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Attorney General for England and Wales

His Majesty's Attorney General for England and Wales is the chief legal adviser to the sovereign and Government in affairs pertaining to England and Wales as well as the highest ranking amongst the law officers of the Crown.[3][4] The attorney general is the leader of the Attorney General's Office and currently attends (but is not a member of) the Cabinet.[5] Unlike in other countries employing the common law legal system, the attorney general does not govern the administration of justice; that function is carried out by the secretary of state for justice and lord chancellor. The incumbent is also concurrently advocate general for Northern Ireland.[6]

United Kingdom
Attorney General for England and Wales
Incumbent
Victoria Prentis
since 25 October 2022 (2022-10-25)
Attorney General's Office
StyleAttorney General
(informal)
The Right Honourable
(within the UK and Commonwealth)
Member of
Reports toPrime Minister of the United Kingdom
Secretary of State for Justice
NominatorPrime Minister
AppointerThe Monarch
(on the advice of the Prime Minister)
Term lengthAt His Majesty's pleasure
Formation1277
First holderWilliam de Boneville
DeputySolicitor General for England and Wales
Salary£178,594 per annum (2022)[1]
(including £84,144 MP salary)[2]
Websitewww.gov.uk

The position of attorney general has existed since at least 1243, when records show a professional attorney was hired to represent the King's interests in court. The position first took on a political role in 1461 when the holder of the office was summoned to the House of Lords to advise the Government there on legal matters. In 1673, the attorney general officially became the Crown's adviser and representative in legal matters, although still specialising in litigation rather than advice. The beginning of the 20th century saw a shift away from litigation and more towards legal advice. Today, prosecutions are carried out by the Crown Prosecution Service and most legal advice to government departments is provided by the Government Legal Department, both under the supervision of the attorney general.

Additional duties include superintending the Serious Fraud Office, HM Crown Prosecution Service Inspectorate, Service Prosecuting Authority, and other government lawyers with the authority to prosecute cases. The attorney general advises the government, individual government departments, and individual government ministers on legal matters, answering questions in Parliament and bringing "unduly lenient" sentences and points of law to the Court of Appeal of England and Wales. As per the Law Officers Act 1997, duties can be delegated to the Solicitor General, and any actions are treated as if they came from the attorney general.

The corresponding shadow minister is the Shadow Attorney General for England and Wales, and the work of the attorney general is also scrutinised by the Justice Select Committee.[7]

History edit

The origins of the office are unknown, but the earliest record of an "attorney of the crown" is from 1243, when a professional attorney named Laurence Del Brok was paid to prosecute cases for the king, who could not appear in courts where he had an interest.[8] During the early days of the office the holder was largely concerned with representing the Crown in litigation, and held no political role or duties.[9] Although a valuable position, the attorney general was expected to work incredibly hard; although Francis North (1637–1685) was earning £7,000 a year as attorney general he was pleased to give up the office and become Chief Justice of the Common Pleas because of the smaller workload, despite the heavily reduced pay.[9] The office first took on a political element in 1461, when the holder was summoned by writ to the House of Lords to advise the government on legal matters. This was also the first time that the office was referred to as the office of the "Attorney General".[8] The custom of summoning the attorney general to the Lords by writ when appointed continues unbroken to this day, although until the appointment of Lord Williams of Mostyn in 1999, no attorney general had sat in the Lords since 1700, and no attorney general had obeyed the writ since 1742.[10]

During the 16th century, the attorney general was used to pass messages between the House of Lords and House of Commons, although he was viewed suspiciously by the Commons and seen as a tool of the Lords and the king.[10] In 1673 the attorney general began to take up a seat in the House of Commons, and since then it has been convention to ensure that all attorneys general are members of the House of Commons or House of Lords, although there is no requirement that they be so.[11] During the constitutional struggle centred on the Royal Declaration of Indulgence in 1672 and 1673 the attorney general officially became the Crown's representative in legal matters.

In 1890, the ability of an attorney general to continue practising privately was formally taken away, turning the office-holder into a dedicated representative of the government.[12] Since the beginning of the twentieth century the role of the attorney general has moved away from representing the Crown and government directly in court, and it has become more of a political and ministerial post, with the attorney general serving as a legal adviser to both the government as a whole and individual government departments.[13] Despite this change, until the passing of the Homicide Act 1957 the attorney general was bound to prosecute any and all poisoning cases.[14]

However, in recent times the attorney general has exceptionally conducted litigation in person before the courts, for instance before the House of Lords in A and Others v Secretary of State for the Home Department,[15] where the legality of the government's detention of terrorist suspects at Belmarsh was at issue.

Role and duties edit

The attorney general is currently not a Cabinet minister, but is designated as also attending Cabinet.[16] The rule that no attorney general may be a cabinet minister is a political convention rather than a law, and for a short time the attorney general did sit in cabinet,[4] starting with Sir Rufus Isaacs in 1912 and ending with Douglas Hogg in 1928.[17] There is nothing that prohibits attorneys general from attending meetings of the Cabinet, and on occasion they have been asked to attend meetings to advise the government on the best course of action legally.[4] Despite this it is considered preferable to exclude attorneys general from cabinet meetings so as to draw a distinct line between them and the political decisions on which they are giving legal advice.[4] As a government minister, the attorney general is directly answerable to Parliament.[18]

The attorney general is also the chief legal adviser of the Crown and its government, and has the primary role of advising the government on any legal repercussions of their actions, either orally at meetings or in writing. As well as the government as a whole, they also advise individual departments.[4][19] Although the primary role is no longer one of litigation, the attorney general still represents the Crown and government in court in some select, particularly important cases, and chooses the Treasury Counsel who handle most government legal cases.[14] By convention, they represent the government in every case in front of the International Court of Justice.[14] The attorney general also superintends the Crown Prosecution Service and appoints its head, the Director of Public Prosecutions. Decisions to prosecute are taken by the Crown Prosecution Service other than in exceptional cases i.e. where the attorney general's consent is required by statute or in cases relating to national security.[20] An example of a consent case is the Campbell Case, which led to the fall of the first Labour government in 1924.[21]

The attorney general also superintends the Government Legal Department and the Serious Fraud Office.[19][22] The attorney general also has powers to bring "unduly lenient" sentences and points of law to the Court of Appeal, issue writs of nolle prosequi to cancel criminal prosecutions, supervise other prosecuting bodies (such as DEFRA) and advise individual ministers facing legal action as a result of their official actions.[23] They are responsible for making applications to the court restraining vexatious litigants, and may intervene in litigation to represent the interests of charity, or the public interest in certain family law cases.[24] They are also officially the leader of the Bar of England and Wales, although this is merely custom and has no duties or rights attached to it.[23] The attorney general's duties have long been considered strenuous, with Sir Patrick Hastings saying that "to be a law officer is to be in hell".[8] Since the passing of the Law Officers Act 1997, any duties of the attorney general can be delegated to the Solicitor General for England and Wales, and their actions are treated as coming from the attorney general.[25]

List of attorneys general edit

13th century edit

  • William of Boneville (1277–1278)
  • William de Giselham (1278–1279)
  • Gilbert de Thornton (1279–1280)
  • Alanus of Walkingham (1280–1281)
  • John le Fawconer (1281–1284)
  • William of Selby (1284–1286)
  • Gilbert de Thornton (1286–1286)
  • William Inge (1286–1289)
  • John de Bosco (1289–1290), also called John de Boys
  • William Inge and Hugo de Louther (1291–1293)[26]
  • John de Mutford (1293–1299)[26]
  • Nicholas de Warwick (1299)[26]

14th century edit

  • John de Cestria (1300–1301)[26]
  • John de Mutford (1301–1308)[26]
  • Matthew de Scacarrio (1308–1312)[27]
  • John de Norton (1312–1315)[27]
  • William de Langley (1315–1318)[27]
  • Adam de Fyneham (1318–1320)[27]
  • Galfridus de Scrope (1320–1322)[27]
  • Galfridus de Fyngale (1322–1324)[27]
  • Adam de Fyneham (1324–1327)[27]
  • William of Merston (26 February 1327 – 1327)[27]
  • Alexander de Hadenham and Adam de Fyneham (1327–1328)
  • Richard of Aldeburgh (1329–1334)
  • Simon of Trewythosa (c. 1334)
  • William of Hepton (1334–1338)
  • John of Lincoln (28 May 1338 – 4 August 1338)
  • John of Clone (4 August 1338 – 1338)
  • William of Merington (1338–1339)
  • John of Clone (1339–1342)
  • William of Thorpe (1342–1343)
  • John of Lincoln (1343–1343)
  • John of Clone (1343–1349)
  • Simon of Kegworth (1349–1353)
  • Henry of Greystok (1353–1356)
  • John of Gaunt (1356 – 4 May 1360)
  • Richard of Fryseby (4 May 1360 – 1362)
  • William (or possibly Robert) of Pleste (1362–1363)
  • William of Nessefield (1363 – 9 November 1366)
  • Thomas of Shardelow (9 November 1366 – 20 May 1367)
  • John of Ashwell (20 May 1367 – 1367)
  • Michael Skilling (1367–1378)
  • Thomas of Shardelow (1378–1381)
  • William Ellis (1381–1381)
  • Laurence Dru (1381–1384)
  • William of Horneby (1384–1386)
  • Edmund Brudnell (1386–1398)
  • Thomas Coveley (1398 – 30 September 1399)
  • William of Lodington (30 September 1399 – 1401)

15th century edit

  • Thomas Coveley (1401 – 13 July 1407)
  • Thomas Dereham (13 July 1407 – 17 August 1407)
  • Roger Hunt (17 August 1407 – 1410)
  • Thomas Tickhill (1410 – 16 January 1414)
  • William Babington (16 January 1414 – 1420)
  • William Babthorpe (1420 – 28 October 1429)
  • John Vampage (28 October 1429 – 30 June 1452)
  • William of Nottingham (30 June 1452 – 12 August 1461)
  • John Herbert (12 August 1461 – 1461)
  • Henry Sothill (1461 – 16 June 1471)
  • William Hussey (16 June 1471 – 7 May 1481)
  • William Huddesfield (7 May 1481 – 28 May 1483)
  • Morgan Kidwelly (28 May 1483 – 20 September 1485)
  • William Hody (20 September 1485 – 3 November 1486)
  • James Hobart (3 November 1486 – April 1509)

16th century edit

17th century edit

18th century edit

19th century edit

Colour key (for political parties):
  Conservative   Liberal

Attorney general Term of Office Political party Prime Minister
  William Atherton 4 July 1861 2 October 1863 Liberal Palmerston
(II)
  Roundell Palmer 2 October 1863 26 June 1866 Liberal
Russell
(II)
  Hugh Cairns 10 July 1866 29 October 1866 Conservative Derby-Disraeli
(III)
  John Rolt 29 October 1866 18 July 1867 Conservative
  John Burgess Karslake 18 July 1867 1 December 1868 Conservative
  Robert Collier 12 December 1868 10 November 1871 Liberal Gladstone
(I)
  John Coleridge 10 November 1871 20 November 1873
  Henry James 20 November 1873 17 February 1874
  John Burgess Karslake 27 February 1874 20 April 1874 Conservative Disraeli
(II)
  Richard Baggallay 20 April 1874 25 November 1875
  John Holker 25 November 1875 21 April 1880
  Henry James 3 May 1880 9 June 1885 Liberal Gladstone
(II)
  Richard Webster 27 June 1885 28 January 1886 Conservative Marquess of Salisbury
(I)
  Charles Russell 9 February 1886 20 July 1886 Liberal Gladstone
(III)
  Richard Webster 5 August 1886 11 August 1892 Conservative Marquess of Salisbury
(II)
  Charles Russell 20 August 1892 3 May 1894 Liberal Gladstone
( IV)
  John Rigby 3 May 1894 24 October 1894
5th Earl of Rosebery
  Robert Reid 24 October 1894 21 June 1895
  Richard Webster 8 July 1895 7 May 1900 Conservative Marquess of Salisbury
( Unionist Coalition)

20th century edit

Colour key (for political parties):

  Conservative
  Labour
  Liberal
  Liberal Unionist
  National Labour
  Irish Unionist

Attorney general Term of office Political party Prime Minister
  Robert Finlay 7 May 1900 4 December 1905 Liberal Unionist Marquess of Salisbury
( Unionist Coalition)
Balfour
( Unionist Coalition)
  John Lawson Walton 12 December 1905 28 January 1908 Liberal Campbell-Bannerman
  William Robson, Baron Robson 28 January 1908 7 October 1910
Asquith
( I)
  Rufus Isaacs, 1st Marquess of Reading 7 October 1910 19 October 1913
  John Simon 19 October 1913 25 May 1915
  Edward Carson 25 May 1915 19 October 1915 Irish Unionist Asquith
(Coalition)
  F. E. Smith, 1st Earl of Birkenhead 3 November 1915 10 January 1919 Conservative
Lloyd George
(Coalition)
  Gordon Hewart 10 January 1919 6 March 1922 Liberal
  Ernest Pollock 6 March 1922 19 October 1922 Conservative
  Douglas Hogg 24 October 1922 22 January 1924 Law
Baldwin
  Patrick Hastings 23 January 1924 3 November 1924 Labour MacDonald
  Douglas Hogg 6 November 1924 28 March 1928 Conservative Baldwin
  Thomas Inskip 28 March 1928 4 June 1929
  William Jowitt 7 June 1929 26 January 1932 Labour MacDonald
(II)
MacDonald
(First National ministry)
MacDonald
(Second National ministry)
  Thomas Inskip 26 January 1932 18 March 1936 Conservative
Baldwin
(Third National ministry)
  Donald Somervell 18 March 1936 25 May 1945
Chamberlain
(Fourth National ministry)
Chamberlain
(War)
Churchill
(War)
  David Maxwell Fyfe
MP for Liverpool West Derby
25 May 1945 26 July 1945 Churchill
(Caretaker)
  Hartley Shawcross
MP for St Helens
4 August 1945 24 April 1951 Labour Attlee
  Frank Soskice
MP for Sheffield Neepsend
24 April 1951 26 October 1951
  Lionel Heald
MP for Chertsey
3 November 1951 18 October 1954 Conservative Churchill
  Reginald
Manningham-Buller

MP for Northamptonshire South
18 October 1954 16 July 1962
Eden
Macmillan
  John Hobson
MP for Warwick and Leamington
16 July 1962 16 October 1964
Douglas-Home
  Elwyn Jones
MP for West Ham South
18 October 1964 19 June 1970 Labour Wilson
  Peter Rawlinson
MP for Epsom
23 June 1970 4 March 1974 Conservative Heath
  Samuel Silkin
MP for Dulwich
7 March 1974 4 May 1979 Labour Wilson
Callaghan
  Michael Havers
MP for Wimbledon
6 May 1979 13 June 1987 Conservative Thatcher
  Patrick Mayhew
MP for Tunbridge Wells
13 June 1987 10 April 1992
Major
  Nicholas Lyell
MP for Mid Bedfordshire
10 April 1992 2 May 1997
  John Morris
MP for Aberavon
6 May 1997 29 July 1999 Labour Blair
  Gareth Williams
Baron Williams of Mostyn
29 July 1999 11 June 2001

21st century edit

Colour key (for political parties):

  Conservative
  Labour

Attorney general Term of office Political party Prime Minister
  Peter Goldsmith
Baron Goldsmith
PC QC
11 June 2001 27 June 2007 Labour Blair
  Patricia Scotland
Baroness Scotland of Asthal
PC QC
27 June 2007 11 May 2010 Brown
  Dominic Grieve
MP for Beaconsfield
12 May 2010 15 July 2014 Conservative Cameron (coalition)
  Jeremy Wright
MP for Kenilworth and Southam
15 July 2014 9 July 2018 Cameron
May
  Geoffrey Cox
MP for Torridge and West Devon
9 July 2018 13 February 2020
Johnson
  Suella Braverman
MP for Fareham
13 February 2020 2 March 2021
  Michael Ellis
MP for Northampton North
2 March 2021 10 September 2021
  Suella Braverman
MP for Fareham
10 September 2021 6 September 2022
  Michael Ellis
MP for Northampton North
6 September 2022 25 October 2022 Truss
  Victoria Prentis
MP for Banbury
25 October 2022 Incumbent Sunak

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Salaries of Members of His Majesty's Government – Financial Year 2022–23" (PDF). 15 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Pay and expenses for MPs". parliament.uk. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  3. ^ "Attorney General's Office". GOV.UK. Retrieved 27 November 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d e Jones (1969), p. 47
  5. ^ "Ministers". GOV.UK. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  6. ^ McCormick, Conor; Cowie, Graeme (28 May 2020). "The Law Officers: a Constitutional and Functional Overview". House of Commons Library. p. 3. from the original on 17 June 2020. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  7. ^ "Work of the Attorney General evidence session". parliament.uk. 8 September 2015. Retrieved 10 September 2021. The Justice Select Committee holds a one-off session on the work of the Attorney General on Tuesday 15 September.
  8. ^ a b c Jones (1969) p. 43
  9. ^ a b Jones (1969) p. 45
  10. ^ a b Jones (1969) p. 44
  11. ^ Cooley (1958) p. 307
  12. ^ Attorney General's Office (2007) p. 4
  13. ^ Jones (1969) p. 46
  14. ^ a b c Jones (1969) p. 48
  15. ^ [2004] UKHL 56
  16. ^ "Ministers". gov.uk. from the original on 5 April 2012. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  17. ^ Ramsden, John (2004). "Oxford DNB article: Hogg, Douglas McGarel (subscription needed)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/33925. Retrieved 29 August 2009. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  18. ^ Jones (1969) p. 49
  19. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  20. ^ (PDF). July 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2011.
  21. ^ Jones (1969) p. 50
  22. ^ "Attorney General's Office for England and Wales". Attorney General's Office for England and Wales. Retrieved 29 August 2009.
  23. ^ a b Constitutional Affairs Committee. "The Constitutional Role of the Attorney General" (PDF). Government of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  24. ^ "About us". Attorneygeneral.gov.uk.
  25. ^ Elliott (2008) p. 249
  26. ^ a b c d e The Chronological Historian:Volume 2. p. 55.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h The Chronological Historian:Volume 1. p. 59.

Works cited edit

  • Attorney General's Office (2007). The governance of Britain: a consultation on the role of the Attorney General. The Stationery Office. ISBN 9780101719223.
  • Carroll, Alex (2007). Constitutional and Administrative Law (4th ed.). Pearson Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-1231-3.
  • Cooley, Rita (1958). "Predecessors of the Federal Attorney General: The Attorney General in England and the American Colonies". The American Journal of Legal History. 2 (4). Temple University: 304–312. doi:10.2307/844539. ISSN 0002-9319. JSTOR 844539.
  • Dickens, Bernard (1972). "The Attorney-General's Consent to Prosecutions". The Modern Law Review. 35 (4). Blackwell Publishing: 347–361. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2230.1972.tb02353.x.
  • Elliott, Catherine; Francis Quinn (2008). English Legal System (9th ed.). Pearson Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-5941-7.
  • Jones, Elwyn (1969). "The Office of Attorney-General". The Cambridge Law Journal. 27 (1). Cambridge University Press: 43–53. doi:10.1017/S0008197300088899. ISSN 0008-1973. S2CID 145400357.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Attorneys General for England and Wales at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Texts on Wikisource:

attorney, general, england, wales, majesty, chief, legal, adviser, sovereign, government, affairs, pertaining, england, wales, well, highest, ranking, amongst, officers, crown, attorney, general, leader, attorney, general, office, currently, attends, member, c. His Majesty s Attorney General for England and Wales is the chief legal adviser to the sovereign and Government in affairs pertaining to England and Wales as well as the highest ranking amongst the law officers of the Crown 3 4 The attorney general is the leader of the Attorney General s Office and currently attends but is not a member of the Cabinet 5 Unlike in other countries employing the common law legal system the attorney general does not govern the administration of justice that function is carried out by the secretary of state for justice and lord chancellor The incumbent is also concurrently advocate general for Northern Ireland 6 United Kingdom Attorney General for England and WalesRoyal Arms of His Majesty s GovernmentIncumbentVictoria Prentissince 25 October 2022 2022 10 25 Attorney General s OfficeStyleAttorney General informal The Right Honourable within the UK and Commonwealth Member ofCabinet attending Privy CouncilNational Security CouncilReports toPrime Minister of the United Kingdom Secretary of State for JusticeNominatorPrime MinisterAppointerThe Monarch on the advice of the Prime Minister Term lengthAt His Majesty s pleasureFormation1277First holderWilliam de BonevilleDeputySolicitor General for England and WalesSalary 178 594 per annum 2022 1 including 84 144 MP salary 2 Websitewww gov uk The position of attorney general has existed since at least 1243 when records show a professional attorney was hired to represent the King s interests in court The position first took on a political role in 1461 when the holder of the office was summoned to the House of Lords to advise the Government there on legal matters In 1673 the attorney general officially became the Crown s adviser and representative in legal matters although still specialising in litigation rather than advice The beginning of the 20th century saw a shift away from litigation and more towards legal advice Today prosecutions are carried out by the Crown Prosecution Service and most legal advice to government departments is provided by the Government Legal Department both under the supervision of the attorney general Additional duties include superintending the Serious Fraud Office HM Crown Prosecution Service Inspectorate Service Prosecuting Authority and other government lawyers with the authority to prosecute cases The attorney general advises the government individual government departments and individual government ministers on legal matters answering questions in Parliament and bringing unduly lenient sentences and points of law to the Court of Appeal of England and Wales As per the Law Officers Act 1997 duties can be delegated to the Solicitor General and any actions are treated as if they came from the attorney general The corresponding shadow minister is the Shadow Attorney General for England and Wales and the work of the attorney general is also scrutinised by the Justice Select Committee 7 Contents 1 History 2 Role and duties 3 List of attorneys general 3 1 13th century 3 2 14th century 3 3 15th century 3 4 16th century 3 5 17th century 3 6 18th century 3 7 19th century 3 8 20th century 3 9 21st century 4 See also 5 References 6 Works cited 7 External linksHistory editThe origins of the office are unknown but the earliest record of an attorney of the crown is from 1243 when a professional attorney named Laurence Del Brok was paid to prosecute cases for the king who could not appear in courts where he had an interest 8 During the early days of the office the holder was largely concerned with representing the Crown in litigation and held no political role or duties 9 Although a valuable position the attorney general was expected to work incredibly hard although Francis North 1637 1685 was earning 7 000 a year as attorney general he was pleased to give up the office and become Chief Justice of the Common Pleas because of the smaller workload despite the heavily reduced pay 9 The office first took on a political element in 1461 when the holder was summoned by writ to the House of Lords to advise the government on legal matters This was also the first time that the office was referred to as the office of the Attorney General 8 The custom of summoning the attorney general to the Lords by writ when appointed continues unbroken to this day although until the appointment of Lord Williams of Mostyn in 1999 no attorney general had sat in the Lords since 1700 and no attorney general had obeyed the writ since 1742 10 During the 16th century the attorney general was used to pass messages between the House of Lords and House of Commons although he was viewed suspiciously by the Commons and seen as a tool of the Lords and the king 10 In 1673 the attorney general began to take up a seat in the House of Commons and since then it has been convention to ensure that all attorneys general are members of the House of Commons or House of Lords although there is no requirement that they be so 11 During the constitutional struggle centred on the Royal Declaration of Indulgence in 1672 and 1673 the attorney general officially became the Crown s representative in legal matters In 1890 the ability of an attorney general to continue practising privately was formally taken away turning the office holder into a dedicated representative of the government 12 Since the beginning of the twentieth century the role of the attorney general has moved away from representing the Crown and government directly in court and it has become more of a political and ministerial post with the attorney general serving as a legal adviser to both the government as a whole and individual government departments 13 Despite this change until the passing of the Homicide Act 1957 the attorney general was bound to prosecute any and all poisoning cases 14 However in recent times the attorney general has exceptionally conducted litigation in person before the courts for instance before the House of Lords in A and Others v Secretary of State for the Home Department 15 where the legality of the government s detention of terrorist suspects at Belmarsh was at issue Role and duties editThe attorney general is currently not a Cabinet minister but is designated as also attending Cabinet 16 The rule that no attorney general may be a cabinet minister is a political convention rather than a law and for a short time the attorney general did sit in cabinet 4 starting with Sir Rufus Isaacs in 1912 and ending with Douglas Hogg in 1928 17 There is nothing that prohibits attorneys general from attending meetings of the Cabinet and on occasion they have been asked to attend meetings to advise the government on the best course of action legally 4 Despite this it is considered preferable to exclude attorneys general from cabinet meetings so as to draw a distinct line between them and the political decisions on which they are giving legal advice 4 As a government minister the attorney general is directly answerable to Parliament 18 The attorney general is also the chief legal adviser of the Crown and its government and has the primary role of advising the government on any legal repercussions of their actions either orally at meetings or in writing As well as the government as a whole they also advise individual departments 4 19 Although the primary role is no longer one of litigation the attorney general still represents the Crown and government in court in some select particularly important cases and chooses the Treasury Counsel who handle most government legal cases 14 By convention they represent the government in every case in front of the International Court of Justice 14 The attorney general also superintends the Crown Prosecution Service and appoints its head the Director of Public Prosecutions Decisions to prosecute are taken by the Crown Prosecution Service other than in exceptional cases i e where the attorney general s consent is required by statute or in cases relating to national security 20 An example of a consent case is the Campbell Case which led to the fall of the first Labour government in 1924 21 The attorney general also superintends the Government Legal Department and the Serious Fraud Office 19 22 The attorney general also has powers to bring unduly lenient sentences and points of law to the Court of Appeal issue writs of nolle prosequi to cancel criminal prosecutions supervise other prosecuting bodies such as DEFRA and advise individual ministers facing legal action as a result of their official actions 23 They are responsible for making applications to the court restraining vexatious litigants and may intervene in litigation to represent the interests of charity or the public interest in certain family law cases 24 They are also officially the leader of the Bar of England and Wales although this is merely custom and has no duties or rights attached to it 23 The attorney general s duties have long been considered strenuous with Sir Patrick Hastings saying that to be a law officer is to be in hell 8 Since the passing of the Law Officers Act 1997 any duties of the attorney general can be delegated to the Solicitor General for England and Wales and their actions are treated as coming from the attorney general 25 List of attorneys general edit13th century edit William of Boneville 1277 1278 William de Giselham 1278 1279 Gilbert de Thornton 1279 1280 Alanus of Walkingham 1280 1281 John le Fawconer 1281 1284 William of Selby 1284 1286 Gilbert de Thornton 1286 1286 William Inge 1286 1289 John de Bosco 1289 1290 also called John de Boys William Inge and Hugo de Louther 1291 1293 26 John de Mutford 1293 1299 26 Nicholas de Warwick 1299 26 14th century edit John de Cestria 1300 1301 26 John de Mutford 1301 1308 26 Matthew de Scacarrio 1308 1312 27 John de Norton 1312 1315 27 William de Langley 1315 1318 27 Adam de Fyneham 1318 1320 27 Galfridus de Scrope 1320 1322 27 Galfridus de Fyngale 1322 1324 27 Adam de Fyneham 1324 1327 27 William of Merston 26 February 1327 1327 27 Alexander de Hadenham and Adam de Fyneham 1327 1328 Richard of Aldeburgh 1329 1334 Simon of Trewythosa c 1334 William of Hepton 1334 1338 John of Lincoln 28 May 1338 4 August 1338 John of Clone 4 August 1338 1338 William of Merington 1338 1339 John of Clone 1339 1342 William of Thorpe 1342 1343 John of Lincoln 1343 1343 John of Clone 1343 1349 Simon of Kegworth 1349 1353 Henry of Greystok 1353 1356 John of Gaunt 1356 4 May 1360 Richard of Fryseby 4 May 1360 1362 William or possibly Robert of Pleste 1362 1363 William of Nessefield 1363 9 November 1366 Thomas of Shardelow 9 November 1366 20 May 1367 John of Ashwell 20 May 1367 1367 Michael Skilling 1367 1378 Thomas of Shardelow 1378 1381 William Ellis 1381 1381 Laurence Dru 1381 1384 William of Horneby 1384 1386 Edmund Brudnell 1386 1398 Thomas Coveley 1398 30 September 1399 William of Lodington 30 September 1399 1401 15th century edit Thomas Coveley 1401 13 July 1407 Thomas Dereham 13 July 1407 17 August 1407 Roger Hunt 17 August 1407 1410 Thomas Tickhill 1410 16 January 1414 William Babington 16 January 1414 1420 William Babthorpe 1420 28 October 1429 John Vampage 28 October 1429 30 June 1452 William of Nottingham 30 June 1452 12 August 1461 John Herbert 12 August 1461 1461 Henry Sothill 1461 16 June 1471 William Hussey 16 June 1471 7 May 1481 William Huddesfield 7 May 1481 28 May 1483 Morgan Kidwelly 28 May 1483 20 September 1485 William Hody 20 September 1485 3 November 1486 James Hobart 3 November 1486 April 1509 16th century edit John Ernley April 1509 26 January 1518 John Fitz James 26 January 1518 February 1522 John Roper February 1522 1 April 1524 Ralph Swillington 1 April 1524 August 1525 Richard Lyster August 1525 3 June 1529 Christopher Hales 3 June 1529 10 July 1535 Sir John Baker 10 July 1535 8 November 1540 William Whorwood 8 November 1540 8 June 1545 Henry Bradshaw 8 June 1545 21 May 1552 Edward Griffin 21 May 1552 22 January 1559 Gilbert Gerard 22 January 1559 1 June 1581 John Popham 1 June 1581 2 June 1592 Thomas Egerton 2 June 1592 10 April 1594 Edward Coke 10 April 1594 4 July 1606 17th century edit Henry Hobart 4 July 1606 27 October 1613 Francis Bacon 27 October 1613 12 March 1617 Henry Yelverton 12 March 1617 11 January 1621 Thomas Coventry 11 January 1621 31 October 1625 Robert Heath 31 October 1625 27 October 1631 William Noy 27 October 1631 27 September 1634 John Bankes 27 September 1634 29 January 1641 Edward Herbert 29 January 1641 3 November 1645 Thomas Gardiner royalist 3 November 1645 1649 Oliver St John parliamentary May 1644 10 January 1649 William Steele commonwealth 10 January 1649 9 April 1649 Edmund Prideaux commonwealth 9 April 1649 1659 Robert Reynolds commonwealth 1659 31 May 1660 Edward Herbert in exile 1649 1653 Geoffrey Palmer 31 May 1660 10 May 1670 Heneage Finch 10 May 1670 12 November 1673 Francis North 12 November 1673 25 January 1675 William Jones 25 January 1675 27 October 1679 Creswell Levinz 27 October 1679 24 February 1681 Robert Sawyer 24 February 1681 13 December 1687 Thomas Powys 13 December 1687 December 1688 Henry Pollexfen March 1689 4 May 1689 George Treby 4 May 1689 3 May 1692 John Somers 3 May 1692 30 March 1693 Edward Ward 30 March 1693 8 June 1695 Thomas Trevor 8 June 1695 28 June 1701 18th century edit Edward Northey 28 June 1701 26 April 1707 Simon Harcourt 26 April 1707 22 October 1708 James Montagu 22 October 1708 19 September 1710 Simon Harcourt 19 September 1710 19 October 1710 Edward Northey 19 October 1710 18 March 1718 Nicholas Lechmere 18 March 1718 7 May 1720 Robert Raymond 7 May 1720 1 February 1724 Philip Yorke 1 February 1724 January 1734 John Willes January 1734 28 January 1737 Dudley Ryder 28 January 1737 May 1754 William Murray May 1754 3 November 1756 Robert Henley 3 November 1756 1 July 1757 Charles Pratt 1 July 1757 25 January 1762 Charles Yorke 25 January 1762 16 December 1763 Fletcher Norton 16 December 1763 17 September 1765 Charles Yorke 17 September 1765 6 August 1766 William de Grey 6 August 1766 26 January 1771 Edward Thurlow 26 January 1771 11 June 1778 Alexander Wedderburn 11 June 1778 21 July 1780 James Wallace 21 July 1780 18 April 1782 Lloyd Kenyon 18 April 1782 2 May 1783 James Wallace 2 May 1783 November 1783 died in office John Lee 22 November 1783 19 December 1783 Lloyd Kenyon 26 December 1783 31 March 1784 Richard Arden 31 March 1784 28 June 1788 Archibald Macdonald 28 June 1788 14 February 1793 John Scott 14 February 1793 18 July 1799 John Mitford 18 July 1799 14 February 1801 19th century edit Colour key for political parties Conservative Liberal Edward Law 14 February 1801 15 April 1802 Spencer Perceval 15 April 1802 12 February 1806 Arthur Piggott 12 February 1806 1 April 1807 Vicary Gibbs 1 April 1807 26 June 1812 Thomas Plumer 26 June 1812 4 May 1813 William Garrow 4 May 1813 7 May 1817 Samuel Shepherd 7 May 1817 24 July 1819 Robert Gifford 24 July 1819 9 January 1824 John Singleton Copley 9 January 1824 20 September 1826 Charles Wetherell 20 September 1826 27 April 1827 James Scarlett 27 April 1827 19 February 1828 Charles Wetherell 19 February 1828 29 June 1829 James Scarlett 29 June 1829 19 November 1830 Thomas Denman 24 November 1830 26 November 1832 William Horne 26 November 1832 1 March 1834 John Campbell 1 March 1834 14 November 1834 Frederick Pollock 17 December 1834 8 April 1835 John Campbell 30 April 1835 3 July 1841 Thomas Wilde 3 July 1841 30 August 1841 Frederick Pollock 6 September 1841 15 April 1844 William Webb Follett 15 April 1844 29 June 1845 Frederic Thesiger 29 June 1845 27 June 1846 Thomas Wilde 7 July 1846 17 July 1846 John Jervis 17 July 1846 11 July 1850 John Romilly 11 July 1850 28 March 1851 Alexander Cockburn 28 March 1851 21 February 1852 Frederic Thesiger 27 February 1852 17 December 1852 Alexander Cockburn 28 December 1852 15 November 1856 Richard Bethell 15 November 1856 21 February 1858 Fitzroy Kelly 21 February 1858 11 June 1859 Richard Bethell 18 June 1859 4 July 1861 Attorney general Term of Office Political party Prime Minister nbsp William Atherton 4 July 1861 2 October 1863 Liberal Palmerston II nbsp Roundell Palmer 2 October 1863 26 June 1866 Liberal Russell II nbsp Hugh Cairns 10 July 1866 29 October 1866 Conservative Derby Disraeli III nbsp John Rolt 29 October 1866 18 July 1867 Conservative nbsp John Burgess Karslake 18 July 1867 1 December 1868 Conservative nbsp Robert Collier 12 December 1868 10 November 1871 Liberal Gladstone I nbsp John Coleridge 10 November 1871 20 November 1873 nbsp Henry James 20 November 1873 17 February 1874 nbsp John Burgess Karslake 27 February 1874 20 April 1874 Conservative Disraeli II nbsp Richard Baggallay 20 April 1874 25 November 1875 nbsp John Holker 25 November 1875 21 April 1880 nbsp Henry James 3 May 1880 9 June 1885 Liberal Gladstone II nbsp Richard Webster 27 June 1885 28 January 1886 Conservative Marquess of Salisbury I nbsp Charles Russell 9 February 1886 20 July 1886 Liberal Gladstone III nbsp Richard Webster 5 August 1886 11 August 1892 Conservative Marquess of Salisbury II nbsp Charles Russell 20 August 1892 3 May 1894 Liberal Gladstone IV nbsp John Rigby 3 May 1894 24 October 1894 5th Earl of Rosebery nbsp Robert Reid 24 October 1894 21 June 1895 nbsp Richard Webster 8 July 1895 7 May 1900 Conservative Marquess of Salisbury Unionist Coalition 20th century edit Colour key for political parties Conservative Labour Liberal Liberal Unionist National Labour Irish Unionist Attorney general Term of office Political party Prime Minister nbsp Robert Finlay 7 May 1900 4 December 1905 Liberal Unionist Marquess of Salisbury Unionist Coalition Balfour Unionist Coalition nbsp John Lawson Walton 12 December 1905 28 January 1908 Liberal Campbell Bannerman nbsp William Robson Baron Robson 28 January 1908 7 October 1910 Asquith I nbsp Rufus Isaacs 1st Marquess of Reading 7 October 1910 19 October 1913 nbsp John Simon 19 October 1913 25 May 1915 nbsp Edward Carson 25 May 1915 19 October 1915 Irish Unionist Asquith Coalition nbsp F E Smith 1st Earl of Birkenhead 3 November 1915 10 January 1919 Conservative Lloyd George Coalition nbsp Gordon Hewart 10 January 1919 6 March 1922 Liberal nbsp Ernest Pollock 6 March 1922 19 October 1922 Conservative nbsp Douglas Hogg 24 October 1922 22 January 1924 Law Baldwin nbsp Patrick Hastings 23 January 1924 3 November 1924 Labour MacDonald nbsp Douglas Hogg 6 November 1924 28 March 1928 Conservative Baldwin nbsp Thomas Inskip 28 March 1928 4 June 1929 nbsp William Jowitt 7 June 1929 26 January 1932 Labour MacDonald II MacDonald First National ministry MacDonald Second National ministry nbsp Thomas Inskip 26 January 1932 18 March 1936 Conservative Baldwin Third National ministry nbsp Donald Somervell 18 March 1936 25 May 1945 Chamberlain Fourth National ministry Chamberlain War Churchill War nbsp David Maxwell FyfeMP for Liverpool West Derby 25 May 1945 26 July 1945 Churchill Caretaker nbsp Hartley ShawcrossMP for St Helens 4 August 1945 24 April 1951 Labour Attlee nbsp Frank SoskiceMP for Sheffield Neepsend 24 April 1951 26 October 1951 nbsp Lionel HealdMP for Chertsey 3 November 1951 18 October 1954 Conservative Churchill nbsp ReginaldManningham BullerMP for Northamptonshire South 18 October 1954 16 July 1962 Eden Macmillan nbsp John HobsonMP for Warwick and Leamington 16 July 1962 16 October 1964 Douglas Home nbsp Elwyn JonesMP for West Ham South 18 October 1964 19 June 1970 Labour Wilson nbsp Peter RawlinsonMP for Epsom 23 June 1970 4 March 1974 Conservative Heath nbsp Samuel SilkinMP for Dulwich 7 March 1974 4 May 1979 Labour Wilson Callaghan nbsp Michael HaversMP for Wimbledon 6 May 1979 13 June 1987 Conservative Thatcher nbsp Patrick MayhewMP for Tunbridge Wells 13 June 1987 10 April 1992 Major nbsp Nicholas LyellMP for Mid Bedfordshire 10 April 1992 2 May 1997 nbsp John MorrisMP for Aberavon 6 May 1997 29 July 1999 Labour Blair nbsp Gareth WilliamsBaron Williams of Mostyn 29 July 1999 11 June 2001 21st century edit Colour key for political parties Conservative Labour Attorney general Term of office Political party Prime Minister nbsp Peter GoldsmithBaron Goldsmith PC QC 11 June 2001 27 June 2007 Labour Blair nbsp Patricia ScotlandBaroness Scotland of Asthal PC QC 27 June 2007 11 May 2010 Brown nbsp Dominic GrieveMP for Beaconsfield 12 May 2010 15 July 2014 Conservative Cameron coalition nbsp Jeremy WrightMP for Kenilworth and Southam 15 July 2014 9 July 2018 Cameron May nbsp Geoffrey CoxMP for Torridge and West Devon 9 July 2018 13 February 2020 Johnson nbsp Suella BravermanMP for Fareham 13 February 2020 2 March 2021 nbsp Michael EllisMP for Northampton North 2 March 2021 10 September 2021 nbsp Suella BravermanMP for Fareham 10 September 2021 6 September 2022 nbsp Michael EllisMP for Northampton North 6 September 2022 25 October 2022 Truss nbsp Victoria PrentisMP for Banbury 25 October 2022 Incumbent SunakSee also edit nbsp Politics portal nbsp United Kingdom portal nbsp Law portal Solicitor General for England and Wales Attorney General for Northern Ireland held by Attorney General for England and Wales from 1972 to 2010 Advocate General for Scotland Attorney General for IrelandReferences edit Salaries of Members of His Majesty s Government Financial Year 2022 23 PDF 15 December 2022 Pay and expenses for MPs parliament uk Retrieved 15 December 2022 Attorney General s Office GOV UK Retrieved 27 November 2022 a b c d e Jones 1969 p 47 Ministers GOV UK Retrieved 31 August 2023 McCormick Conor Cowie Graeme 28 May 2020 The Law Officers a Constitutional and Functional Overview House of Commons Library p 3 Archived from the original on 17 June 2020 Retrieved 10 March 2021 Work of the Attorney General evidence session parliament uk 8 September 2015 Retrieved 10 September 2021 The Justice Select Committee holds a one off session on the work of the Attorney General on Tuesday 15 September a b c Jones 1969 p 43 a b Jones 1969 p 45 a b Jones 1969 p 44 Cooley 1958 p 307 Attorney General s Office 2007 p 4 Jones 1969 p 46 a b c Jones 1969 p 48 2004 UKHL 56 Ministers gov uk Archived from the original on 5 April 2012 Retrieved 10 March 2021 Ramsden John 2004 Oxford DNB article Hogg Douglas McGarel subscription needed Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 33925 Retrieved 29 August 2009 Subscription or UK public library membership required Jones 1969 p 49 a b What does the Attorney General Do Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 10 March 2014 The Protocol between the Attorney General and the Prosecuting Departments PDF July 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 25 July 2011 Jones 1969 p 50 Attorney General s Office for England and Wales Attorney General s Office for England and Wales Retrieved 29 August 2009 a b Constitutional Affairs Committee The Constitutional Role of the Attorney General PDF Government of the United Kingdom Retrieved 29 July 2014 About us Attorneygeneral gov uk Elliott 2008 p 249 a b c d e The Chronological Historian Volume 2 p 55 a b c d e f g h The Chronological Historian Volume 1 p 59 Works cited editAttorney General s Office 2007 The governance of Britain a consultation on the role of the Attorney General The Stationery Office ISBN 9780101719223 Carroll Alex 2007 Constitutional and Administrative Law 4th ed Pearson Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 1231 3 Cooley Rita 1958 Predecessors of the Federal Attorney General The Attorney General in England and the American Colonies The American Journal of Legal History 2 4 Temple University 304 312 doi 10 2307 844539 ISSN 0002 9319 JSTOR 844539 Dickens Bernard 1972 The Attorney General s Consent to Prosecutions The Modern Law Review 35 4 Blackwell Publishing 347 361 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2230 1972 tb02353 x Elliott Catherine Francis Quinn 2008 English Legal System 9th ed Pearson Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 5941 7 Jones Elwyn 1969 The Office of Attorney General The Cambridge Law Journal 27 1 Cambridge University Press 43 53 doi 10 1017 S0008197300088899 ISSN 0008 1973 S2CID 145400357 External links edit nbsp Media related to Attorneys General for England and Wales at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Texts on Wikisource Attorney General Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 9th ed 1878 p 887 Attorney General Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed 1911 p 63 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Attorney General for England and Wales amp oldid 1218711452, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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