(Redirected from Charles Leslie Falconer, Baron Falconer of Thoroton):''Lord Falconer may also refer to
Lord Falconer of Halkerton.''
'Charles Leslie Falconer, Baron Falconer of Thoroton',
PC,
QC (born
19 November 1951) is a
British barrister and
Labour Party politician. In June 2003 he became the
Lord Chancellor and the first
Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs (a position created originally to replace the position of Lord Chancellor). In May 2007 the Department for Constitutional Affairs (DCA) became the new
Ministry of Justice with an enhanced portfolio, that encompasses all the responsibilities of the former DCA plus some functions transferred from the Home Office. Upon that reorganization taking effect on May 9th, 2007, Lord Falconer became the first
Secretary of State for Justice, while keeping the title and role of Lord Chancellor. Following Gordon Brown's accession to the position of Prime Minister, Falconer was ejected from his position as head of the Ministry of Justice.
Educated at the
Edinburgh Academy,
Trinity College, Glenalmond, and
Queens' College, Cambridge, Falconer became a flatmate of
Tony Blair when they were both young
barristers in
London in the late 1970s in
Wandsworth. They had first met as pupils at rival schools in the 1960s. At school, he dated Amanda Mackenzie Stuart, an ex-girlfriend of Blair's, immediately when she became single. While Blair went into politics, Falconer concentrated on his legal career. They met up again in 1976 when working as barristers in the same building. He practised from
Fountain Court Chambers in
London, and becoming a
Queen's Counsel in 1991. He married privately-educated
Marianna Hildyard, a barrister as well in 1985
[1]. Her father, D.H.T. Hildyard, was the
British Ambassador to Chile in
Santiago. She became a QC in 2002. They have four children: Hamish, William, Rosie and Johnnie. Hamish is at
St John's College at
Cambridge. He was chair of Cambridge University Amnesty International 2006 - 2007, and is the director of Sudan Divestment. They have an £2.5m house and a £250,000 basement flat in
Islington. They also have a £550,000 country retreat in
Thoroton (between
Bingham and
Bottesford in
Nottinghamshire). His father used to live in the village, and they rent out his old home
[2].
Having had a privileged education and upbringing himself, he placed his daughter and three sons at independent
Westminster School [3]. Tony Blair later used teachers from this school to privately tutor his children. This proved to be an electoral problem when he tried to be selected for the seat of
Dudley East before the 1997 election, which had been held by
John Gilbert. He intended to keep his children at Westminster if selected, which caused the local selection panel to drop him from the admittance procedure. He could afford the fees easily; he earned around £500,000 annually.
In May 1997 Blair became
Prime Minister and Falconer was made a
life peer as 'Baron Falconer of Thoroton', of Thoroton in the County of Nottinghamshire (he was the first peer created on Blair's recommendation), and joined the government as
Solicitor General. In 1998 he became Minister of State at the
Cabinet Office, taking over responsibility for the
Millennium Dome after the resignation of
Peter Mandelson. He was heavily criticised for the failure of the Dome to attract an audience, but resisted calls for his resignation.
He joined the
Department for Transport, Local Government and the Regions as Minister for Housing, Planning and Regeneration after the
2001 election and moved on to the
Home Office in 2002. At the Home Office he was responsible for criminal justice, sentencing and law reform, and annoyed some of his fellow lawyers by suggesting that their fees were too high.
In 2003 he joined the
Cabinet as the Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs, becoming also Lord Chancellor 'for the interim period' before the office was abolished. The government argued that the position of a cabinet minister as a Judge and Head of the Judiciary was no longer appropriate and would not be upheld by the
European Convention on Human Rights. The announcement was generally seen as a rushed one as the abolition of the office of Lord Chancellor would require primary legislation. Removing the Lord Chancellor's judicial role was a policy known to be disliked by
Lord Irvine of Lairg, the previous Lord Chancellor.
The post of Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs took over the remaining responsibilities of the
Lord Chancellor, and also became the sponsoring Department for the
Secretary of State for Wales and the
Secretary of State for Scotland. Falconer announced his intention not to use the Lord Chancellor's power to sit as a judge and stopped wearing the traditional robe and
wig of office. Falconer hoped to be the last to hold the title, ending 1,400 years of tradition. However, Lord Falconer has since said to the
House of Lords Constitution Committee that he now "regrets" campaigning for the historic role of
Lord Chancellor to be abolished. He even joked about reinstating the traditional practice - abolished by his predecessor
Lord Irvine - of making the
Lord Chancellor, the
Lord Great Chamberlain and the
Earl Marshal walk backwards ahead of the Queen to show respect. "I was keen to walk backwards, but was told I could not because all the other people now walked forwards and I would look like a crazed... I would be a very, very odd Lord Chancellor on that basis," Lord Falconer told the committee.
In a recent radio address on the BBC, he rejected calls for an English parliament to represent the people of England despite the fact that Scotland has its own parliament (see
West Lothian Question.)
Lord Falconer was fired from his ministerial posts during
Gordon Brown's inaugural cabinet reshuffle, and replaced with
Jack Straw.
Freedom of Information Act
In his role as
Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs, Lord Falconer has sought to make it easier for government bodies to refuse to release documents under the
Freedom of Information Act (
2000), on the grounds that they are too expensive and too time-consuming for civil servants to find. Currently, the legislation allows requests for information to be refused if the cost they will incure exceeds £600 for
Whitehall and £450 for other public bodies. Lord Falconer's proposed changes would make no difference to this level, but would expand the number of activities that would be included in the totals, making it easier for government parties to refuse requests for information. At the end of
March 2007, Falconer's department announced that it would not introduce the proposals to parliament, but would instead have a second three-month consultation with the public (the previous consultation, also of three months, ended three weeks previous to this). Media elements reported this change as a 'backtracking', and Maurice Frankel, director of the Campaign for Freedom of Information, was quoted as saying 'This raises the strong possibility that the government will decide to leave the current arrangements untouched.'
[4]
External links
★
They Work For You
★
Sudan Divestment
See also
★
List of Lord Chancellors and Lord Keepers
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List of Labour politicians
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List of British politicians
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House of Lords