The morning’s top legal affairs news stories
Theresa May backs judges’ independence after Brexit ruling [BBC News]
How lawyers forced Theresa May to back the judiciary [Legal Cheek]
And now here’s the next lot lining up to have a go: EU links of judges who will rule on Brexit impact [Mail Online]
Scotland “expected” to join Brexit legal challenge in fight against May triggering Article 50 [The Independent]
Brexit: Owen Smith calls for law change to allow second vote [BBC News]
Brexit means defending UK laws and courts. Brexiteers ought to accept that [The Spectator]
The government has a good chance of winning the Brexit Supreme Court appeal — here’s why [The Independent]
Nigel Farage and Gina Miller clash over Brexit [Twitter]
Nigel Farage and Gina Miller clash over Brexit #marr https://t.co/kC3sa2WE3o
— The Andrew Marr Show (@MarrShow) November 6, 2016
Tory MP who quit over Brexit and “wanted Attorney General’s role” denies calling him a “third-rate provincial conveyancer” [Mail Online]
Emails warrant no new action against Hillary Clinton, FBI director says [New York Times]
Australian law lecturer accused of pretending to be Justin Bieber to procure children [The Guardian]
Review: FinTech, AI and online justice — what technology means for the next generation of lawyers [Future of Law Blog]
Apply now: City law graduate recruitment initiative for LGBT+ candidates [Legal Cheek Hub]
All the weekends debate [Legal Cheek Comments]