Sandra grant bennett tony blair
•
People/Characters Tony Blair
•
Roll of Practising Barristers
Roll of Practising Barristers
If you are a qualified barrister (within the meaning of the Legal Services Regulation Act 2015, as amended) and you intend to provide legal services in the State, you must apply to the LSRA to have your name entered on the Roll of Practising Barristers.
It is an offence to provide legal services as a barrister without being named on the Roll.
Roll obligations introduced in 2023
Since 31 July 2023, under the Courts and Civil Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2023, barristers on the Roll are required to:
- Update the LSRA with a change to your details, including your name, your postal/email address, whether you are in the full-time service of the State and whether or not you are a member of the Law Library. A failure to update the LSRA could constitute misconduct under the 2015 Act;
- Apply to the LSRA to have your name removed from the Roll where you no longer wish to provide legal services.
You can view and sear
•
Tony Blair served as prime minister of the United Kingdom (1997–2007). He was the youngest prime minister since 1812 and the longest-serving Labour prime minister, and his 10-year tenure as prime minister was the second longest continuous period (after Margaret Thatcher’s) in more than 150 years. He is responsible for moving the Labour Party from the left towards the centre ground of British politics, resulting in an unprecedented three consecutive terms in power for the party.
Blair’s decade in office was marked by uninterrupted economic growth and a more independent Bank of England. Blair also preserved much of Thatcher’s market radicalism while managing to place greater emphasis on social justice. Numerous minority groups found his government more sympathetic to their concerns—notably gays, who by 2004 were allowed to enter into civil partnerships recognized by the law. Many believed, however, that Blair’s role in restoring peace to Northern Ireland would come to be seen as his