Former Attorney - General Dominic Grieve has hit out at
the current Justice Secretary's views on Brexit.
The current justice secretary, the first sitting Cabinet member to appear before the inquiry, was in a privileged position as head of the Foreign Office throughout the build - up, execution and violent aftermath of the conflict.
Writing in the Telegraph today,
current justice secretary Chris Grayling appeared to have already moved on from the report, when he said he might call for Britain's withdrawal from the European court of human rights if the Conservatives won the next election.
Not exact matches
Current Conservative officeholders who are members of the group include the Work and Pensions
Secretary, Iain Duncan Smith; David Cameron's PPS, Desmond Swayne; Nick Clegg's Parliamentary Under -
Secretary, Mark Harper; the Minister of State for Transport, Theresa Villiers; a Parliamentary Under -
Secretary of State at the Ministry of
Justice, Jonathan Djanogly; three government whips, Angela Watkinson, Mark Francois and Greg Hands; the Chairman of the Procedure Committee, Greg Knight; and the Chairman of the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee, John Whittingdale, who was Mrs Thatcher's Political
Secretary in the late 1980s.
Mr Gove's comments came as the woman who replaced him
current Lord Chancellor and
Justice Secretary, Liz Truss, continued to face pressure to intervene in the row.
Delegates included
current Foreign Office Minister Sir Alan Duncan, former
Secretary of State for Wales and former Brexit Minister David Jones, Shadow Transport
Secretary Andy McDonald, Shadow
Justice Secretary Richard Burgon, Shadow Minister of Women and Equalities Sarah Champion, the SNP's
Justice and Home Affairs spokesperson Joanna Cherry QC and the Liberal Democrat Shadow
Secretary of State for International Development, Baroness Sheehan.
The delegation of Parliamentarians included Lord Stewart Wood, former foreign policy adviser to both Gordon Brown and Ed Miliband, then Shadow Minister for Human Rights Andy Slaughter, Shadow Minister for International Development Imran Hussain,
current Shadow
Justice Secretary Richard Burgon MP,
current Shadow Transport
Secretary Andy McDonald MP and Wes Streeting MP.
he delegation of Parliamentarians included Lord Stewart Wood, former foreign policy adviser to both Gordon Brown and Ed Miliband, then Shadow Minister for Human Rights Andy Slaughter, Shadow Minister for International Development Imran Hussain,
current Shadow
Justice Secretary Richard Burgon MP,
current Shadow Transport
Secretary Andy McDonald MP and Wes Streeting MP.
Justice Secretary Ken Clarke's Rushcliffe constituency in Nottinghamshire would cease to exist in its
current form.
The
current shadow cabinet minister with responsibility for this issue, Nick Herbert, Shadow
Secretary of State for
Justice, doesn't go as far but in a statement issued to ConservativeHome opens the door to a manifesto promise:
And late breaking news — Bill C - 75 has just been announced and in an attempt to keep all members
current, we have a special guest attending our program, Marco Medoncino, Parliamentary
Secretary to the Minister of
Justice and Attorney General of Canada, who will explain the new proposed changes and answer questions we may have.
The intervention follows confirmation from
Justice Secretary David Lidington that the
current government intends to proceed with a proposed Civil Liability Bill, which would see a 100 % increase in the small claims limit for all non-road traffic - related personal injury cases and a fivefold increase in the limit for road accident cases.