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All aboard!

08 August 2025 / Dominic Regan
Issue: 8128 / Categories: Features , International , Transport
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Are your bags packed? Globetrotting guru Dominic Regan signs off for the summer with an au revoir, plus some top travel tips

Foreign travel is a joy, provided you have a valid passport with you. The Passport Office is by a mile the most efficient government department I have ever dealt with, a view endorsed by my children. Make sure you pack yours, unlike the pilot of United Airlines Flight UA 198 who recently had to turn back on a run from Los Angeles to Shanghai after realising over the Pacific that he had left it behind.

Money money money

I hold the usual bank cards. For spending abroad, I have debit cards from both Monzo and Chase. Both give you a near-perfect exchange rate. In Italy last month, I was getting €1.20 to the pound when the best exchange rate for notes I could get at home was €1.15. Unlike most banks and card providers, no 3% foreign transaction fee is levied.

Both of my providers say they do not charge

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Red Lion Chambers—Maurice MacSweeney

Red Lion Chambers—Maurice MacSweeney

Set creates new client and business development role amid growth

Kingsley Napley—Tim Lowles

Kingsley Napley—Tim Lowles

Sports disputes practice launchedwith partner appointment

mfg Solicitors—Tom Evans

mfg Solicitors—Tom Evans

Tax and succession planning offering expands with returning partner

NEWS
The rank of King’s Counsel (KC) has been awarded to 96 barristers, and no solicitors, in the latest silk round
Can a chief constable be held responsible for disobedient officers? Writing in NLJ this week, Neil Parpworth, professor of public law at De Montfort University, examines a Court of Appeal ruling that answers firmly: yes
Early determination is no longer a novelty in arbitration. In NLJ this week, Gustavo Moser, arbitration specialist lawyer at Lexis+, charts the global embrace of summary disposal powers, now embedded in the Arbitration Act 1996 and mirrored worldwide. Tribunals may swiftly dismiss claims with ‘no real prospect of succeeding’, but only if fairness is preserved
The Ministry of Justice is once again in the dock as access to justice continues to deteriorate. NLJ consultant editor David Greene warns in this week's issue that neither public legal aid nor private litigation funding looks set for a revival in 2026
Civil justice lurches onward with characteristic eccentricity. In his latest Civil Way column, Stephen Gold, NLJ columnist, surveys a procedural landscape featuring 19-page bundle rules, digital possession claims, and rent laws he labels ‘bonkers’
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