The Anonymous Widower

Why Is The Highway Code Only A Code And Not A Law?

If you ask Google AI, the question in the title of this post, you receive this answer.

The Highway Code is not a law in itself, but a collection of rules and guidance for all road users. While it contains some legally enforceable rules (marked with “MUST” or “MUST NOT”), and breaking them is a criminal offence, it also includes non-binding advice. The “code” serves as an authoritative source of information, making it easier for people to understand the law and helping courts to establish liability by using the advisory rules as evidence of a standard of expected behaviour.

So why is it just a collection of rules and guidance?

Coming home yesterday on a bus, a smartly-dressed elderly lady sat next to me and we got talking.

Something must have triggered it, as she told me why the Highway Code was just a code and not a law.

Apparently, her father had written it and he had insisted that it should not be made into law and the government of the day in 1931 had agreed he  should have his way.

I asked Google AI, who actually wrote it and received this answer.

The Highway Code was written by the UK government, with the first edition published in 1931 under the authority of the then Minister of Transport, Herbert Morrison. The code was created as a result of the Road Traffic Act 1930, which required the Minister of Transport to issue the guide for all road users.

It looks like as Herbert Morrison’s daughter has passed on, he didn’t write the Code himself.

November 14, 2025 Posted by | Artificial Intelligence, Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment