Such an inspirational lady. I have bought three copies of her book..1 for my niece who has just entered family law (which has taken her 10 years) and my unborn granddaughter to whom I will encourage to be a gentle, strong and independent woman. Thank you for this interview.
@namelessnobody76113 жыл бұрын
@Owain Oh shut up
@namelessnobody76113 жыл бұрын
@Caravaggio (a) Please point to the evidence you wield in corroboration of your assertion that she is in any way a ‘leftist’ (a suggestion slightly incongruous with your implication that this provided the basis on which she was appointed, given Blair certainly wasn’t left-wing). (b) As for your allusion to her womanhood as a prevailing factor, I dare venture that, as a female, it must pain you that she possesses an intellect unparalleled to that of your own. It’s no wonder that you’d be intimidated by an individual of a calibre so superior and yet still very much a woman- quite different from your expectation of a docile and servile house feature.
@tom52163 жыл бұрын
Lady Hale is an absolute star as is Lord Sumption. Both people of great integrity who understand the value of real justice, the role of the law, freedom of speech and liberty. The politicians should listen and learn.
@kennybrown33023 жыл бұрын
I will add Lord Denning to the list although a controversial character.
@happykarmaman343 жыл бұрын
What a lovely and amazing person, great interview.
@alanhat52523 жыл бұрын
thank you Channel4 & Lady Hale, that was both interesting & instructive
@djh19473 жыл бұрын
5⭐ Excellent interview.
@stewartpalmer22443 жыл бұрын
Really interesting interview. Thanks!
@benyetts8413 жыл бұрын
She's such a hero!
@namelessnobody76113 жыл бұрын
@Caravaggio 😂 You wally
@user-jc2bz5xb5g3 жыл бұрын
What an inspiration! I also loved the interview between Baroness H & RBG 🥰
@martinwyke3 жыл бұрын
Johnson proves that bad government drives out good government; a corollary to Gresham’s law.
@Aquarius.3 жыл бұрын
At the start....'TRYING' being the key word... and at the end..... don't back track MRS there would be no point in stating that you would have 'a functioning Justice System'... UNLESS 'a functioning Justice System' was LACKING.... and as for the comments in regard to the FAMILY COURTS.... YOUR WORDS 'putting children nearer the top in decision making' SAYS IT ALL. Regarding 'Everyone is subject to the law'..... would that be BLACKS LAW or COMMON LAW??????
@anti-stupid-not--vax9629 Жыл бұрын
The nature birth right RULE OF LAW
@DavinLewisPRO3 жыл бұрын
*IM SORRY I ALWAYS FEEL WEIRD LISTENING TO FOREIGN PEOPLE TALK ABOUT **#NATIVE** PEOPLE OF THE GENERATIONAL SORTS 🤧*
@PALWE3 жыл бұрын
Your comment stays. Mine was deleted
@alanhat52523 жыл бұрын
sorry if you are not a native English speaker but would you please try again, this time using well-constructed English-language sentence structure.
@margarethilliard32123 жыл бұрын
@@alanhat5252 why?
@TI_Ted3 жыл бұрын
disgusting man, whoever would entertain such a person has “rather” questionable judgement.
@JupiterThunder11 ай бұрын
She certainly made her decisions based on her political views to stop Brexit by any means possible.
@garryharriman73493 жыл бұрын
Why is this individual still being permited to apear on National TV as a broadcaster?
@JC1533-g7n3 жыл бұрын
Prerogative powers are "not constituted by any document." There is not a single source of law limiting whether the length of a prorogation can only be so many seconds, hours, days, or months. Its variable length is a subjective political decision. Thus there was, and remains, ZERO laws or precedents that say the prorogation of parliament is justiciable. Nor is there any doubt that Boris Johnson's advise to Her Majesty, regarding the prorogation, was anything other than established political practice. In fact, the limited sources that mention the extant prerogative powers describe them as being "excluded categories" whose exercise is "non-justiciable." John Major affirmed this principle when he prorogued Parliament in 1997, undoubtedly to avoid scrutiny over the Cash-for-Questions Affair. Contrarily, this court decided their Parliament would have been unduly deprived of time to assert its right to scrutinise the government of the day, undermining the principle of Parliamentary sovereignty. This didn't take into account the fact that the House of Commons had previously given itself control of the Parliamentary timetable and could pass legislation as quickly as it wished, or of the fact that that a general election was consistently accessible in order to put the government before the people to be judged accordingly. Parliament soon went on to do both, without issue or assistance. In asserting its right and obligations to intervene where there was no explicit violation, the court could justify itself with little more than vague musings that it seemed like there SHOULD be limits to this prerogative power, so there WAS, 'because of'-- more vaguely-- 'the Stuart kings', and Edward III gets a mention too. This is not the application of established precedent, this is the creation of a new precedent, and there is no precedent for it. The courts in the United Kingdom do not make laws, they apply them. Nor is this merely an interpretation, as it is so removed from the above mentioned letter and established practice. Then, having created this new 'law', they went on to blatantly apply it retroactively-- positively ex post facto! Those who accused the government of quashing democracy and changing the rules, as well as breaking them, surely did a lot of it themselves, and we must ask, why? Why did the court go to the trouble and break with all tradition for something which made no difference, before or after, to Parliamentary sovereignty? The answer is, of course, in the opening line-- Brexit. Far from taking no "issue [with] when and on what terms the United Kingdom [was] set to leave the European Union", this decision revels in it. Here was a court bent on forcing the government to accept a disadvantageous foreign treaty, by changing the rules in order to help the Opposition that was avoiding an election it would obviously lose, and did. Before, however, they had to make sure the UK (and its sovereign Parliament) were bound to stay as close to the EU as possible. With the court's help, the opposing parties deprived the Prime Minister of his established rights and a fairly elected majority until he was forced to submit. Why else would this court so glibly, in its only moment of candor, describe its sloppy mangling of powers as a "one off"? This person is no objective sage. She is a political partisan.
@elijhon843 жыл бұрын
Hallo guys....i like video friend
@davidtanslow35843 жыл бұрын
So why is nothing done to stop politicians and governments breaking the laws?
@righthonourablezeus38283 жыл бұрын
She seems thoroughly uninspiring and rather shamefully states statistics on women in law followed by 'i dont know the numbers on working class and ethnic minorities...'
@asumazilla3 жыл бұрын
there is less pressure to collect these numbers its less easy to catergorise people.
@rjkmusicmedia3 жыл бұрын
This is, and always has been, so revealing and obvious- making her look even more politically unhinged and delusional. Only now there is no speculation. Semantics isn't her strong point; which is unbelievable for a 'judge'.
@rjkmusicmedia3 жыл бұрын
To sum up; some of her views are literally dangerous for a democracy.