Become a Member
Politics

Attorney General compares modern criticism of international law to ‘1930s Germany’

Shadow home secretary Chris Philp called for Lord Hermer to be sacked over the remarks

May 30, 2025 11:20
GettyImages-2160880969.jpg
LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 6: Attorney General Richard Hermer leaves Number 10 following the first cabinet meeting since Labour formed a government under Sir Keir Starmer at Downing Street on July 6, 2024 in London, England. (Photo by Alex McBride/Getty Images)
2 min read

Opposition figures have called for the Attorney General to be sacked after he appeared to compare current criticism of international law to the legal climate in 1930s Germany.

In a keynote speech to the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), Lord Hermer, who is Jewish, reiterated the government’s commitment to international law.

Hermer said that the government’s foreign and security policy – previously described by David Lammy, the foreign secretary as “progressive realism” – was one that “combines both a pragmatic approach to the UK’s national interests with a principled commitment to a rules-based international order”.

But he went on to say that the government’s approach was “a rejection of the siren song, that can sadly, now be heard in the Palace of Westminster, and in some spectrums of the media, that Britain abandons the constraints of international law in favour of raw power”.