UK Parliament / Open data

Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Bill

Before my noble friend withdraws his amendment, perhaps I can ask the Minister a question. I am sure that the Committee is grateful to him for the full explanation that he has given in response to the amendments. He has assured the Committee that it is unimaginable that the Lord Chancellor would not consult regularly with bodies representative of those who provide legal services and he has insisted on the importance of due monitoring and accreditation—all processes no doubt designed to uphold standards. Can he give some account of how all those processes that he has said that the Government will undertake assort with something else of which the Lord Chancellor has made much? He said in his article in the Guardian on 20 December: "““This year we've begun deregulation of the legal sector, a change comparable in its possible impact to the Big Bang in the City in the 1980s””." That suggests that there will be some very different procedures and that the relationship between the Ministry of Justice and the legal profession could become very different indeed. In the context of the ministry's zealous desire to deliver substantial savings in public spending and its desire to break open some of the traditional structures and ways of carrying on, I wonder how the consultation, monitoring and continuing assurance of standards are to be reconciled with the exciting and radical new approaches that the ministry is developing.
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
734 c81-2 
Session
2010-12
Chamber / Committee
House of Lords chamber
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