Barleyfields
Calling yourself a solicitor when you’re not is a criminal offence. I doubt anyone would have been confused if he had been truthful and called himself a trainee solicitor. The title is straightforward enough. But of course it doesn’t sound as good does it? It wasn’t a form of shorthand, it was a blatant attempt to deceive.
Well, if you know more than the rest of us about their respective motivation, fair enough. All I know is that that sort of thing is not uncommon, and that saying you are (as opposed to impersonating or practicing as) a solicitor when you have a law degree is no more or less an offence than pretending to be s a Mental Nurse when you have no psychiatric training at all.
Context is the important thing. Passing yourself off as medically or legally trained for personal gain is one thing, but using a catch-all term to describe the area in which you worked (particularly when it has nothing to do with your role as an MP) is another. My SIL is a real-time analyst, but as nobody usually knows what that means, he just says he works in IT or systems management. No deceit intended, and if it mattered he would elaborate, but usually it's just shorthand and saves tedious explanations.


