đ” Save legal aid, magna carta was made to protect people like you đ”
A criminal barrister has gone public with a song he wrote about the ongoing strikes over legal aid.
Church Court Chambersâ Michael Fullerton, who does not use Twitter or other social media platforms, took to YouTube to voice his frustration at the state of pay at the criminal bar.
Following an Independent Review of Criminal Legal Aidâs recommendation that pay for legal aid work should increase 15%, the government committed an extra ÂŁ135 million a year into the criminal legal aid sector and later in 2022 announced that it would increase the fees by 15%.
The Criminal Bar Association (CBA), however, wants a 25% pay rise from the government, arguing that with inflation at around 10% this âmeans that a 15% rise in fees will be more than extinguished by the time we receive it.â Former Justice Secretary Dominic Raab refused to negotiate with the CBA and criminal barristers started an indefinite, uninterrupted strike on 5 September.
The barrister puts his frustration down to the fact that âthe statutory instrument providing for a 15% uplift on new instructions from 1st October 2022 effectively means another 2-4 years before those trial fees will become effectiveâ.
Fullerton told Legal Cheek: âIn the meantime, ÂŁ91 for a standard appearance and ÂŁ125 for a PCMH hearing are abysmal fees for the hours of preparation required and then to attend Court. There are various other areas including paperwork and s.28 hearings which are not paid adequately or at allâ, stressing that this is âparticularly relevant for the younger practitioners who are financially struggling to make a living on such low fees and to note the government has been cutting legal aid fees in real terms for years.â
Striking barristers, who normally don their wigs and gowns when attending picket lines, have been criticised by some for struggling to sway the public in their favour. He added: âI wrote the song as it is a different medium from the printed word and, having attended the assembly outside the Supreme Court and then heard the CBA submissions to the Joint Select Committee at the Palace of Westminster on 6th September 2022, hoped it would highlight certain issues facing the criminal bar to the wider public.â
Fullertonâs song (embedded top) takes aim at âgovernment ineptitudeâ with the barrister, who started out his legal career in Australia, repeating âsave legal aid, magna carta was made to protect people like youâ as the chorus.
The lyrics refer to short-lived strikes in 2014 following the then Justice Secretary Chris Graylingâs plans to cut legal aid that was resolved when the CBA agreed with the Ministry of Justice to suspend cuts until after the next general election. Legal Cheek is told that this was the first time Fullerton has used song to share his views on legal aid cuts with the barrister being understood to have sung on stage outside of parliament in protest of Graylingâs plans.
There is also little love lost over Raabâs departure. Fullerton can be heard singing: âDominic Raab, was he the worst we ever had? We say: âshame on youâ. Yes we say: âshame on youââ. Besides these specifics, the song voclaises broad criticism towards the governmentâs attitude towards legal aid reforms:
âCome the day youâre in court, innocent or not, or maybe down on your luck,
youâll find legal aid is no priority for a government that doesnât give a⊠[emphatic pause] care at all.â
Raabâs replacement Brandon Lewis had a âconstructiveâ introductory meeting last week with the chairs of the Bar Council and the CBA.