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'A privilege not a fallback' — Dozens of new solicitors admitted to Scottish legal profession

27th August 2025 Written by: Joshua King

Dual admission ceremonies welcoming 130 new solicitors to the Scottish legal profession should fill the community with 'optimism', the President of the Law Society of Scotland has said.

The events represented a first for both President Patricia Thom, who was overseeing her first admissions in the role, and new chief executive Ben Kemp who was in attendance.

Speaking after the ceremonies had concluded, Patricia Thom said: “Congratulations to our new solicitors on what is such an important day. It’s an honour to preside over these ceremonies, and speaking with new solicitors alongside their proud parents and other supporters even more so.

“The talent on display fills me with optimism for the future, as Scotland’s legal sector continues to grow strongly. That growth reflects the enormous contribution that solicitors make both to our economy and to people and communities more widely.”

Ben Kemp said: “Like Patricia, I am proud to be a Scottish solicitor, and it is a special privilege to celebrate and welcome our newest Law Society members to the profession.

“As a longstanding Law Society member myself, I want our new solicitors to know that their professional body will be there for them at every stage of their careers, whether that be in supporting their adoption of technology, their professional development or their wellbeing.”

Guest speaker for the ceremonies was dual-qualified solicitor Shareen Gault, who is General Counsel and Head of Legal and Risk with global learning and development company Insights Group.

She told those in attendance that she initially considered becoming a solicitor as a fallback option: “But something happened during my traineeship and that is that I realised, to advise people was something of a privilege, to represent people too was a privilege.”

SPONSORED: Why law firms should invest in a cyber incident response simulation

6th July 2026
Cyber resilience requires firms to have a proven and workable incident response plan that gives them the best chance to survive and recover from a serious cyber breach, writes Lindsay Hill, solicitor and CEO of Mitigo Cyber Risk Management.

Weekly roundup of Scots law in the headlines including calls to scrap Lord Advocate's dual role — Monday July 6

6th July 2026
You weekly roundup of Scots law in the headlines including an announcement by the Law Society of Scotland calling on the government to consult on changing the role of the Lord Advocate.

The end of the affair: Are partnerships no longer lawyers’ chosen corporate relationships?

3rd July 2026
Will the traditional partnership structure still appeal to lawyers in years to come? Peter Ranscombe reports.
About the author
Joshua King
Editor of the Journal of the Law Society of Scotland. Leading The Journal's coverage of the legal sector and profession with a clear eye to the future. Qualified in Scots law.
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