longweekend58 wrote on Apr 6
th, 2012 at 11:07am:
Quote:The Attorney General as the chief Law Maker of the state should not make any comment on any cases being investigated by the police or any cases before the court, no if or no buts.
actually he is the cheif law ENFORCER - not law MAKER. BIG difference.
you are wrong longy the Attorney general is the chief law maker
Do you know what happens to legislation before it goes to Parliamant. Who adviced Cabinet on Legislation if it is within the Constitution. who does the Governor General get advice from if she/he has any doubt on any legislation.
read this and you might learn something
Quote:The Office of Attorney-General
The Attorney-General at the Commonwealth and State level occupies in effect two offices: a common law office of Attorney-General and a ministerial office. The incumbent is therefore subject to at least three potentially conflicting responsibilities: as Attorney-General, as a Minister of the Crown and as a
Member of Parliament. The duties and responsibilities of the two latter positions are well known. Less clearly understood are the duties and responsibilities of the
common law office of Attorney-General.
The duties and responsibilities of the Attorney-General derive from both the executive prerogative power at common law and from statute. The most significant prerogative powers include the power to initiate and terminate criminal prosecutions, advise on the grant of a pardon, grant immunities from prosecution, issue a fiat in relator actions, appear as amicus curiae or contradictor, institute proceedings for contempt of court, apply for judicial review, intervene in any
proceedings involving the interpretation of the Commonwealth Constitution, represent the Crown in any legal proceedings, and provide legal advice to the
Parliament, Cabinet and the Executive Council. Hence, the Attorney is often described as the ‘Chief Law Officer of the Crown’. Other law officers assist the Attorney in the performance of these duties: principally, the Solicitor-General, the Director of Prosecutions and the Crown Solicitor. Additionally, the Attorney-
General is the nominal head of the Bar having precedence over all Queen's Counsel and Senior Counsel, advises on judicial appointments and has defended the judiciary from political attacks.
http://epublications.bond.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1120&context=blr&se...