Some of the most
powerful unions in the country are no longer those representing the interests
of working people in the traditional sense that those millions are not pouring
out of factories on a whistle at 5.00p.m. sweat on their brows cigarettes in
mouth. They are organisations like the
British Medical Association, The Prison Officers` Association or the Police
Federation. They are tightly controlled
and their members have benefitted from their ability to negotiate from
strength. The Magistrates` Association
cannot be included in such a group because it represents volunteers and so operates
on a shoestring budget each of its 20,000 or so members paying subs of less
than £40. In other respects it has no affinity
with other professional unions or associations because it has no brief to represent
its members against employers because we
are not employees although the attitude of Her Majesty`s Courts and Tribunal
Service is that we are just that; employees but merely unpaid. So generally
speaking with few exceptions magistrates as a group are not seen and not heard………….except in Dudley.
With the
threatened closure of their court the bench has threatened en masse
resignations if such action goes ahead. According to my information the Justice
Ministry factored in a general J.P. resignation rate of up to 10% as a result
of the implementation of court closures.
How many have actually resigned for that reason is unknown and it would
be an interesting question for the M.A. to contemplate. Whilst having great sympathy for my
colleagues the paradox is that they would be rubbing their hands in the
corridors of Petty France LONDON SW1 at the opportunity to parachute in yet another
District Judge(MC) to yet another local justice area.
Human Rights
lawyers and others can huff and puff all day that our Supreme Court should have
another tier outside these shores as a final Court of Appeal. They should stay closer to home and consider
the probability that the time is not long away when a single professional judge
will be presiding over all matters, including of course trials, in the magistrates` courts system and not just
a minority of cases as is now the position.
What logic then to the continual
argument that whatever developments in jurisprudence the totem of trial by jury
must be retained……..except when the matter is summary only…………?