‘I’m not a wet lettuce’: Trainee solicitor behind SQE petition hits back at Braverman’s ‘snowflake’ jibe

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By Legal Cheek on

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Former Home Sec slammed students calling for exam overhaul


The trainee solicitor behind a petition calling for an overhaul of the “disproportionately challenging” Solicitors Qualifying Examination (SQE) has hit back at lawyer-turned-politician Suella Braverman KC, after she claimed in a national newspaper that those signing it had a “snowflake sensibility”.

For Legal Cheek readers who haven’t been following the story, we first reported late last week that someone purporting to be a trainee at an international law firm had launched a petition calling for reform of the SQE.

In it, they argue the new exams are “not fit for purpose” and claim they discriminate against candidates from diverse backgrounds and those with different learning styles. The trainee also described how the SQE had taken a serious toll on their mental, financial, and physical wellbeing. The petition has since attracted nearly 900 signatures.

One person we can safely assume hasn’t signed the petition is former Home Secretary Suella Braverman, who — much to our surprise — took to the pages of The Telegraph to voice her displeasure.

“A cohort of aspiring solicitors has taken to petitioning for the SQE to be made easier,” she writes. “Their complaint? The exams are ‘too hard, disproportionately challenging’, and, of course, ‘biased towards certain backgrounds and learning styles’. In other words: ‘We didn’t do well, and it must be someone else’s fault.’”

The former Cambridge-educated barrister goes on to argue that the “snowflake sensibility — once confined to undergraduate common rooms and the wilder fringes of social media — has now infected even the corridors of legal ambition”.

Well, the rookie solicitor who launched the petition has now responded to Braverman’s comments in a brief update posted on the Change.org website.

The SQE Hub: Your ultimate resource for all things SQE

“Nowhere in the petition did I claim that the exam was ‘too hard’,” they say. “I’m not a wet lettuce, for Christ’s sake.” Doubling down on their argument that the SQE is “disproportionately challenging”, they urged the Conservative MP to “don your reading spectacles and place your thinking cap firmly on and re-read [the petition].”

They go on to list what they describe as the key issues currently affecting the SQE and the students expected to pass it — many of which are already highlighted in the original petition.

These include the “extortionate” cost of sitting the exams, the lack of past papers, reports of candidates allegedly being “denied access [to] water during the exam,” and concerns that the questions do not reflect real-life legal practice.

“I am somewhat disappointed that a KC could not identify the more nuanced points made within the petition,” they write. “However, I guess that comes with the territory of using the penniless youth trying hard to succeed in your political point scoring,” before the trainee signs off, “Yours sincerely, A snowflake x.”

In response to the petition, a spokesperson for the SRA previously said: “We understand that candidates can find the SQE challenging, both to prepare for and sit. It is a demanding, high stakes assessment that gives successful candidates access to a licence to practise.”

They continued:

“The questions are written by a pool of solicitors reflecting what is expected of a newly qualified solicitor and the pass mark is determined using well-established methods. The SQE’s independent reviewer has confirmed it’s a robust and fair assessment. Many candidates have now passed the SQE. Pass rates and statistical information about candidates are published after each sitting. Differential outcomes by ethnicity are widely seen in legal professional exams, in other sectors and at different stages of education. Informed by research commissioned from the University of Exeter, we are taking action to address the causes of such differential outcomes that are within our influence.”

34 Comments

Anon

Some good points marred by a childish and unprofessional tone imo. To the person who wrote the petition: I suggest rephrasing your (substantively legitimate) points in a more professional manner if you seriously want institutional buy-in here.

Job

The substantively legitimate points were raised in the original petition. Those were then criticised in a phenomenally childish and misrepresentative way on a national platform.

Wet Lettuce

Wet lettuce is an underused phrase in my opinion.

One way to settle this...

Can we not ask Ms Braverman to sit the exam.
You would expect a KC to do fairly well without much revision!
Come on Legal Cheek – you can make this happen!

Anon

As someone who scored top quintile on all SQE exams, even I couldn’t turn up to the exam with little notice again and do as well. The exam results corroborate with the effort you put in. It was evident in my learning group at my training provider that more than half of cohort did not even manage to keep up with the pace of the course. Call it genuine reasons, excuses of whatever. SQE is not something you can half-heartedly attempt and hope to pass. It tests your months before the day as much as the day itself. Instead of petitioning, I wish you looked around for SQE success stories and learned a little about them

The JUDGE

In my humble opinion, the SQE is the fairest example of in the world because everyone is judged by the same standard. If you fail this exam, you have to ask yourself the “why”, especially given that 60%+ of the exam takers do pass the exams.

Failing means you are not fit for the industry, nuff said.

Graduate solicitor apprentice

1. Have you sat the SQE?
2. How does closed book exams prepare candidates for real life when solicitors have access to materials to conduct research?
3. Is the extortionate cost of the exam justified compared to similar exams in other jurisdictions?
4. Why are there no past papers available?
5. Why is information on the SQE limited which is only made worse by an NDA of an indefinite duration?

The JUDGE

Did you fail your exam son? As far as I’m aware, most exams are closed books. There has to be an objective way to assess whether one is fit for the profession – the SQE is the answer.

No, the SQE doesn’t prepare you for your career, but it differentiates candidates who are smart (or assiduous) and those who are plainly incompetent. Furthermore, you do not need past papers to pass an exam.

If you were a client, would you engage anyone who has failed her SQE?

Anon

Part of the problem is that the new generation do not think ‘clients’. They think flashy salaries and virtuous circle firms to attach themselves to. How much law is truly practised as a trainee / NQ in a large firm is highly questionable. SQE is seen as a spanner in the works both by the aspirants and their paymasters.

The JURY

Have you taken the SQE? I hope your qualification matches your tone.

The JUDGE

I did, and passed the exams with flying colours. MC trained and now at an elite US firm.

Anon

This argument is making us all look stupid.. having turned from poor to cringe!

The SQE seems to be the last line of defence from this lot calling themselves as us. I hope the exam remains hard.

Mr Perseverance

Generation DryNites is at it again!

Non sequitur

DryNites are to stop wet beds, not wet lettuces…

Graduate Solicitor Apprentice

People seem to be missing the point: nobody is saying the exam shouldn’t be intellectually demanding, the issue lies with the transparency (or lack of) from the SRA/Kaplan and the cost.

There are no past papers available, the information provided by Kaplan/SRA is limited, candidates are “gagged” by an NDA which is indefinite in duration, and wouldn’t say the sample questions provided by the SRA are representative.

The courses and the exams cost at least £10,000 and many people have to self-fund. Yes you can in theory pass the SQE without paying for the courses, but the pass rates are significantly lower.

The exam itself does not represent real life. Solicitors have access to materials and are not expected to answer one question on criminal law then immediately answer another on wills. Yes solicitors should have a basic understanding of the law, but the SQE1 essentially is a memory test with limited application of the law.

The SQE isn’t doing what it’s supposed to do, and the SRA are living in denial about this.

Ariel

Look who’s talking- Suella Braverman – yesterday’s
(wo) man !

Ahmed

I’m really tired of all and sundry using the prefix ‘elite’ every time a US firm is mentioned. Just because a firm is US does not automatically mean it is elite. Even if I am at one of the ‘elite US’ firms.

US practitioner

No. Only cravath scale US laws are elite US. BCLP, Baker & McKenzie and W&C are not.

reality check

None of them are ‘elite’ lol. All they do is churn documents at 3 in the morning for investment bankers who laugh at them behind them backs.

Anonymous

If you look at how many signatures the petition has attracted, it’s clear that there’s something deeply wrong with the SQE.

It relies enormously on the amount you can memorise (which doesn’t aptly reflect legal practice) and no provider fully knows how to prepare students since there are no past papers to review against.

The toll that this exam has taken on my mental health (as well as many of my cohort) is very concerning. Personally, I feel the exam would be much better if you could take FLK1 and 2 separately as only having one week between the exams is extremely difficult. Also, they must reduce the fees for taking the exams – if the SRA are insisting to model after the bar, it doesn’t make sense to charge 10x as much as the NY bar (not accounting for the cost of a prep course).

The reasonable man

You can’t make big bucks without pulling in the hard work. The barrier to entry in the UK is already incredibly low compared to many other European jurisdictions.

Anon

7000 people gave SQE1 alone in Jan 2025 sitting alone. I believe there are 4 sittings in a year.

How many people did you say signed the petition?

1PQE

Never understood whats with people from that generation and the “I suffered so you should suffer too”. Get the same $hit at work – I worked every hour under the sun so you should too.

BHC

What’s the difference between “memorising” the law, and “knowing” the law..?

Aren’t they the same?

I would have though a solicitor entrance exam should test this very thing.

A Barrister

You don’t need to memorise the law. You need to know how to understand it, apply it and know where to find the answer. Memory is fallible, and it invites mistakes to rely upon it.

Conversely, the BPTC had several open book exams. Opinion Writing and Drafting were open book for example, not only that, but we could write anything in the books we wanted, I literally had whole stock opinions ready to go, drafted in the blank pages at the front and back of my textbook, all this was approved and recommended to us.
This is reflective of real practice. I don’t write every opinion from scratch, I will regularly reuse and repeat sections I’ve used in other opinions and orders.

David

Not at all, there’s only so much that the SQE and the LPC can teach you.

I’m on the LPC, already undergoing a training contract. One thing my principal told me has shaped my entire attitude towards learning the law; it was something along the lines of “it’s good that you can recite the law word for word to the client, but what advice are you actually giving them?”

After 6 months of being a Paralegal, shadowing my principle and now starting my training contract, I can 100% attest that “memorising” the law is most definitely not the same as “knowing” the law as there is more than 1 way to cut the cake, so to speak.

ABC

Let’s not forget the historic computers that crash almost every exam, with no time supplement for the exam that is already extremely time limited.
The extenuating circumstances application system is a joke and no one at the exam centre knew what to do when it came to submitting such circumstances.

Anna

Bro is a dry lettuce.

Current London Trainee

Beyond all of the (valid) arguments, just look at the LPC vs SQE – the pass rate differences, open book vs closed exams etc. Future (and current) trainees are entering the profession with monumentally higher walls than faced by their predecessors.

THAT is disproportionate.

The fact that everyone I know who has failed the SQE once or twice went on to do the LPC, and fly through it claiming it was ‘easy’, shows everything.

Cap

Who’s doing the SQE and then now doing LPC? Sounds like 🧢

Remember

Sue Ellen is not a real KC. She received the title when she was appointed Attorney General. Her legal career, such as it was, was only marginally less impressive than her political one.

Eex

Actually in most of civil jurisdiction you: a) have a close book exam; and b) you have to learn a humongous amount of information from different areas of law, some of which you will never use (Roman law, sea etc). I know because I am qualified in both systems. So the argument that SQE is somehow an disgraceful outlier fails.

And no, you don’t always have access to materials when you’re in court and are asked a question about ancillary legal doctrine that may or may not be material to the case. This profession is difficult people – get it through your heads and stop complaining.

Eex

Actually in most of civil jurisdictions you: a) have a close book exam; and b) you have to learn a humongous amount of information from different areas of law, some of which you will never use (Roman law, sea law etc). I know, because I am qualified in both systems. So the argument that SQE is somehow a disgraceful outlier fails.

And no, you don’t always have access to materials when you’re in court and are asked a question about ancillary legal doctrine that may or may not be material to the case. This profession is difficult people – get it through your heads and stop complaining.

Old person who passed.

Pathetic . If you want to do a job that requires cojones, find a pair.

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