in the view she takes.”

This criticism has led legal affairs commentator Joshua Rozenberg to predict Truss won’t last a year as Lord Chancellor — but who will replace her?

Writing in The Law Society Gazette this week, Rozenberg speculated:

For May to appoint a lawyer would be an admission that she got it wrong last year. I would therefore expect the job to go to a minister with no legal qualifications — someone like Justine Greening, for example.

If Education Secretary Greening does move to justice, her Cabinet post will lay empty, and LBC Radio’s Iain Dale thinks Truss may be the one to fill it. In his blog, he wrote:

In terms of departures from the Cabinet I’m told Sajid Javid has not impressed Number Ten and may be facing an interview without coffee. Liz Truss, according to many of her colleagues, deserves the same fate, but a move to education may be what awaits her.

This prediction has been repeated in both The Times and Times Higher Education, and now seems to be something the teachers of Twitter are bracing themselves for…

A combination of these rumours, and others, have led the likes of Richard Doughty, a policy and public affairs manager at the Chartered Institute of Legal Executives (CILEx), to float the idea of a straight swap.

But while Rozenberg’s article is vague on this point, it’s clear this isn’t what Dale is predicting. He reckons Brandon Lewis, a qualified barrister and the MP for Great Yarmouth, could be the next Justice Secretary, and that Greening will be moving to health instead.

Though social media is currently rife with rumours, it’s of course worth bearing in mind that speculation can only take you so far. Remember when the legal Twitterati spent hours last year agonising over who Justice Secretary Michael Gove’s replacement would be?

Some wondered whether it’d be Jeremy Hunt:

Others kept their fingers crossed that it wouldn’t be Chris Grayling:

While many threw their weight behind Dominic Grieve:

And then it was Truss, someone no one had really considered.

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Liz Truss will not make a year as Lord Chancellor, Joshua Rozenberg predicts https://www.legalcheek.com/2017/04/liz-truss-will-not-make-a-year-as-lord-chancellor-joshua-rozenberg-predicts/ Mon, 24 Apr 2017 10:50:00 +0000 http://www.legalcheek.com/?p=92006 She’s unlikely to survive post-election reshuffle

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She’s unlikely to survive post-election reshuffle

Lord Chancellor Liz Truss cannot bounce back from the devastating criticism she’s endured in recent months and will not make one year in the Cabinet post.

These are the thoughts of Joshua Rozenberg, a top legal affairs commenter who last year became the first ever journalist to take silk.

He reckons Truss will be booted out of the Cabinet come June in a reshuffle expected to take place shortly after Prime Minister Theresa May’s forecasted general election victory. Writing for the Law Society Gazette, he said Truss is “surely” in the firing line.

Though Rozenberg thinks she’s a “likeable, approachable politician” with “clear ideas”, Truss’s short time in the government post has been undeniably marred by controversy.

Perhaps the most notable is that ‘ENEMIES OF THE PEOPLE’ headline (pictured below) and the Justice Secretary’s lack of response to it. Here, Truss was slammed by lawyers for failing to shield the judges involved in the Brexit litigation against the wrath of the tabloid newspapers.

Truss has insisted it’s not her job to tell the free press what they should write. On this Rozenberg agreed with Truss, but added that it is her job to stand up for the judiciary, writing:

[W]hat she was being asked to do was to defend the independence of the judiciary, as she had sworn to do on her appointment. A more honest answer would have been to admit she had been poorly advised.

More recently Truss was lambasted by the Lord Chief Justice, the head of the judiciary. He took issue with (among other things) her understanding of new rules surrounding pre-recorded evidence in rape cases and her handling of the ‘ENEMIES OF THE PEOPLE’ hoo-ha. On the latter, he went as far as to describe her as “completely and utterly wrong in the view she takes.”

A ‘judiciary vs government’ clash like this doesn’t happen very often. Rozenberg — who writes regularly for Legal Cheek — knows this, and concludes his latest opinion piece by saying:

It is hard to see how Truss can survive measured and devastating criticism like this from the most senior judge in England and Wales.

If May “is attuned to the views of those with whom the Lord Chancellor must maintain a close working relationship”, Rozenberg said, Truss as Justice Secretary will be no more come mid-June.

Rumours about Truss being ousted from her Cabinet post have been swirling for some weeks now; Rozenberg’s support certainly gives them more gravitas. This may well be music to our readers’ ears. A whopping 88% of our Twitter followers think Truss is “a rubbish Lord Chancellor” who deserves to be given the boot.

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Liz Truss to appeal judicial pensions discrimination ruling https://www.legalcheek.com/2017/02/liz-truss-to-appeal-judicial-pensions-discrimination-ruling/ Tue, 28 Feb 2017 16:02:25 +0000 http://www.legalcheek.com/?p=89223 Just a week after she handed High Court and Court of Appeal judges an 11% pay increase

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Just a week after she handed High Court and Court of Appeal judges an 11% pay increase

The Lord Chancellor will appeal an employment tribunal ruling which found that changes to the judicial pensions scheme amounted to unlawful discrimination.

Refusing to accept the decision, a grounds of appeal document — drafted on behalf of Truss and the government by counsel — claims that the tribunal “erred” in its approach to the case and failed to consider the government’s “material factor defence”.

The new pensions set-up means that judges under a certain age are as much as £25,000 worse off than their more experienced colleagues. This is because older judges are still considered under the older pensions scheme, which was more generous.

Clearly feeling hard done by, 210 judges, led by Master McCloud, argued that the plans directly discriminated against them based on their age. In addition to this, others claimed indirect discrimination on the grounds of sex and race, because the younger end of the judiciary tends to be the more diverse.

While the employment tribunal ruled in their favour, it would appear Truss isn’t going down without a fight. Speaking to Legal Cheek, Shah Qureshi — who is an employment specialist at London outfit Bindmans and is representing the judges — said:

We are disappointed that the government has decided to appeal what we view as a clear and precise judgment. It would have been better served to address the discriminatory impact of these reforms on younger judges, ethnic minorities and women.

When the case was heard at first instance, it was heard by a retired judge to ensure there was no conflict of interest. Legal Cheek understands that the Employment Appeals Tribunal may adopt the same technique.

The decision to appeal comes just a week after Legal Cheek revealed that Truss had upped High Court and Court of Appeal judges’ salaries by 11%. Targeting younger members of the judiciary with a “non-pensionable and taxable” bonus, the decision means that a High Court judge will earn £199,542 this year, while their Court of Appeal counterparts will pocket a hefty £227,211.

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Barristers struggle to suppress anger at Liz Truss’s silk day speech https://www.legalcheek.com/2017/02/barristers-struggle-to-suppress-anger-at-liz-trusss-silk-day-speech/ Thu, 16 Feb 2017 12:00:19 +0000 http://www.legalcheek.com/?p=88571 Exclusive: Lord Chancellor’s speech was badly judged and has not gone down well with new QCs

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Exclusive: Lord Chancellor’s speech was badly judged and has not gone down well with new QCs

Anger

Justice Secretary Liz Truss made a speech to new QCs on silks day that surprised and even outraged her audience, Legal Cheek can exclusively reveal.

This week, new QCs, their families, friends and colleagues gathered at Westminster Hall to celebrate taking silk. There, Legal Cheek understands Truss made a speech which has been described by those in attendance as peculiar and badly judged.

The speech in question was one about business and the economy, and how Great Britain would continue to dominate on the world’s stage. It was not a speech about justice: Legal Cheek has been informed there was no mention of the judiciary nor the recent Supreme Court Brexit case. Somewhat strange given that the Lord Chancellor was addressing 113 new QCs.

For some, Truss’s address felt inappropriate for the occasion. Though noting that silks day was overall a happy occasion, insiders have told us quite a few people at the event were surprised by the speech (and not in a good way).

Though the, usually chatty, legal Twitterati has kept surprisingly shtum on this, we have spied a few social media outbursts.

Like this one. An attendee — who was at the ceremony to support his newly appointed QC wife — posted this on his Facebook page.

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He wasn’t the only person feeling miffed. Have a look at this tweet:

The Ministry of Justice has been unable to provide us with a full copy of the speech. It has also not responded to our request for comment.

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‘Highest ever’ proportion of female QC appointments, yet research commissioned into why so few women apply https://www.legalcheek.com/2017/01/highest-ever-proportion-of-female-qc-appointments-yet-research-commissioned-into-why-so-few-women-apply/ Thu, 12 Jan 2017 12:03:13 +0000 http://www.legalcheek.com/?p=86499 73% of new silks are men

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73% of new silks are men

silks

One hundred and thirteen barristers have been named as new QCs today, and the hot topic on everyone’s lips is ‘how diverse are the appointments?’

The answer: a bit more than they usually are. This year’s round of appointments shows diversity in the upper echelons of the bar is improving, with the percentage of candidates from non-traditional backgrounds succeeding in their applications very much on the up.

Take applicants from black minority ethnic (BME) backgrounds. Of the 37 BME applicants who applied for silk status, 16 (43%) were successful. This is a big improvement on last year’s percentage (28%).

A similar trend can be traced when it comes to LGBT applicants. Eight of the nine (89%) applicants who declared they were a gay man, a gay woman or bisexual made silk, another big leap from last year’s 58%.

And then there’s gender diversity. According to Helen Pitcher — who chairs the panel responsible for selecting new silks — the proportion of female QCs is “at its highest level ever”. Thirty-one women applicants of the 56 (55%) who applied made silk, again an improvement on 2015-16’s 52% stat.

On the appointments, Lord Chancellor Elizabeth Truss had this to say:

I want us to tap into all the talents of our society and today’s appointments are a step in the right direction. The number of women and BME candidates applying and being successful is moving in the right direction.

But, while this all sounds very positive, ultimately just 27% of the new QC titles have gone to women. Pitcher herself is concerned by this, and revealed today:

We have commissioned research to see whether there are barriers which may deter well-qualified women from applying.

Though the profession will no doubt await this research with interest, today is a day for celebration, for those too who have been made honorary QCs. Of those five, law students may recognise Professor Graham Virgo — whose contract law bible is a reading list staple — and Professor John Finnis, an academic whose take on natural law will be familiar to jurisprudence buffs. Solicitor Marcia Willis-Stewart, Professor Surya Subedi and Professor Cheryl Thomas round off the fivesome.

A big congratulations to all those who have made QC.

Read the full list of appointees here:

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