2014 Press Release QCA- 100 new QC’s appointed

PRESS RELEASE
100 NEW QUEEN’S COUNSEL APPOINTED IN 2013-14 COMPETITION

100 new appointments as Queen’s Counsel (also known as silk) are announced today. These appointments are made by Her Majesty The Queen on the advice of the Lord Chancellor, Chris Grayling MP, following consideration by the independent Queen’s Counsel Selection Panel.

Helen Pitcher, Chairman of the Selection Panel, said today:
’I am delighted at the announcement of the new silks. I congratulate each one of them. The selection process is a rigorous and demanding one. We collect confidential assessments from judges, fellow advocates and professional clients, who give freely of their time to provide vital evidence about an applicant’s demonstration of the competencies. The best applicants are then interviewed by two members of the Panel, following which the whole
Panel discuss all the evidence on each applicant.

Each year, the Panel has the difficult task of identifying the truly excellent advocates. I am confident that those appointed today truly deserve to be Queen’s Counsel. Unsuccessful applicants will of course be very disappointed. But I must stress that almost all of those who are unsuccessful are nevertheless highly respected and effective advocates.

Finally, I should like to thank Sir Anthony May, Sir Colin Budd and Razi Shah, who are standing down from the Selection Panel at the end of this competition, for their contribution to our work.’

The Selection Panel is publishing a full report on the 2013-14 competition, with statistical information relating to successful and unsuccessful applicants. It will be available on the QC Appointments website sho were appointed,
• 11 applicants aged over 50 of the 43 who applied, compared with five over 50 year olds appointed last year. The youngest successful applicant on this occasion is 36 years old and the oldest is 68.
• Five solicitor advocates of the seven who applied. In 2012-13 one solicitor advocate was appointed.
• Two employed advocates of the six who applied. In 2012-13, no employed applicants were appointed.
• Five of the eight applicants who declared a disability. In 2012-13, Last year, no applicant who declared a disability was appointed.

Notes to Editors
1. Queen’s Counsel are appointed by The Queen, on the advice of the Lord Chancellor. He is in turn advised by an independent Selection Panel which receives and considers each application and makes recommendations as to appointment.
2. The members of the independent Queen’s Counsel Selection Panel for the 2013-14 competition were:
Helen Pitcher (Chairman)
Sir Alex Allan
Sir Colin Budd KCMG
Sir Alistair Graham
Linda Lee
Martin Mann QC
Sir Anthony May
Frances Oldham QC
Quinton Quayle
Razi Shah
The Selection Panel is supported by its own Secretariat.

3. The QC appointment scheme was developed by the Bar Council and the Law Society, with the support of the (then) Department for Constitutional Affairs, and approved by the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State (Lord Falconer) in November 2004. Applications were first invited in 2005 and the first round of appointments under the new arrangements was announced in 2006. Refinements to the scheme, building on experience of the first year, were agreed in 2006. The selection process is financed entirely through applicants’ fees. A copy of the agreed Process and further information is available from the Queen’s Counsel Appointments website: www.qcapplications.org.uk

4. Applications for the 2013-14 competition closed on 17 April 2013 and the Selection Panel submitted recommendations to the Lord Chancellor on 6 December 2013.

Each applicant has been considered against five competencies:
• Understanding and using the law
• Written and oral advocacy
• Working with others
• Diversity
• Integrity

5. 162 of the 225 applicants were interviewed by the Selection Panel. All unsuccessful applicants receive written personal feedback on their application. The Panel expects to invite applications for the next round of appointments in March 2014.

6. The new Queen’s Counsel announced today will formally become silks when they make their declaration before the Lord Chancellor at the ceremony on 14 April 2014.

7. Copies of the Selection Panel’s report will be available on the QCA website from 19 February 2014. Further information can also be obtained from Russell Wallman, Head of QC Appointments Secretariat, on 0207 831 0020.

2014-15 Competition Opening

FOR IMMEDIATE PUBLICATION – Tuesday 4 March 2014
APPOINTMENT AS QUEEN’S COUNSEL: 2014-15 COMPETITION ANNOUNCED

The Queen’s Counsel Selection Panel has announced today that it is inviting applications for appointment as Queen’s Counsel from barristers and solicitors with rights of audience in the higher courts from Tuesday 4 March 2014.

The application form and guidance for applicants will be available on the Panel’s website at  ww.qcapplications.org.uk from Tuesday 4 March 2014. The deadline for receipt of applications is 5pm on Tuesday 15 April 2014. On current expectations the outcome of the competition will be announced in the early part of 2015.

All applicants are assessed against a common competency framework and a common standard of excellence. There are no quotas, and the Panel treats all applications in the same way. The Panel will be looking for applicants who demonstrate five competencies to a standard of excellence. The competencies are:

A – Understanding and using the Law
B – Written and oral Advocacy
C – Working with others
D – Diversity
E – Integrity

The award is for excellence in advocacy in the higher courts and equivalent tribunals, and arbitrations. The advocacy may be in written or oral form and relates to developing and advancing a client’s or employer’s case to secure the best outcome for the client in a dispute. That outcome may, for example, be secured through arbitration, court decision or a settlement agreement. The Panel recognises that not all applicants have the same opportunity to undertake significant oral advocacy in court, and takes into account the type of practice of the applicant in coming to its decision. However, there needs to be some evidence of excellence demonstrated in oral advocacy.

Applicants are required to provide a summary description of their practice and recent cases, a self-assessment as to how they meet the competencies and the names of assessors who have recently encountered them at work – judges or arbitrators, fellow practitioners and professional clients or client proxies. The Panel will consider the evidence from the application form and the assessments received and decide, on the basis of the available evidence, which applicants justify an interview.

The Panel will have ten members, five of whom, including the chairman, are lay (i.e. non-lawyer) members. The Panel is independent of the legal professions and Government.

The Panel’s recommendations will be passed to the Lord Chancellor, who will put recommendations to The Queen. The Lord Chancellor has no power to veto names or to add names of his own.

The Scheme is funded entirely by fees from applicants.

Notes to Editors:
1. Further information from Russell Wallman at QC Appointments Secretariat 020 7831 0020.
2. Helen Pitcher (Chairman), Sir Alistair Graham, Linda Lee, Sir Alex Allan, Martin Mann QC and Quinton Quayle will continue to be members of the Selection Panel during the 2014-15 competition. Sir Maurice Kay replaces Sir Anthony May as the judicial member of the Panel and a new solicitor member, a new barrister member, and a new lay member will be announced shortly.
3. The document setting out the principles and mechanics of the process was agreed in 2004 and modified in 2006 by the Bar Council, Law Society and the (then) Department for Constitutional Affairs. A copy of this and other information is available on the QCA website at www.qcapplications.org.uk
4. The scheme is entirely self-financing. To cover the costs of the process applicants have to pay an application fee of £1,800 (+ VAT). There will be a further appointment fee of £3,000 (+ VAT) paid by successful applicants.