Jeremy Hutchinson is 100 years old. He has been a barrister since 1945, a Queen's Counsel since the early sixties and a life peer since 1978. He is a scion of the Bloomsbury set and a lifelong patron (and defender) of the arts. He stood as the Labour candidate for the hopeless Westminster Abbey seat in the 1945 General Election.
Thomas Grant is also a QC and what they have come up with in this book is a social history of postwar Britain seen through the lens of celebrated court cases in which Hutchinson led the defence. These include the spy trials of George Blake and John Vassall, the Profumo Affair in which he represented Christine Keeler, various obscenity cases including Lady Chatterley's Lover and The Romans in Britain, the art fraudster Tom Keating and the drugs smuggler Howard Marks. Grant has cleverly grouped these by subject because his aim is not a comprehensive or chronological life of his subject. That said, he does begin with an excellent short biography, which I thought was nigh on perfect.
The highlight, though, is the postscript by the great man himself, whom great age has in no sense withered. Indeed, he seems to have written it in his centenary month (March 2015). Here he takes a swipe at the consequences of Legal Aid cuts and the attempts of the then Lord Chancellor, Chris Grayling, to undermine the fundamentals of British justice. Hutchinson, the great libertarian, takes the 'savings' apart with consummate, even deadly, skill. He ends with the obvious and proper solution to ballooning budgets at the Ministry of Justice:
[The MoJ] has only to attend to another area of its responsibility: the crisis in our intolerably overcrowded prisons. The prison population has now grown to over 85,000 (it was 46,000 when I retired). Each of these prisoners costs the taxpayer around £40,000 a year to keep. The 'warehousing' and humiliation of offenders in grossly full and inhuman conditions make meaningful education, constructive work, rehabilitation and self-respect impossible. It produces inevitable recidivism and lowers the morale of the overworked and dedicated staff. Governors repeatedly point out that they have to cope with thousands of inmates who should not be there at all: the mentally ill, the drug takers, those serving indeterminate sentences under a law now long repealed, unconvicted defendants in custody awaiting trial for minor offences for which they clearly will not receive a custodial sentence. ,,, Real prison reform calls for imagination, courage and determination; the dismantling of legal aid a mere stroke of the pen.In case you think this is Hutchinson's Labour bias (or mine, for that matter), let me also quote his onslaught on New Labour's so-called 'reforms':
In 2003 Tony Blair, supporting his autocratic and oppressive Home Secretary David Blunkett, without consultation or advice, sacked his protesting Lord Chancellor, Lord Irvine, and abolished the office itself. Thus, on the whim of an arrogant and power-hungry politician the second greatest office of state was destroyed, after 800 years.This is how great lives should be lived and recorded. My book of the year thus far. Essential reading.
No comments:
Post a Comment