Friday’s Sun included a strongly worded comment piece lambasting Covid policy as driven by “Matt Hancock, a fanatic, and Boris Johnson, a muddled old bumbler” and as inflicting unjustified misery and economic mayhem while failing to stop the spread of the virus. No surprise there -newspapers are free to voice a range of views on issues of the day – but more troubling is the fact that the writer of the piece is former Supreme Court Judge Lord Sumption.
He’s no stranger to controversy, admitting in August that he had not himself complied with “some
of the law” and suggesting last month that people should decide for themselves whether or not to obey coronavirus laws. He went further yesterday arguing “it
is about time we voted with our feet and took back control of our own lives.” Sumption
is entitled to his libertarian views and but should he be expressing them?
For one thing it’s a breach of the long standing convention
that judges should not comment publicly on the merits, meaning, or likely
effect of government policy. For another, The Guide to Judicial Conduct says that judges
"should be aware that participation in public debate on any topic may
entail the risk of undermining public perception in the impartiality of the
judiciary". It also says that "where a judge decides to participate
in public debate, he or she should be careful to ensure that the occasion does
not create a public perception of partiality towards a particular cause or to a
lack of even handedness". There’s nothing remotely even handed in what
Sumption has to say or the way he says it.
So what? He’s retired and surely he can say what he pleases.
Unfortunately for him the Guide to Judicial Conduct makes clear that “a retired
judge may still be regarded by the general public as a representative of the
judiciary. Retired judges should exercise caution and are encouraged therefore
to refer to this guidance so as to avoid any activity that may tarnish the
reputation of the judiciary.”
Unfortunately for us, Sumption is not fully retired. He is one of four members of the Supplementary Panel of the Supreme Court so until he
reaches 75 in 2023, he can be called upon “when additional judges are needed to
form a panel of the requisite number”.
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