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18 May 2017
Issue: 7746 / Categories: Legal News
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Manifestos pledge law reform

Prime Minister Theresa May announced 11 new rights for employees as part of the 2017 Conservative manifesto this week.

They include worker representation on company boards and a new right to request leave for training.

However, Leon Deakin, employment partner at Coffin Mew Solicitors, said: ‘An examination of the detail leaves many questions to be answered.’

While the statutory right to take up to a year off to care for a disabled dependant extends existing rights, the time off would be unpaid, he said.

Following the earlier leak of a partially completed Labour manifesto, the final version was released this week. A Labour government would not ban court fees but would introduce ‘a ratio to establish the maximum difference between actual costs and charges levied’. The manifesto also pledges to ‘consider’ the recommendations of the independent Bach commission on access to justice, which is supported by the Fabian Society.

See Jon Robins’s coverage of the Labour pledges here.

Issue: 7746 / Categories: Legal News
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West End firm strengthens employment and immigration team with partner hire

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NEWS
The controversial Courts and Tribunals Bill has passed its second reading by 304 votes to 203, despite concerted opposition from the legal profession
The presumption of parental involvement is to be abolished, the Lord Chancellor David Lammy has confirmed
A highly experienced chartered legal executive has been prevented from representing her client in financial remedies proceedings, in a case that highlights the continued fallout from Mazur
Plans to commandeer 50%-75% of the interest on lawyers’ client accounts to fund the justice system overlook the cost and administrative burden of this on small and medium law firms, CILEX has warned
Lawyers have been asked for their views on proposals to change the penalties for assaulting a police officer
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