And only one of us is a convicted criminal, an anti-semite, "Brocialist", deliberately hiding his funders, who has written for the UCL Conservative Newsletter, has a dodgy PhD, and thinks table salt is a chemical weapon.
Were you, indeed, in David Miliband's leadership campaign team? I only ask because I left the Party whilst Blair was leader but you actually seem to have worked for his intellectual successor? newstatesman.com/uk-politics/20…
Why did you oppose the tax on bankers' bonuses, @aaronbastani?
Help me understand, Dr @AaronBastani. Why was it wrong to tax the rich under Milliband but right to tax them under Corbyn?
There are instances of Bastani using anti-semitic tropes, boosting anti-semites, and defending the anti-semitism of others, which caused me to express the view I did. But it is also fair to point out this, in which he shows some commendable self-insight.
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Earlier this month we published leaked data showing that Ministers had misled Parliament, the High Court and the National Audit Office over the size of the VIP lane. goodlawproject.org/news/ministers…
When, in October 2020, we published details of the existence of the VIP lane the story was not picked up by the media who could not believe it was true.
Our February 2022 story has had a similar reception. Save for small pieces in The Independent and The Times, this incredibly important story has gone largely unreported.
So, we've had some questions in from The Times and so I thought I'd share our responses here.🧵
The first suite of questions is about standing. And the effect of the Divisional Court's decision on how we work.
To that first suite of questions we have said:
Sometimes, as with the Runnymede case, we’ve worked with partners who clearly have standing. Sometimes we have standing ourselves, as the Courts have repeatedly confirmed. Sometimes we have achieved the outcomes we want by backing cases brought by others.
What Boris Johnson's premiership has shown is how those who rule us - VIP Tory donors, politicians, newspaper proprietors, and the rest of the entitled Establishment - hate being held to the same rules as normal people.
And if you seek to disrupt their ugly status quo they really, really don't like it. Several days after, yes, that Boxing Day I was messaged by a sympathetic Tory insider thus:
This was after I had been monstered for killing a single fox which was caught in netting attacking my chickens on the front page of the Mail. Yes, the Mail whose proprietor's wife boasts in the society pages about her love of hunting - the routine killing animals for fun.
So frustrating to have to read perhaps the leading Anglophone intellectual refracted through such such a thick lens.
No doubt the Guardian had its reasons.
Inadvertently revealing of how reduced some have become, that they could consider taking a mind as majestic as Atwood's and try to fix it into a box of their making. Doesn't she deserve better?
Key point, for law students: how the political mood music affects the application of the law. If the mood music is unfavourable that helps your prospects of losing and if it is favourable it helps your prospects of winning. theferret.scot/trans-men-and-…
The principle extends beyond trans issues (England, hostile; Scotland, supportive). During the 'Brexit years' we brought a whole bunch of cases that we won in Edinburgh but we would have lost in London.
All sorts of interesting applications given that the Government can often be sued throughout the UK and English courts are becoming more hostile to challenges to the Executive.
Hancock, a man three times found to have broken the law, including yesterday is on his high horse. Tell your publican. Or the taxpayers who'll pay for your illegal VIP lane. Or the woman you had an affair with in lock down. Or the ethnic minorities or disabled people you ignored.
The sheer front of these sleazy little men. They really do think they are too good for the law. They have no care for how they betray those who work hard and pay taxes to fund the public purse which they use as an illegal treasury for their VIP associates.
Number of times Matt Hancock has broken the law: three (so far).
Number of times I or Good Law Project have broken the law: zero.