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Making an Employment Support Allowance appeal – video shared by Sue Marsh (@suey2y)



The mess in the Employment Support Allowance system is staggering, and, with legal aid centres being shut down to save money, many innocent claimants are being deprived of essential help. Channel 4 News exposes the full extent of this scandal:

“The number of appeals for employment and support allowance (ESA) heard by the Tribunal Service, has quadrupled in two years, rocketing from 68,000 in 2009 to a projected 240,000 by the end of this financial year. The cost to the taxpayer is staggering: £80m so far, and rising. Rosanna was cleared fit for work and not entitled to benefit. She appealed. She won, scoring almost top marks during the appeal’s medical assessment. Her benefit was reinstated. The appeals are dominating the caseloads of Citizens Advice Bureaux across the country and putting enormous pressure on GPs too.

Thanks to @suey2y for her continued passionate campaigning on this.

Here are some other resources you may find helpful:

– some general information about the Employment Support Allowance

http://www.adviceguide.org.uk/england/benefits_e/benefits_sick_or_disabled_people_and_carers_ew/employment_and_support_allowance.htm

– some practical advice about improving your chances of appeal:

http://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/employment-and-support-allowance/esa-appeals

– appealing decisions

http://www.dls.org.uk/advice/factsheet/welfare_benefits/employment%20support%20allowance/Employment%20Support%20Allowance%20Appeal%20%20Decisions.pdf

We’re in this together!

Guest post by Ibrahim Hasan – The draft "Communications Data Bill", opportunities and challenges



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The draft Communications Data Bill was published this week. The Bill provides an updated framework for ensuring the availability of communications data and its obtaining by public authorities. It replaces Part 1 Chapter 2 of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (“RIPA”) and Part 11 of the Anti-Terrorism Crime and Security Act 2001 (ACTSA) and sits alongside the Data Retention (EC Directive) Regulations 2009.

If passed in its current form, the Bill will enact proposals, announced in the Queen’s Speech in May, which will require Internet firms to give Police, the Serious and Organised Crime Agency, the Intelligence Agencies and HM Revenue and Customs access to a wider range of communications data on demand, in real time. However it will not allow them to access the content of such communications without a warrant. The Home Office says  that the Bill is “needed” to ensure that communications data continues to be available to the police and others in the future as it has in the past. Without action they say that there is a growing risk that crimes enabled by email and the internet will go undetected and unpunished. However various civil liberties groups, as well as Internet Service Providers have voiced concerns about the Bill from a privacy and technical perspective.

The Current Law

Part 1 Chapter 2 of RIPA (sections 21-25) sets out who can access what type of communications data and for what purposes. This includes the police and security services as well as councils, government departments and various quangos. The legislation as it stands restricts access to the different types of communications data depending on the nature of the body requesting it and the reason for doing so.

The definition of “communications data” includes information relating to the use of a communications service (e.g telephone, internet and postal service) but does not include the contents of the communication itself.  Such data is broadly split into three categories: “traffic data” i.e. where a communication was made from, to whom and when; “service data” i.e. the use made of the service by any person e.g. itemised telephone records; “subscriber data” i.e. any other information that is held or obtained by an operator on a person they provide a service to.

Some public bodies already get access to all types of communications data e.g. police, security service, ambulance service, customs and excise. Local authorities are restricted to subscriber and service use data and even then only where it is required for the purpose of preventing or detecting crime or preventing disorder.

At present access to communications data is done on a system of self authorisation. There are forms to fill (signed by a senior officer) out and  tests of necessity and proportionality to satisfy. Notices have to be served on the service provider requesting the data.

More information

At present, the Internet service providers are obliged to keep details of users’ web access, email and internet phone calls for 12 months, under the EU Data Retention Directive 2009. While they keep a limited amount of other data already on their own subscribers for billing and other commercial purposes, the new law will require them to store a much bigger volume of third party data such as that from Google Mail, Twitter, Skype and Facebook that crosses their servers every day.

Access in real time

It is unclear as to how the new proposals will be different from the current system. There is talk of the police and intelligence services being able to access data in real time. The current system normally gives access to historic data. It does allow real time access to certain organisations (including the police and security services) but only in an emergency to save life or limb or in exceptionally urgent operations. The authorisation forms still have to be completed and signed and served later on though. Maybe they are suggesting that the security services get carte blanche direct access into communications service providers’ systems. This would be unprecedented and certainly “Orwellian”, to say the least. The potential for abuse would be massive.

This is not the first time that this idea has been floated. In October 2010, the Government announced its intention to introduce the Interception Modernisation Programme, at a cost of  £2billion. This latest announcement seems to be the same project but renamed “the Communications Capabilities Development Programme (CCDP)”. Details of the scheme will be published within weeks and will build on Labour’s abandoned proposal  (which was heavily criticised by the Coalition partners at the time) to require communications service providers (CSPs) to collect and store the traffic details of all internet and mobile phone use, initially in a central database

Modernising the law  

The Home Office Minister says they are updating the law “in terms of social media and new devices” – it is widely expected to include things like Facebook and phone calls via web-based systems such as Skype. If this means the agencies knowing when an individual visits these sites this is already allowed under the current regime known as traffic data (web browsing information). If the new system goes further and allows agencies to look at actual webpages visited  within a domain (e.g Facebook) and calls made (e.g from Skype) this would be a big extension of existing powers and much more intrusive. It gives the possibility of building up a picture of someone’s lifestyle, their movements, contacts, interests etc.; potentially  vast a amount of information which, if it gets into the wrong hands, can be quite damaging to individuals.

Safeguards

At present, the checks and balances are very weak (self authorisation followed by a notice to the CSP). The proposals, which talk of access in “real time” and “on demand”, require much stronger checks and balances.

If it is really necessary for GCHQ to have access to such a vast amount of information, it should be subject to judicial approval. This could be a similar system to the one which councils will be subject to as a result of the changes to the RIPA regime to be made by Protection of Freedoms Act 2012. In the future any local authority request for communications data (however minor) will have to be approved by a Magistrate. (See my earlier Blog Post for more detail about the Bill.) After all, the powers that the police and intelligence agencies have under RIPA to undertake surveillance and acquire communications data are much wider than those of local authorities.

There are also legitimate concerns about what would happen if the information held and accessed on individuals gets into the wrong hands. Can we really trust the law enforcement agencies not to mishandle such data? Only recently allegations have surfaced that that the police have been misusing their powers under RIPA to assist the tabloids to locate the whereabouts of celebrities and other persons of interest.

The effect on local authorities

The Bill will have a minimal effect on local authorities when accessing communications data. The process and procedure will remain the same (subject Magistrates approval as set out in the Protection of Freedoms Act (discussed above)). There is no provision to widen the scope of the information available to councils. The Home Office will have to issue a new code of practice and standard forms which Investigating Officers and their legal advisers will have to familiarize themselves with. This comes on top of other recently announced changes to the local authority surveillance powers.

The Bill will be subject to scrutiny by a joint parliamentary committee before the effort to bring the measures through Parliament and into law begins in earnest.  Given what the Lib Dems and some Conservative backbenchers have said about it, it is likely to have a rough passage through Parliament.

 

Ibrahim Hasan is a solicitor and director of “Act Now Training” (website here). You can follow Ibrahim on Twitter here

Article (c) Ibrahim Hasan 2012 (not LegalAware)

Cystic fibrosis and asthma at the Brompton celebrated in the Queen's Birthday Honours List 2012



 

 

Many congratulations to Professor Duncan Mackay Geddes. Consultant in Respiratory Medicine, Royal Brompton Hospital, London, for receiving a CBE, for services to medical research, charity and education. Prof Geddes is an outstanding physician in asthma. I am particularly pleased to see that Professor Margaret Ellen Hodson. Professor of Respiratory Medicine, Imperial College and Royal Brompton Hospital, London for services to Respiratory Medicine (London) has been awarded an OBE. She is the most brilliant physician, in cystic fibrosis, I have ever met. The Brompton is a truly superb centre in respiratory medicine, along with the National Heart and Lung Institute also in Chelsea.

A complete list is published here.

Only a handful of awards were made in law.

Knights Bachelor

His Honour Judge Clive Vernon Callman. For services to Law, Education and Charity. (London)

CBE

Kevin Charles Patrick McGinty. Deputy director-General and director of Criminal Law, Attorney General’s Office. (London)

OBE

Miss Rebecca Buckingham. Formerly head of Justice and Rule of Law, Helmand Provincial Reconstruction Team, Department for International Development. (Surrey)

MBE

David Nisbet Cheetham. Formerly Diocesan Registrar of St. Albans. For services to Ecclesiastical Law and to charity in Hertfordshire. (Hertfordshire)

Adrian Mark Wright. Liaison Officer, Serious Organised Crime Agency. For services to Law Enforcement in Afghanistan. (Cheshire)

Dinner ladies, Argyll and Bute Council, and proportionality



“Argyll and Bute” is trending on Twitter, and who this morning would have thunk it? All bloggers I feel should be encouraged. I also believe that bans should consider the legal doctrine of proportionality – a ban should be necessary and proportionate. This means having a look at the views of both of the parties involved.

This story didn’t have the fun of ‘Dinner ladies’ by Victoria Wood and colleagues. Argyll and Bute Council has dropped its ban on photographs taken in school dining halls after internet users expressed their outrage at the rule which put a halt to a successful school dinner blog run by a nine-year-old. This issue of banning and proportionality is well known in other examples of legal scenario, such as prisoner voting.

The blog in question is here. The nine year-old’s blog #NeverSeconds has apparently had more than two million hits, sparked debate about the state of school dinners across the globe and raised more than £9000 for charity. She even drew comparisons with Jamie Oliver for his fight for healthy meals, with the celebrity chef praising the “clever girl” for her “great work”. You can read more about the background in this article from the Telegraph here.

This first post demonstrates how totally well-meaning this 9 year-old-student is/was, in a blog entitled, “NeverSeconds – One primary school pupil’s daily dose of school dinners”:

 

 

But this is how it sadly ended in a rather illiberal manner.

 

Council leader Cllr Roddy McCuish,  Leader of Argyll and Bute Council, told BBC Radio 4’s World at One:

“I have just instructed senior officials to withdraw the ban on photos from the school dining hall. It is a good thing to do, to change your mind and I have certainly done that.”

He also made the following statement:

“There is no place for censorship in this Council and never will be whilst I am leader. I have advised senior officers that this Administration intends to clarify the Council’s policy position in regard to taking photos in schools. I have therefore requested senior officials to consider immediately withdrawing the ban on pictures from the school dining hall until a report can be considered by Elected Members. This will allow the continuation of the “Neverseconds” blog written by an enterprising and imaginative pupil, Martha Payne which has also raised lots of money for charity.

But we all must also accept that there is absolutely no place for the type of inaccurate and abusive attack on our catering and dining hall staff, such as we saw in one newspaper yesterday which considerably inflamed the situation. That, of course, was not the fault of the blog, but of the paper.

We need to find a united way forward so I am going to bring together our catering staff, the pupils, councillors and council officials – to ensure that the council continues to provide healthy, nutrious and attractive school meals. That “School Meals Summit” will take place later this summer.

I will also meet Martha and her father as soon as I can, along with our lead councillor on Education, Michael Breslin to seek her continued engagement, along with lots of other pupils, in helping the council to get this issue right. By so doing Martha Payne and her friends will have had a strong and lasting influence not just on school meals, but on the whole of Argyll & Bute.”

Martha clearly is very enthusiastic about having a blog which she is free to write on, and the Council wishes to take action on criticisms of the good which may damage the reputation of the school and/or council. However, taking action as a ban would have to be reasonable, necessary and proportionate to have legal effect, many law students would consider. So it seems that the Council, Martha and her father may enter some form of mediation, but it is noteworthy that this episode has generated a lot of negative publicity already (even involving an urgent comment on #BBCWATO given below.) The story continues.

 

listen to ‘Argyll and Bute council reverse #neverseconds camera ban live on The World at One’ on Audioboo

BAILII – worthy of your urgent attention



They say you’ll only miss something when it’s gone.

I hope people will not be saying this of BAILII – if it happens that due to market forces it goes into extinction. Market forces have already seen an uninspiring impact on the legal profession, though making certain CABx go into liquidation in a ‘survival of the fittest’ Darwinian legal-economic climate. Even the new model legal curriculum promises to see the unprofitable ends of law get elbowed out, whether this be immigration, housing, disability benefits or asylum, as the ‘wealth creators’ get shoehorned in, such as share acquisitions and private equity.

As a website, BAILLI may not look snazzy. It may not achieve millions on the London Stock Exchange in the near future. It does, however, offer an incredible resource for law and is entirely free-of-charge and public, meaning any member of the public can look up judgments. Try it – here.

You probably don’t want to go there to see lots of targeted ads anyway based on your demographic profile. You may wish to be able to read any judgment from recent years, if you believe in access-to-law for all. Yet, this amazing website is facing financial difficulty. I have spoken to Joseph Ury of BAILLI who is one of the most genuinely nice people you will ever meet. He continues to explain the situation with modesty and politeness, but never with an ounce of anger.

The thing about BAILII is that it typifies innovation, as a popular, easy-to-use, effective resource where the user feels utterly involved. BAILLI is not a simply static invention, a repository of useful and redundant information; it fosters a culture of discovery, research, knowledge transfer and knowledge sharing. It allows things like the ‘Medici Effect’ and the ‘next adjacent’ in innovation to happen for real – in other words, as a legal academic or legal practitioner, you can make groundbreaking connections between diverse subject areas which you never knew had existed.

If you think this is something worth supporting, I strongly urge you to go to the new Facebook page here.

And make sure you follow @BAILII on Twitter here! 

Make yourself known, and contribute to something worth protecting in this ideologically-driven age of austerity.

Finally, I strongly recommend you to look at the work of my peers/colleagues in this regard:

Saving Private Bailii and the Legal Communication Revolution (by @ilegal)

http://ilegality.tumblr.com/post/24123840258/saving-private-bailii-and-the-legal-communication

Justice’s hidden backbone – a tribute to BAILII (by @adamwagner1)

http://ukhumanrightsblog.com/2010/11/18/justices-hidden-backbone-a-tribute-to-bailii/

BAILII – by @familoo

http://pinktape.co.uk/uncategorized/bailii/

BAILII needs your cash regularly (by @nearlylegal)

http://nearlylegal.co.uk/blog/2011/06/bailii-needs-your-cash-regularly/

 

 

Blogpost: "Blogging Against Disablism Day 2012" – my experience #BADD2012



 

 

 

 

 

 

The seventh annual Blogging Against Disablism day is today, on Tuesday, 1st May 2012. This is the day where all around the world, disabled and non-disabled people blog about their experiences, observations and thoughts about disability discrimination. In this way, we hope to raise awareness of inequality, promote equality and celebrate the progress we’ve made. I once wrote a post for the legal blog, Legal Cheek, describing the practical difficulties that disabled students like me, have in training contract interviews. But this is a different post!

I have often written on this blog about inclusivity and accessibility in relation to law and legal education; and I strongly recommend their twitter thread @legalcheek.

Actually, the firms on the whole are very good at making you feel comfortable for the interview. So much so you end up feeling very uncomfortable (as a result of the ‘Does he take sugar?’ syndrome). However, I would say almost too comfortable, in the sense that you do feel that the Partners concerned were taking meticulous care. In a sense, this is a case of ‘damned if you do, or damned if you don’t’.

My disability is multi-fold. I see double all the time, therefore I often voluntarily have to shut one eye to avoid seeing double. This is because I was in a coma for six weeks in the summer of 2007 due to meningitis. I now have also a cerebllar dysarthria (speech problem), but I am told that my speech is comprehensible. Secondly, I have trouble walking. I have a condition which is known as ataxia, which means I can easily go off balance, and I look as if I am mildly drunk. I find that London cabbies immediately know that I have ataxia, even if I hail a cab from outside a pub (I do not drink alcohol any more); they are very discerning, and, of course they have a right to refuse to pick you up if they wish and they can justify it. The handicap means I have to take it steady while walking (I won’t be doing the London Legal Walk 2012, but the organisers have kindly given me the chance to do sponsored tweeting for it, which makes me very happy as I volunteered for 5 months last year in a law centre in London in welfare benefits, as a law student approved to do the LPC).

 

 

 

 

 

 

I think for training contract interviews, some candidates do not even know that they require ‘reasonable adjustments’. I am very influenced by David Merkel, the lawyer in charge of the Law Society’s ‘Lawyers with Disabilities’ group. I went to their Christmas bash in 2010, and David told me, at a quiet moment aside, it was all about giving law students ‘a chance to show what they can add to a law firm, on a level playing field‘.This I feel is very true. Disabled citizens like me don’t like being made to feel ill, which they can sometimes do in the application procedure for training contracts. They’re not ill, they’re just different. Unfortunately, this Government, which stopped my Disabled Living Allowance without any warning or notification, makes me feel unwanted. I refuse to allow that perception of me, even if Katie Hopkins makes hurtful tweets like this. I cried for a bit after I read it, but with all due respect having completed my MBA recently I feel confident about business too, but in a different sense. I am 37, with several good postgraduate degrees, including in business, law and natural sciences, so I feel that I can bring value to society, even more than a popular TV show. Ironically, I feel @Lord_Sugar appreciates ‘value’ in business.

Finally, I am most grateful to @BADDTweets for alerting me to this, which is the Twitter stream for “Blogging Against Disablism Day”, run by @goldfish and @themanoutside (#bad2012): http://tinyurl.com/BADD2012. I particularly appreciate the chance to voice my experience of disability and disabilism here. All I can say to disabled and non-disabled citizens that it can be, in any context, very insidious and subtle. I am very lucky in that the law school I’m in does not “make me feel ill” (in any way you wish to interpret this legally or not!), but rather instead wanted and valued, and it is a joy to study my Legal Practice Course at BPP Law School, Holborn.

@garyslapper's top revision tweets



Prof Gary Slapper, from New York University, is a true Scholar, and anyone who’s met him will know that his scholarship is truly infectious. I feel his students are very lucky indeed. In a move which caught a number of #legaltweeps by surprise, Gary took to the twitter tom-toms to divulge some top revision tips. Gary’s had the delight of marking probably thousands of finals scripts in his time, probably. In a move unheard of, Gary effectively performed an “online revision surgery” for students who couldn’t believe their luck. With Gary’s permission, I am delighted to be able to share some of these tips here in a blogpost, in case you happened to miss the advice. You’ll note that the tips are either REVISION TIPs or EXAM TIPs.

This one is particularly crucial for the GDL, where you don’t get credit for answering more than the number of questions requested (at many institutions):

Gary evidently feels that the right sort of presentation is preferable.

Gary suggests that a ‘scattergun’ approach is not that desirable.

Precision is a current theme unsurprisingly for Gary.

When revising, Gary “goes for” quality-revision time.

In your exams, you only have a limited amount of time, so everything you write should be for a reason, and there seems to be no shame in stating uncertainties in some answers.

I don’t know of anyone who uses “cheat sites”, but Gary has a very good way of looking at their use. I did my GDL contract exam, having prepared all of the previous day for an exam in Con+ Ad (and still passed), so I sympathise with the second point in this set.

The manner in which you revise is not a trivial point, either.

I like the #AvoidSurprises tweet the most! #justsaying

Well worth a #ff @garyslapper – you will learn lots of law even if you don’t intend to!

or te intelligere legem melius

Gary continues to be utterly inspirational in his teaching of law and its idiosyncrasies, weird or otherwise. Take for example his article on how bigamy has been dealt with by international courts!

Both @garyslapper and @charonqc certainly do not treat teaching as their “job”; they have inspired countless students through their love of their law; here they are ‘in action ‘s part of the hugely successful “Without Prejudice series”, episode 17.

@StephenMayson is right, though maybe the clouds can inspire legal regulation?



Being lawyers (or academic, in my case), it is hard to avoid an analogy with directives from the European Common Market affecting our domestic laws (with the regulations constituting a higher tier) and how different legal sectors could be regulated. It has been articulated elsewhere how reliable the “market approach” to legal services has been, so I don’t wish to go over this ground again. I do however wish to mention that it may not be helpful to leave the market entirely to its own devices, as you may certain ‘unprofitable’ areas of law, naming no names, shoehorning other areas of law out of the market, perhaps primarily involved in social welfare. This would be a great tragedy in itself, but also if it were allowed to compromise the education of future lawyers. Commodification also has been specifically dealt with, elsewhere, and I don’t wish to go over the arguments here either.

So should there be a ‘Superregulator’ for all parts of the law, including barristers, traditional solicitors firms, ABSs etc.? The intuitive answer is possibly no, as each division of the legal services ‘market’ will have its specific needs which need to be addressed. Like Directives, if there were seen to be a need for a ‘Superregulator’, maybe it could hand down directives  for the Bar Standards Board, Solicitors Regulation Authority, or otherwise, to follow?

However, I was struck by a post by Prof. Stephen Mayson (from the College of Law) last night. It implied that there might be perceived inequality in ethical standards between different areas of the legal market. If there were to be perceived inequality, I feel that this could impact on competition within legal services, in that this might constitute ‘a barrier to entry’ (to use the Porter terminology) for alternative business structures. However, I am very much reminded of a completely different area in which self-regulation has been discussed until the cows come home – that of cloud computing. Here it’s argued that cloud providers should be talking the same common language, such that a customer/client can switch between cloud providers with ease (a notion called ‘interoperability’); it’s particularly important so that the public can confidently trust any particular cloud provider, whatever they are charging for their services which may be fundamentally different in quality and cost.

Let’s try that sentence switching the word ‘cloud’ by the words ‘legal service’. Here it’s argued that legal service providers should be talking the same common language, such that a customer/client can switch between legal service providers with ease (a notion called ‘interoperability’); it’s particularly important so that the public can confidently trust any particular legal service provider, whatever they are charging for their services which may be fundamentally different in quality and cost. It (for the time-being) works, emphasising that Stephen Mayson is right to warn against anything which could unwittingly cause a ‘barrier-to-entry’.

There are two aspects of the marketisation of legal services which dangerously have gone unaddressed, which I suggest ought to be of be importance to my senior academic colleagues. Firstly, you are not comparing like with like in this new market; even if you are able to compare legal services on measures of price and cost, you will run into difficulties in comparing the social value of a transaction, whether it be an acquisition of Instagram or a sensitive immigration case of a Ugandan citizen in West London. It’s the same reason ‘Monitor’ ran into problems as the regulator for the brave new world NHS. Secondly, you should be very conscious of where genuine partitioning or arbitrage of the legal services markets exists. Again, cloud providers may be able to charge differently according to supply/demand, quantity of services sold (e.g. bulk discounting), or different segments in time or geography. This is well known to the economists already due to Pigou’s elegant theory of price differentiation in competitive markets; unless the legal services regulators consider this too, I guarantee they will run into trouble in the long-run.

 

Welcome to the BPP Legal Awareness Society!



The BPP Legal Awareness Society is part of a vibrant community of student societies at BPP, which any student of BPP can join.

Non-members of BPP are warmly invited to keep in touch with the Society’s activities through its lively Twitter thread, along with its blog which is kept up-to-date by a number of members of the society. Zerbakht is the Society’s officer for corporate news content on the blog.

It is a separate entity from BPP, however its members feel it reflects the lively spirit and commitment to high standards of BPP. The mission of the society statement is: “Putting law at the heart of business“. This explains that we wish to explain to students, and the public at large, why an understanding of the law is pivotal to an understanding of business and the rest of society.

It holds regular meetings at BPP Law School Holborn (Sam is in charge of our events). Future guest speakers, in the near future, including a partner in English employment law, an expert in social media and the law, and a member of a leading ABS in England. All students across the wide range of BPP-taught disciplines are invited to attend. We also hope to have a greater outreach – whilst the Twitter thread has been going for some time, we’ll soon be publishing regular podcasts. Katie-Claire is the Society’s Officer in charge of that project. Gizem (the Society’s Corporate Liaison Officer) will be promoting good relationships with City firms, where many BPP law students end up completing their training contract at least.

We have a new logo. It’s a lion, to reflect our shared values with the place where we study. However. it’s distinct. The image represents the student body, which is friendly, intelligent, energetic, young, resourceful and focused.

If you’re a past, current, or future member of BPP, you can join here.  We should especially like to hear from you if you’re at an early stage in (or about to start) an undergraduate degree course, but considering a career in business, law or finance.

The legal and medical professions are protecting the public's faith in them



 

A Doctor from the NHS tells a man with a BA(Hons) in politics what he thinks about the NHS Bill, based on his experience of more than 30 years of working in the NHS.  Many Doctors are concerned about the reputation of the medical profession amongst the general public, if this Bill is enacted, it is widely reported.

Andy Burnham MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Health, will repeal the Act (assuming it gets Royal Assent), if Labour wins the General Election of 2015.

Des Hudson, meanwhile, Chief Executive of the Law Society of England and Wales, was delighted this evening that their Lordships have inflicted a heavy defeat on the Legal Aid and Sentencing Bill. Like Clare Gerada, the Chair of the Royal College of General Practitioners, they do not enter public life to be political, but to uphold the professional standards of the groups the represent, including reputation of law and medicine in the general public.

 

ht: @DrEoinClarke

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