

While some of them struggle with the big words, the rest of us should read them to get informed and stay angry about the sustained assault on rule of law that is being perpetrated before our very eyes by the authoritarians who currently dominate the UK’s parliament and government.The timing was apt. The Secret Barrister’s books should be required reading for every individual who has the temerity to put themselves forward for elected office. The resulting political climate has allowed the government to advance their programme of reducing the human rights protections, and access to justice, of some of the most vulnerable in society, and limiting the power of the courts to scrutinise government incompetence and abuse. I must follow them because I am their leader.”


And parliamentarians and government ministers from both Labour and the Tories, some of them, like Harriet Harman and Dominic Raab, qualified lawyers, have wilfully misrepresented due process and demanded removal of citizens’ human rights protections because, they think, it plays well with sections of the electorate : “There go the people. For example the vile Daily Mail infamously declared judges “enemies of the people” for just doing their jobs. But findings of government unlawfulness, such as with the Tory government’s plans to withdraw from the EU without primary legislation, or Boris Johnson’s unlawful attempt to prorogue parliament, have drawn particular venom. This is pretty fundamental to how the UK is meant to work. Government is also meant to be accountable under the laws set by parliament, and it is the role of the courts to publicly administer these laws, including whether the government is acting in accordance with them. This does not mean the “supremacy of government”. Fundamental to the UK constitution is the supremacy of parliament. This, they note, is scattered through diverse pieces of legislation stretching back centuries. Hence it draws particular ire from those who believe that ministers and other public servants, such as the police, should not be accountable before the law.Īs the Secret Barrister points out, it is untrue that the UK has no constitution. This piece of British law allows citizens to hold the government to account for its failings. The Secret Barrister describes in some detail how, to take just one example, the victims of the serial rapist, John Worboys, were only able to obtain any remedy for the appalling police failings in the case that left Worboys free to assault other women, due to the Human Rights Act. Take, for instance, that perennial bug bear of the English Far Right, the Human Rights Act. However they also represent a searing indictment of the ongoing assault on the fundamental tenets of rule of law in the United Kingdom.

Taken together these two books are an elegantly written primer of key elements of UK law and how it is practiced.
