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Yes, obviously I don't actually know what he did or didn't write. I just generally assume that ministers present the work of civil servants. That may well be wrong in this case. Geoffrey Robertson writes:
The foghorn voice of our attorney oft resounded at the Old Bailey, but attorneys general are rarely the authors of their opinions on intricate legal matters. Geoffrey Cox’s opinion will have been cobbled together from the advice, not only of lawyers in his department, but from that of Treasury counsel and probably outside QCs retained at public expense.
branwen:
I think Oliver's point was that he might not have actually written the specific clause, not that he wouldn't have been knowledgeable about it
I didn't have any point about the specific clause in mind, just as above that I assumed it was all, or mostly, someone else's work.
Whether or not he wrote it, May's probably just using him as another fall guy. *cue theme of 'The Fall Guy'*
I wouldn't bet on that. Given his career at the Bar before and during his political career, he'd be reasonably well qualified to do so.