Not exact matches
I'm guessing it would be mostly women who would do that; women seek divorce much more than men do, fewer women don't have custody (2.4 million out of 8.6 million single moms, but that's approaching the number of single dads, 2.6 million) and they seem to
face less public
scrutiny or at least
less outrage than cheating men do.
When a Government chooses to insert into primary legislation powers to make statutory instruments, one of the consequences of that choice — whether or not it is the reason for the choice — is that those matters that will thereby fall to be dealt with in secondary legislation will receive far
less scrutiny than those matters that are addressed on the
face of the Bill.
In - house departments are also paying an increasing amount of
scrutiny to the diversity of their legal teams, with HP, Microsoft and Paypal all demanding to see
less homogenous external legal teams, with those that do not change potentially
facing financial penalties.