Sir John Laws and Dominic Cummings are/were in a family

Uncle Sir John Laws
Nephew Dominic Cummings
Notes Retired judge and Cummings' uncle Sir John Laws dies after contracting Covid-19 This article is more than 6 months old Relative of No 10 adviser hailed as ‘one of the greatest lawyers of his generation’ Coronavirus – latest updates See all our coronavirus coverage Robert Booth Sun 5 Apr 2020 13.57 EDTFirst published on Sun 5 Apr 2020 13.48 EDT Shares 785 Rt Hon Sir John G M Laws Sir John Laws was one of the UK’s leading legal authorities. Photograph: Photoshot Sir John Laws, a retired senior judge and an uncle of the Downing Street adviser Dominic Cummings, has died after contracting coronavirus, it has been reported. Laws, 74, had been in hospital for three weeks with sepsis and other health problems. He was seriously ill and at first tested negative for coronavirus but subsequently contracted the virus and died on an isolated ward at Chelsea and Westminster hospital in London. Laws was one of the UK’s leading authorities in public law and democracy, asserting the primacy of the constitution over parliament in the balance of power in Britain. He rose to become an appeal court judge after representing the government as first Treasury counsel followed by a period as a high court judge. After retirement from the bar he was elected a visiting professor of legal science at Cambridge University. “John was the most gregarious of men, with a quick and lively wit, who enjoyed life in all its richness,” said Mark Hill QC, the chair of the Ecclesiastical Law Society. “A loyal and generous friend, he will be remembered for his love of Greece and of cats. Our thoughts are with his daughter, Margaret Grace, her husband and their two children, particularly at this difficult time of social isolation. May he rest in peace and rise in glory.” Nigel Pleming QC, a good friend of Laws, said Laws’ daughter was able to see her father before he died, wearing full personal protective equipment. “He was one of the greatest lawyers of his generation,” Pleming said of Laws. Dinah Rose QC, one of the country’s leading barristers, said Laws was “one of the greatest advocates I’ve ever seen, and a man of enormous charm and erudition”. Edward Henry QC remarked on the irony of Laws’ embodying “the judiciary’s expansionist philosophy” as it set him on “a collision course with government”. The government has recently indicated it wants to reduce powers of judicial review, which it believes have interfered with its decisions including over Brexit. Share your story Share your stories If you have been affected or have any information, we'd like to hear from you. You can get in touch by filling in the form below, anonymously if you wish or contact us via WhatsApp by clicking here or adding the contact +44(0)7867825056. Only the Guardian can see your contributions and one of our journalists may contact you to discuss further. Tell us Laws, a brother of Cummings’ mother, grew up in Easington, County Durham, and studied at Durham School and Exeter College, Oxford.
Updated about 4 years ago

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