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The Weekly Round-Up: Happy (Legal) New Year!

Temple Church

In the News:

On 1 October 2020, the Lord Chancellor, Robert Buckland QC, gave a speech at Temple Church to mark the opening of the legal year.  He praised the “enduring success” of our legal system, our “healthy democracy”, and the “commitment to the Rule of Law” which steered the government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Lord Chancellor delivered his speech two days after the controversial Internal Market Bill cleared its final hurdle in the House of Commons with ease, by 340 votes to 256. Earlier in September, Brandon Lewis, the Northern Ireland secretary, told the House of Commons that the government’s plans would “break international law in a very specific and limited way.” On September 29, the Lord Chancellor voted against a proposed amendment to the Bill “requiring Ministers to respect the rule of law and uphold the independence of the Courts.” He was joined in doing so by the Attorney General, Suella Braverman, and the Solicitor General, Michael Ellis.

The speech came just after Parliament voted to extend the government’s sweeping emergency powers by 330 votes to 24, following Health Secretary Matt Hancock’s promise to let MPs vote “wherever possible” on coronavirus rules (without going into specifics). This outcome illustrates the inefficacy of a plea made by Baroness Hale, former President and Justice of the Supreme Court, for the United Kingdom to return to parliamentary scrutiny and a “properly functioning Constitution as soon as we possibly can”.

Since the Lord Chancellor’s speech, Home Secretary Priti Patel condemned “do-gooders” and “lefty lawyers” in the same breath as “traffickers”, and vowed to tighten up the asylum system. The Home Secretary is understood to believe that lawyers are clogging up the judicial system by challenging deportations. Whilst the Home Secretary pointed to “decades of inaction by successive governments”, it may also be noted that the Conservative Party has been in government as part of a coalition since 2010 and as the sole governing party since 2015. Significant cuts to the funding of the justice system are also very likely relevant to the backlogs in the courts. Amanda Pinto QC, Chair of the Bar Council, fired back earlier today with this riposte: “It is not the job of lawyers to limit Parliament’s own laws in a way that the Government of the day finds most favourable to its political agenda.”

The Lord Chancellor characterised his role as poised “on the frontline, where the law meets policy and policy meets the law.”

But the past month has made the extent to which the role has diminished under the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 painfully obvious. The 2005 Act asserted that the officeholder would no longer act as head of the judiciary, nor have an integral role in the appointment of judges, nor act as speaker in the House of Lords. As Jake Richards wrote earlier this year in Prospect Magazine, what was once a key constitutional office has, in recent years, been filled by “officeholders [who] have shown at best ignorance and at worst contempt for their duties.”

We usher in the new legal year with many restrictions still in place, and the distinct possibility of more to come before the calendar year ends. The outbreak of Covid-19, the spectre of Brexit and the impact of 30% cuts in budgets at the Ministry of Justice over the last decade cause acute constitutional concern to many in the profession. The Lord Chancellor’s speech may not allay these fears.

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