barmag67 Jan. 2016 | Page 32

Terence Etherington, Chancellor of the High Court whose message focused on the challenges faced by young barristers and the ways in which such challenges can be met. Breaking into overt political discussion was, again, something rather new this year. It was the political debate which featured a panel of real live politicians. Not unpredictably, this turned to be one of the most popular of the specialist sessions held at the Conference. Debating human rights, anti-terrorism legislation, access to justice, the funding of the justice system and more, the cross-party panel included Robert Buckland QC MP, the Solicitor General for England and Wales, Andrew Slaughter MP, Shadow Minister for Justice and the Liberal Democrat peer Lord Marks of Henley-on-Thames. A valedictory When at last the Conference drew to a close, Dominic Grieve rose to the occasion with what some would have called an end-of-term address. Striking an almost elegiac note, he described, for example, his encounter with the more enthusiastic students of the law, greatly impressed with their unwavering commitment to the Bar as a true vocation. Here, excellence in advocacy at the Independent Bar became the prevailing theme of Dominic Grieve’s remarks, as did the Rule of Law in the UK. ‘The Independent Bar can deliver a more competent service than litigants in person or McKenzie friends,’ he said, adding that with access to justice severely limited, we -- the Bar -- are “a whited sepulchre”, especially with reference to the Criminal Bar. ‘We must ensure that criminal advocacy standards are enforced,’ he said, basically in support of a panel system -- and that ‘our independence and professional ethics are maintained.’ ‘New Cinderellas’ Also mentioned in the closing speech were such issues as the proposed Bill of Rights possibly replacing the HRA, (but who knows where or when – as this matter seems to have been relegated to ‘the back burner’). Also put forward was the obvious need for reform, or at least raised awareness in so many other areas, including the relationship between the Bar and Parliament, considering the dangerous times we live in, with justice and national defence ‘the new Cinderellas of government expenditure’. Change in the offing Continuing on a fairly positive note, however, were Dominic’s comments on the current Lord Chancellor, who even though ‘at the neocon end of the spectrum’, has ‘keen intelligence and a strong sense of the significance of his office.’ The Bar then, must be prepared for the advent of certain changes, some eagerly awaited, like the abolition of the awful ‘criminal government surcharge’, which it is hoped, will soon be long gone. Nevertheless, as stressed in most of the debates throughout the Conference, Dominic concluded by saying that the Bar must remain vociferous in its own defence and that of the public interest, ever fiercely protective of ‘the balance between citizen and state’. 32 the barrister Hilary Term 2016 barmag67.indd 32 03/12/2015 10:21