British lawyers in wigs picket outside UK courthouses to protest cuts to legal aid

Lawyer Alice Jarratt takes part in a protest outside Southwark Crown Court during a demonstration against cuts to legal aid funding, in London, Monday, Jan. 6, 2014. Hundreds of British lawyers, many dressed in traditional wigs and gowns, have swapped courtrooms for picket lines to protest planned cuts to legal-aid funding. Hearings were disrupted Monday at courts including London’s famous Old Bailey as barristers staged their first-ever national walkout. The British government, which has slashed spending in the name of deficit reduction, plans to cut lawyers’ fees in a bid to reduce the legal aid budget by 220 million pounds ($360 million) by 2019. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant) (The Associated Press)

British lawyers protest outside Southwark Crown Court as they demonstrate against British government cuts to legal aid, in London, Monday, Jan. 6, 2014. Hundreds of British lawyers, many dressed in traditional wigs and gowns, have swapped courtrooms for picket lines to protest planned cuts to legal-aid funding. Hearings were disrupted Monday at courts including London’s famous Old Bailey as barristers staged their first-ever national walkout. The British government, which has slashed spending in the name of deficit reduction, plans to cut lawyers’ fees in a bid to reduce the legal aid budget by 220 million pounds ($360 million) by 2019. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant) (The Associated Press)

Lawyer Alice Jarratt takes part in a protest outside Southwark Crown Court during a demonstration against cuts to legal aid funding, in London, Monday, Jan. 6, 2014. Hundreds of British lawyers, many dressed in traditional wigs and gowns, have swapped courtrooms for picket lines to protest planned cuts to legal-aid funding. Hearings were disrupted Monday at courts including London’s famous Old Bailey as barristers staged their first-ever national walkout. The British government, which has slashed spending in the name of deficit reduction, plans to cut lawyers’ fees in a bid to reduce the legal aid budget by 220 million pounds ($360 million) by 2019. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant) (The Associated Press)

Hundreds of British lawyers — many dressed in traditional white curled wigs and black gowns — have swapped courtrooms for picket lines to protest planned cuts to legal aid.

Hearings were disrupted Monday at courts including London's famous Old Bailey as barristers staged their first national walkout.

The British government, which has slashed spending in the name of deficit reduction, plans to cut lawyers' fees to reduce the legal aid budget by 220 million pounds ($360 million) by 2019.

Lawyers' groups say that will discourage attorneys from taking criminal defense work, which relies heavily on legal aid.

The government insists barristers are generously paid, with 1,200 receiving 100,000 pounds ($164,000) in income from legal aid last year.

The Criminal Bar Association says the average earnings were around 36,000 pounds ($59,000).