And the truth turned out to be that Kate Bingham did offer her time and talents in service of the public good, and the cv that was published with the announcement of her appointment made it clear what experience and skills - all omitted from the sneer here - she had for that role
@afneil rightly excoriates the everyday sexism reflected in much of the response of the supposed intelligentsia and its licensed court jesters to Kate Bingham’s appointment
“There is an England of my mind” wrote the man who sneered at Kate Bingham as an ignorant crony. There is also an England in which even half a century ago, girls were educated to the highest academic standards and encouraged to be determined in pursuit of their aspirations
“How not to be wrong” - a simple lesson. Too much attention given to so many confident opinions expressed here by people who believe themselves to be right, but turn out to be completely and utterly wrong
I’m pleased to see the level of engagement with this short thread explaining in more detail the gross mistakes made by the author of “How To Be Right” and “How Not To Be Wrong” here
And here’s a professor of human rights law, world trade law and EU law with over 100,000 followers offering his mature and well-informed insight into Kate Bingham’s appointment
Next, a man complains that the information about Kate Bingham’s appointment “does not appear to be readily available” after a FOI request to the Cabinet Office drew a blank.
The information was readily available on gov.uk on 16 May 2020
The legal director of the Good Law Project, which is suing for a declaration that the appointment was unlawful, concedes that Kate Bingham, disparagingly described as “your mate”, might have “ended up doing a good job”. There’s nothing as underwhelming as faint praise
“Some wives of Tory MPs ... turn out to do a great job” opines someone who, if he has a first class degree in biochemistry from Oxford and a Kennedy scholarship for an MBA at Harvard Business School, is modestly hiding it. A respondent to him doesn’t even concede “a great job”
English actor, writer, comedian and presenter Stephen Mangan picked up almost 70,000 “likes” for this tweet on 1 November 2020, again echoing the presumption that the appointment was venal and the appointee incompetent for the role
Quite apart from information he could have found on gov.uk website when her appointment was announced in May 2020, only a few days earlier, Kate Bingham had published this article in The Lancet about the work of the Vaccine Taskforce thelancet.com/journals/lance…
Some MPs who enthusiastically retweeted Stephen Mangan’s tweet have been deleting it from their timelines now that it’s clear to them how embarrassingly wrong it was
But the Good Law Project still has this 21 November 2020 page, which describes the crowdfunded anti-cronyism litigation it is pursuing, live on its website. Its legal director conceded that “your mate ... might end up doing a good job” but, like the GLP itself, has now blocked me
Why does an organisation which solicits public contributions to its work, and describes itself as speaking the truth and acting with integrity, not simply acknowledge it has made a mistake here?
It’s only fair to say that Stephen Mangan did delete his tweet, unblock me, and discuss it civilly
Not deleted. These tweets, which describe Kate Bingham as “... buggering the country up for the rest of us” and “so incredibly grim”. There was no substance in the negative headlines and accusations of conflict of interest and leaking confidential information quoted either
I am blocked by this individual, who refers to me as “an account that doesn’t engage in good faith”, a favourite phrase
Not deleted. The wisdom of “actor, writer, director, fool” as he describes himself in his bio, David Schneider
“No relevant experience or expertise” simply reveals the ignorance of the soi-disant fool, as a first class Oxford degree in biochemistry and long experience of venture capital investment in the products of the life sciences industry was highly relevant to the VTF’s objectives
Not deleted. A QC finds this “completely incredible”. She was right. It was incredible, because untrue, as Parliamentary records from 4 and 10 November clearly show. But a smear still live on the Twitter timeline of @GoodLawProject legal director @gem_abbott (I’m blocked by both)
I think lawyers who choose to tweet politically and polemically should have a duty to do their best to update and correct information they have relied on to make a point, especially when it is shown to have been wrong by the official Parliamentary record, as it has been here
And it’s surely flagrantly inconsistent with the high standards that the Good Law Project holds out for itself for this to remain live on the Twitter timeline of its legal director, having been shown to be untrue in evidence and answers before both Houses of Parliament
I’m blocked by the Twitter accounts of the Director, Legal Director, and Good Law Project itself, apparently because I “don’t engage in good faith”. This thread is in absolute earnest, and isn’t only about them, although they alone are asking the public for money to litigate here
Yesterday, two European newspapers, la Repubblica and die Welt published a joint interview with Kate Bingham in English repubblica.it/cronaca/2021/0…
Consistent with other interviews in the press and on the radio/podcasts it expands on the skills and experience she brought to the role, which any fair-minded reader could have discerned for themselves. As for the Guardian “there’s very little they’ve written that is correct”
It was the Guardian which published the article in the first tweet in this thread and which included this allegation, on which the Good Law Project was then proposing to litigate, but which was completely baseless theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
As a Parliamentary answer, the annual report of the VTF published in December 2020, and an i/v made clear, the contract with this consultancy was made by the VTF with normal process, and the work was done in connection with setting up a registry of participants in vaccine trials
Even though the achievements of the Vaccine Task Force under Kate Bingham’s leadership had had greater publicity and recognition by the end of January, the man who described her appointment as “so unbearably grim” does not acknowledge its role in the success of vaccination now
No fair-minded, reasonably well-informed person could attribute the success of the vaccination programme to the public sector alone. The attitude shown by the Good Law Project, its director and legal director towards Kate Bingham as chair of the VTF has been shameful throughout
The Vaccine Taskforce published its year end report on 8 December 2020, including an independent review of its work by the chair of the Royal Institution. Not a single mainstream journalist or activist commentator appears to have noted its publication or its contents
@Gabriel_Pogrund - the report contains a list of VTF members, and information about the communications work done in connection with the new NHS citizens’ registry for vaccine trials. I’m a Times subscriber, have read your other articles. Did you write anything on this report?
“How Not To Be Wrong” by James O’Brien, revisited
And no, this isn’t an example of an impressive change of mind on reflection on the evidence, because the evidence was always there for anyone willing to look at it without prejudice or the sneering presumptions manifest in his earlier comments
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“Delegitimising”. These posts are a lawyer, a KC who formerly practised in tax law, who now runs a not for profit campaigning law organisation he set up, and who has a close personal interest in these issues, delegitimising the judgment of our country’s final court of appeal
The appeal only reached the UK Supreme Court because the court below, the Court of Session Inner House, gave permission to appeal. There is a legal test for this: whether there is an arguable point of public importance that ought to be considered by the Supreme Court of the UK
In the Supreme Court of the UK, the appeal was argued for both sides and by permitted interveners. The judgment is unanimous (like the 2019 prorogation judgment) and the work of three men and two women of the highest judicial erudition. I know where I think the delegitimising is
I don’t see any strong correlation between the fact this case was crowdfunded and the fact that there was a client-solicitor dispute about the solicitors’ charges. There is no difference in the duties and remedies in that relationship and those in a non-crowdfunded case
The crowdfunding platform CrowdJustice transfers funds raised directly to solicitors acting in a case, to ensure they are not used for some other purpose by the crowdfunding promoter, but plays no role in reviewing or auditing the solicitors’ bills in any way
The real problem with crowdfunded litigation is that funders have no access to neutral information or legally privileged advice on merits or strategy, and no influence on strategy other than the broad brush of sufficiency or insufficiency of funding for the case to be pursued
The Bill would create a “state [assisted] suicide service”. It is literal interpretation, not inflammatory to say so. The Bill partially decriminalises the offence of assisting suicide under the Suicide Act 1961 and it gives power to ensure that assistance is available on the NHS
This former BBC journalist wrongly stigmatises an MP’s literally accurate phrase as “inflammatory”, and in the same breath describes those here who point this out to him as “those famously robust Elon lads”. He needs a bit less gotcha and a bit more reading of what the Bill says
It isn’t a universal state suicide service, because there are eligibility limits for it. Only people who are terminally ill and have sufficient mental capacity qualify. But it is essentially “on demand” for them. The safeguards are a compliance check not a discretionary filter
This latest GLP crowdfunder is unsurprisingly controversial. I’m not going to repeat the talking points for or against the merits of the legislation. There is a link to a pre-action letter which sets out the legal arguments. But how persuasive are they?
Supporters have no access to or indication of the privileged advice on the merits given by the lawyers in the case. And the GLP has not updated its records spreadsheet to show that its most recent crowdfunded judicial review, on voter ID, failed to get permission, as unarguable
The claimant in the case is TransActual CIC. It has instructed its own solicitors and barristers, but not used its own funds. The GLP’s role is just crowdfunding the case, for which it takes 10p in every £ donated and keeps any surplus out of the £75,000 target for its own work
Matthew Parris’s vision of euthanasia is one where people of full mental capacity and free of coercive influence will rationally choose to “check out early”. It’s a callous vision and it takes no account of frailty, folly, or loss of freedom in making a life or death decision
This case of a man who killed his mother and was indulgently sentenced for his offence was reported this week. I’m troubled by it. Imagine the same events happening in the moral universe Matthew Parris describes? The Sixth Commandment in shades of grey thetimes.co.uk/article/man-wh…
The judge accepted that the son, who had given up work to become a full-time carer for his mother, believed that death was the only solution. But he had *no* right to impose that belief on his mother, who was then incapable of understanding or making such a decision for herself
The one thing this isn’t is charitable. The crowdfunding page names no lawyers, but describes Chris Packham himself as the case owner. He is not a charity. There is no link to any pre-litigation correspondence or draft grounds of claim, or statement of how a surplus will be used
This link is more informative and makes it clear that there are lawyers acting in the case. But why does Chris Packham, who owes his public prominence to work for the BBC, a public service broadcaster funded by licence payers, need to crowdfund for this litigation?