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02 August 2024 / Roger Smith
Issue: 8082 / Categories: Features , Profession
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Sir Keir Starmer: lawyer

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The new prime minister is quintessentially a lawyer, writes Roger Smith. What does that mean for his premiership?

Whatever your politics, you have to recognise that Keir Starmer’s premiership raises not only political issues but professional ones. He is so quintessentially a lawyer. He presents himself as such—not so much consciously but in his whole demeanour. And he seems a real, deep-down lawyer. Not someone like Tony Blair who added a barrister’s experience as just one layer of his personal development.

I am peculiarly sensitive to the prime minister’s character because I spent six weeks canvassing in the election—for the first time in my life. This was in the constituency of Islington North, where the opposition was not from the Greens, Lib Dems, Reform or Tories. We saw nothing of them. We were up against Keir’s predecessor as leader of the Labour Party—Jeremy Corbyn.

If challenged on the doorstep, the canvasser is put in the position of defending the leader’s position. By the end, I had a pretty fluent articulation of policy

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London Solicitors Litigation Association—John McElroy

London Solicitors Litigation Association—John McElroy

Fieldfisher partner appointed president as LSLA marks milestone year

Kingsley Napley—Kirsty Churm & Olivia Stiles

Kingsley Napley—Kirsty Churm & Olivia Stiles

Firm promotes two lawyers to partnership across employment and family

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NEWS
Freezing orders in divorce proceedings can unexpectedly ensnare third parties and disrupt businesses. In NLJ this week, Lucy James of Trowers & Hamlins explains how these orders—dubbed a ‘nuclear weapon’—preserve assets but can extend far beyond spouses to companies and business partners 
A Court of Appeal ruling has clarified that ‘rent’ must be monetary—excluding tenants paid in labour from statutory protection. In this week's NLJ, James Naylor explains Garraway v Phillips, where a tenant worked two days a week instead of paying rent
Thousands more magistrates are to be recruited, under a major shake-up to speed up and expand the hiring process
Three men wrongly imprisoned for a combined 77 years have been released—yet received ‘not a penny’ in compensation, exposing deep flaws in the justice system. Writing in NLJ this week, Dr Jon Robins reports on Justin Plummer, Oliver Campbell and Peter Sullivan, whose convictions collapsed amid discredited forensics, ‘oppressive’ police interviews and unreliable ‘cell confessions’
A quiet month for employment cases still delivers key legal clarifications. In his latest Employment Law Brief for NLJ, Ian Smith reports that whistleblowing protection remains intact even where disclosures are partly self-serving, provided the worker reasonably believes they serve the ‘public interest’ 
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