1 | Case | Legal outcomes | Campaigning outcomes | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 2016 | |||||||
3 | Can the Prime Minister trigger Article 50? | We won this case, obtaining a declaration that triggering Article 50 required parliamentary approval. | We significantly increased awareness of the primacy of Parliament over the Executive in managing the consequences of a referendum established to advise Parliament. | |||||
4 | ||||||||
5 | 2017 | |||||||
6 | Can the Article 50 notification be revoked (Take One)? | We discontinued this claim because we were unable to obtain costs protection. | ||||||
7 | Can the Article 50 notification be revoked (Take Two)? | We won this case; the Court ruled that we could revoke the notice we had given under Article 50. | There was greater public awareness of the possibility of revoking Article 50 amongst the public and in Parliament. | |||||
8 | Should the Electoral Commission investigate Vote Leave's spending? | When we began the challenge to the Electoral Commission's refusal to investigate Vote Leave it reversed its decision and began to investigate. The remainder of the case became largely academic when the Electoral Commission concluded Vote Leave had broken the law. Having won on the remainder in the Divisional Court we lost in the Court of Appeal. | The investigation started in response to the litigation established that Vote Leave had broken electoral law which raised proper questions about the democratic legitimacy of the outcome. | |||||
9 | Should the Government publish its Brexit studies? | We were in the process of appealing against a refusal of permission when Government released the Brexit studies. | Whilst the litigation was ongoing the Government published summaries of its Brexit studies. | |||||
10 | Uber has to pay VAT (Take One) | We withdrew this case after we lost an interim application to cap Uber's costs. | GLP's campaign to require Uber to stop dodging VAT succeeded - HMRC assessed it to VAT. | |||||
11 | ||||||||
12 | 2018 | |||||||
13 | Challenge to the health risks posed by a No Deal Brexit | We were refused permission to bring this claim. | The claim helped highlight the effects of a No-Deal Brexit on access to medicines. And Parliament repeatedly rejected No Deal. | |||||
14 | Challenging training fee clawbacks | We organised claims against a number of organisations charging "exit fees" when people left after receiving training. Litigation continues and we have succeeded against one Defendant, lost against another, and Capita has discontinued the practice. | The issue was covered on a number of media outlets and the Minister promised to review exit fees. Although their use continues, most blue chip employers have ceased using companies that impose exit fees. | |||||
15 | Home Office deporting academics | We crowdfunded for litigation but did not need to send a letter before action or issue proceedings because the Home Office reversed its decision. | Following a public campaign we were heavily involved in the Home Office reversing its decision. | |||||
16 | Monocle magazine paying below minimum wage | After we issued proceedings, Monocle settled with the Claimant in this matter outside of court, paying the entirety of her claim and admitting liability. | The case, and the broader issue of unpaid internships, received extensive media coverage. | |||||
17 | Post-Brexit EU citizenship (Dutch courts) | The Dutch Court referred to the European Court of Justice the question whether we would retain citizenship rights after Brexit but the Dutch Court of Appeal reversed the decision. | ||||||
18 | Should the Electoral Commission investigate DUP's spending? | We were refused permission to bring this claim while our earlier case relating to Vote Leave was still ongoing. | This donation was investigated by the Electoral Commission and the donors were fined as a result. | |||||
19 | ||||||||
20 | 2019 | |||||||
21 | The Prime Minister had to request an extension to our departure date from the EU under the Benn Act | The Court declined to determine the case "until it is clear that the obligations under [the Benn Act] have been complied with in full", as our claim requested, and they ultimately were. | In his response to our claim the Prime Minister stated in Court that he would do as the law required and request a Brexit extension (contrary to what he was saying in public). As a result of that request, the "no deal" period was extended. The UK did not ultimately leave the EU until January 2022 and there was no "no deal" Brexit. | |||||
22 | The Prorogation of Parliament was unlawful | We won this case in the Supreme Court. The Court ruled that the prorogation of parliament was unlawful and thus null and void. | The Inner Court of Session found that the Government had in effect misled the Queen; the Government appealled and a unanimous verdict of the Supreme Court found that the prorogation prevented Parliament carrying out its constitutional duties. | |||||
23 | Uber has to pay VAT (Take Two) | We were refused permission to bring the case. | GLP's campaign to require Uber to stop dodging VAT succeeded - HMRC assessed it to VAT. | |||||
24 | Unlawful to create a separate customs territory in Northern Ireland | The Court refused our applications for interim orders and we withdrew the case when Parliament impliedly repealed section 55 of the Taxation (Cross-border Trade) Act 2018. | ||||||
25 | ||||||||
26 | 2020 | |||||||
27 | Airports National Policy Statements aren't compatible with Net Zero targets | We engaged in pre-action correspondence with the Government because the ANPS was not compatible with Net Zero targets. We did not pursue the case when Government promised to consider a review. | We continued to hold Government to account over its Net Zero outcomes through other channels [see row 65]. | |||||
28 | A Level results downgraded by algorithms | We did not issue proceedings in this case, as Government U-turned and reversed this policy following our pre-action letter. | Following significant pressure, including our threatened claim, Government entirely discarded the results that Ofqual calculated automatically by algorithms and instead based grades on the ones awarded by teachers. | |||||
29 | Abingdon Health antibody tests | The Court was against us on the substance and found we did not have sufficient legal interest in DHSC's decisions to bring the claim. | This case uncovered the existence of a "VIP lane" within the Test and Trace system and highlighted the use, and vulnerability of private communications channels by Ministers. | |||||
30 | Challenging Government's "Operation Moonshot" program | After we applied for an oral hearing on permission, following refusal on the papers, Government abandoned the £100bn Moonshot program. | ||||||
31 | Free School Meals over summer holidays 2020 | We did not issue proceedings because Government abandoned its policy while we were engaged in pre-action correspondence. | Our campaign, and litigation, had some impact but credit is primarily due to Marcus Rashford. | |||||
32 | Government's Energy National Policy statements fail Net Zero targets | We issued proceedings when Government refused to confirm it would review its National Policy Statement on Energy Infrastructure. Government later confirmed it would review the policy - and subsequently changed it. | ||||||
33 | Government failing to publish PPE contracts | We won this case in Court. | The Judge specifically noted that Government admitted their breaches of the law "as a result of this litigation and at a late stage of it". The case attracted widespread attention and precipitated calls for Matt Hancock to resign. | |||||
34 | Government's preferential treatment for Hanbury | We were granted permission to bring this claim, but given previous rulings against GLP's standing in procurement challenges, we did not feel it was a good use of our supporter's funds to continue with the case, and settled it paying a portion of the Government's costs. | Through generating significant media attention we facilitated greater public scrutiny and greater accountability for Government decision making. | |||||
35 | Government's preferential treatment for Public First, a communications agency linked to Michael Gove and Dominic Cummings | We were refused permission to appeal this case to the Supreme Court. | We generated considerable media focus on the award of contracts without any procurement process to friends of Michael Gove and Dominic Cummings. | |||||
36 | Online education; no resources for disadvantaged children | We did not need to issue proceedings in this case as Government changed course following our pre-action letter. | Government introduced a programme providing support to disadvantaged and vulnerable students, including £85m of funding for laptop purchases. | |||||
37 | Public inquiry into Covid response | We were refused permission 'on the papers' to bring this claim because the Prime Minister had committed to hold a public inquiry. When the date was firmed up we discontinued our claim. | Government committed to holding a public inquiry in the Spring of 2022. | |||||
38 | Removal of State Aid rules by executive fiat after Brexit | We withdrew our claim in this case before permission was considered. | After we issued our claim, Government stated that it would change the State Aid regime by properly bringing legislation before Parliament for scrutiny. | |||||
39 | Recognise air pollution as a potential hazard Government must protect against | We were refused permission to bring this claim. | The Judge agreed there could be "arguments of substance" as to a freestanding precautionary principle. | |||||
40 | Unlawful appointments of Dido Harding and Mike Coupe | The claim brought by the Runnymede Trust, funded by us, which ran alongside and was identical to ours, succeeded on the grounds that neither the Minister or the Prime Minister carried out their public sector equality duties before appointing Dido Harding or Mike Coupe. Not all grounds of the claim succeeded. | Together we established that the Public Sector Equality Duty should have been taken into account in the appointments and drew widespread attention to the unlawful process around the appointments of Harding and Coupe. | |||||
41 | VIP lane PPE: Ayanda | The Court found that the VIP lane, through which Ayanda won its contract, was illegal. | We drew wide attention to the institutionalisation of cronyism in the VIP lane. | |||||
42 | VIP lane PPE: Clandeboye | The Court dismissed all our claims relating to Clandeboye. | We drew wide attention to the institutionalisation of cronyism in the VIP lane. | |||||
43 | VIP lane PPE: Pestfix | The Court found that the VIP lane, through which Pestfix won its contracts, was illegal. | We drew wide attention to the institutionalisation of cronyism in the VIP lane. | |||||
44 | VIP lane PPE: Saiger | Although permission was granted in Saiger - a now-familiar story of profiteering, secrecy and waste - more recent courts have shown a reluctance to look at pandemic procurement. In the circumstances, we have decided that it is not a good use of money to proceed with this claim. We withdrew it in June 2022. | We drew wide attention to the institutionalisation of cronyism in the VIP lane. | |||||
45 | ||||||||
46 | 2021 | |||||||
47 | Children in care sent outside home areas | We were refused permission to bring this claim. | We attracted some national media attention to the fact of looked after children being 'dumped' a long way from their support networks in cheaper parts of the country. Since we started the claim, Surrey Council has invested £37 million in new in-area residential accommodation. | |||||
48 | Delays in providing healthcare to trans people | Our appeal in this case was dismissed; the Court found that the NHS Constitution right to treatment within maximum waiting times was a "target duty" which could not be enforced by an individual bringing a judicial review. | We generated media coverage both in the national press and specialised LGBTQ+ publications that raised awareness of the long waiting times that trans people have in accessing treatment. Through the case we successfully challenged the NHS's position that young trans people do not have the protected characteristic of gender reassignment, resulting in them now having extra protection before the law. | |||||
49 | Failings in the Dylan Lee inquest | We funded representation for Dylan Lee's mother in an inquest into his suicide following racist bullying. However, we were refused permission to challenge the breadth of that inquiry. | We attracted some national media attention to the racist treatment of Gypsy Romani and Traveller children. | |||||
50 | Blackmailing constituency MPs | We did not issue proceedings in this case, following pre-action correspondence. We do not have sufficient evidence connecting the threats and the removal of spending. | Government did not deny that threats were made but undertook they would not recur. | |||||
51 | Immensa - failures of mass false negative Covid tests | Given previous rulings against GLP's standing in procurement challenges, we did not feel it was a good use of our supporter's funds to continue with the case, and settled it with each side bearing its own costs. | Through generating significant media attention we facilitated greater public scrutiny and greater accountability for Government decision making. | |||||
52 | Levelling Up Fund cash distributed in Conservative seats | We were granted permission to bring this claim but withdrew it following legal advice that on the basis of the disclosure given by Government we were unlikely to succeed. | Our claim helped generate considerable publicity for 'pork-barrel' politics of the Government. | |||||
53 | Ministers using private emails for Govt business | Our appeal was refused in the Court of Appeal, and we were refused permission to appeal to the Supreme Court. | We generated widespread awareness of the improper use to conduct Government business of private communications channels. | |||||
54 | The use of public money for party political advertising | We did not issue proceedings. Government provided its policies in correspondence; Good Law Project stated that "we no longer believe we can succeed in addressing [this issue] with litigation". | ||||||
55 | Review decision to allow LGB Alliance charity status | The Tribunal found that Mermaids did not have standing to challenge the decision to grant LGB Alliance charity status. Moreover, one of the two judges would have found that LGBA was not a charity if the question was open to them to answer. | The Tribunal warned that elements of LGB Alliance's conduct "went beyond the boundaries of civilized debate". | |||||
56 | School absence policies for Covid vulnerable families | After pre-action correspondence with the Minister, he revised the policy to make it clear that schools should show proper flexibility towards clinically vulnerable families. | ||||||
57 | Scrutinising the appointment of Charity Commission chair | We discontinued proceedings when Government withdrew the appointment of Martin Thomas following revelations about his past conduct we had uncovered. | We generated considerable attention for the Government's attempt to politicise the Charity Commission and appoint a plainly unsuitable candidate as its Chair. | |||||
58 | NGOs intervening in Bell/Tavistock appeal (which stopped puberty blocker prescriptions) | The intervention we organised was allowed and the appeal against the original Bell decision succeeded. | Bell's legal team announced they had been refused permission to appeal this to the Supreme Court. | |||||
59 | In cases where a child can't consent to puberty blockers, this power should be given to parents, not the Courts | The Claimants in this case won in Court. Our Legal Defence Fund for Transgender Lives funded the Claimants in this case. | This case has clarified the legal position but very considerable barriers remain to trans children accessing healthcare which we are challenging in other litigation. | |||||
60 | VIP lane PPE: Bunzl | We were granted permission to bring this claim. Given changes in the Court's stance on procurement challenges, we did not feel it was a good use of our supporter's funds to continue with the case, and settled it with each side bearing its own costs. | Through generating significant media attention we facilitated greater public scrutiny and greater accountability for Government decision making. | |||||
61 | VIP lane PPE: Pharmaceuticals Direct Limited | This case was dismissed following a procedural error by external solicitors, and was under appeal. Given changes in the Court's stance on procurement challenges, we did not feel it was a good use of our supporter's funds to continue with the case, and settled it with each side bearing its own costs. | Through generating significant media attention we facilitated greater public scrutiny and greater accountability for Government decision making. | |||||
62 | Water companies dumping sewage in rivers | We intervened in the Court of Appeal to support the Claimants, Manchester Ship Canal Company, who were unsuccessful in overturning the judgment there. We supported an intervention by the Environmental Law Foundation in MSCC's appeal at the Supreme Court. In a landmark judgment, the Supreme Court ruled polluting water companies can be held accountable for their sewage dumping behaviour. | We built momentum behind the issue and engaged thousands of supporters. We have continued to expand our work in this area with this case and with other litigation. Following the landmark judgment, we’re looking to maximise campaigning in this area to help clean up the mess made by water companies pursuing profit over people and the planet. | |||||
63 | ||||||||
64 | 2022 | |||||||
65 | Net Zero I | Our legal challenge was successful. The Court ruled that the Government's Net Zero proposals and report did not meet their statutory targets. The Government was ordered by the Court to revise and improve their Net Zero proposals by March 31st 2023. | We campaigned alongside Friends of the Earth and ClientEarth to deliver a rare, practical and tangible win for the climate. | |||||
66 | Met Police failing to investigate No 10 parties | After the Met Police agreed to reverse their original decision not to investigate the PM we withdrew our judicial review. | The Prime Minister was fined after the Met concluded he had committed a criminal offence. | |||||
67 | Met Police should explain why they didn't fine Boris Johnson | After our above claim, the Met didn't fully investigate Boris Johnson's attendance at events where other attendees were fined, and we applied to judicially review that decision. The High Court refused to grant us permission to bring the claim. | We generated widespread awareness through our social media, supporter communications and national media coverage around Boris Johnson's attendance at events and failure by the Met to investigate. | |||||
68 | E2BN's £70bn framework agreement with Place Group | After we issued our challenge, E2BN withdrew the framework agreement and have agreed to pay our costs. | We generated national attention about abuses of framework agreements to avoid transparency. | |||||
69 | Thurrock Council's "secretive" investments | We have engaged in legal correspondence with the Council and, given campaigning developments, we do not plan to take litigation forward. | Building on the work of The Bureau of Investigative Journalism we added to the national attention and pressure on the council. An investigation has since been launched by central Government into the scandal and the council leader has resigned. | |||||
70 | Ofgem must protect vulnerable people from fuel poverty | After Government imposed a price cap, we agreed to discontinue the claim we had issued, with both sides paying their own legal costs. | Reporting indicates that Ofgem is now considering implementing a social tariff to protect vulnerable customers, as our claim requested. | |||||
71 | Defamation defence for Nina Cresswell | We supported Nina Cresswell in her successful defence against a libel claim by the man who sexually assaulted her. In addition to finding that that her account was true, the court held for the first time that women publishing their account can rely on the defence that their publication was about a matter of public interest to defend themselves against a libel claim. | Before the campaign, Nina was being sued for defamation by her attacker, further traumatising the experience for her and leaving a burning sense of injustice. After winning the campaign, not only was Nina able to successfully defend herself, but women and sexual abuse victims everywhere will be able to speak out against their abusers, like Nina did, in order to protect others. The campaign attracted widespread media attention from across the political spectrum which will further encourage and empower survivors to come forward. Nina's original case against the man for attacking her is also being reopened, remedying the way her case was originally treated. | |||||
72 | Public money spent on Johnson's Privileges Committee advice | We engaged in correspondence and issued, protectively, but the response from Government is such that we do not consider a challenge could succeed and so we are taking no further steps. | ||||||
73 | Stop Surrey Hills gas drilling | We supported and fundraised for a claim brought by local community group Project Dunsfold. Their case was dismissed, and they were refused permission to appeal. | We generated significant local media coverage and attracted local public support for this issue, leading to a higher awareness of exploratory drilling in this area. | |||||
74 | Stop selling off public space: Shropshire Greenfields | We supported and fundraised for an appeal brought by the local Greenfields Community Group. Their appeal in the Supreme Court was successful, and the court removed planning permission previously granted to a property developer. | We generated local and national media attention to the practice by local authories of selling off green spaces. The Supreme Court win will set a new precedent in how local authorities manage and sell publicly-owned green spaces for years to come. | |||||
75 | River Wye | We supported a local campaigner's appeal to the Supreme Court over a planned farming development. The appeal was refused. | We generated a high level of awareness and engagement on this issue amongst GLP supporters. Herefordshire Council expanded the River Wye Impact Risk Zone to include the planned development site. | |||||
76 | Protect against sewage discharges: Clean Waters | We supported Marine Conservation Society, Richard Haward’s Oysters and surfer and activist Hugo Tagholm to challenge inadequate policies against sewage dumping. As a result of our action Government launched a consultation on expanding their Storm Overflows Plan to include coasts, estuaries and marine protected environments and agreed to pay our costs. The remainder of our grounds of claim were dismissed by the Court. | We have generated significant news coverage on this topic and have contributed to wider public discussions around the impact of sewage discharge. This topic has become more politically salient and has had wider public attention since we started our campaigning work in this space. | |||||
77 | Dark money: Restore Trust | We compelled Restore Trust to reveal who is behind it and remedy its breaches of citizen's data rights. Restore Trust settled the claim and paid costs. | We were successful in exposing who is behind Restore Trust and the connections that they have to other dark money organisations. | |||||
78 | ||||||||
79 | 2023 | |||||||
80 | Trans healthcare delays: Alice Litman's inquest | The coroner's inquest findings recognised Alice's long wait for the "underfunded and insufficiently resourced" gender identity clinic impacted her mental health prior to her death. Prevention of Future Death reports were sent to the three relevant bodies stating that these delays, lack of mental healthcare for those waiting for care, and the lack of clarity around support processes for trans youths in primary healthcare are issues that should be addressed. | We supported Alice's family and their campaign, which generated positive and constructive engagement with the serious issues in trans healthcare provision across the media. We await the responses to the PFD reports, which should identify how the risks to life which the coroner has identified can be addressed. | |||||
81 | Dark money: New Culture Forum | New Culture Forum's website wasn't fully transparent about how they used and transferred the data they collected. After we wrote to them with a pre-action letter, they changed their policies to bring them in line with legal requirements. | ||||||
82 | Government failing to publish "Ventilator Challenge" contracts | We sent a pre-action letter to the Government, seeking to compel it to publish contracts for pandemic ventilator procurement. Faced with the threat of legal action, the Government published the missing contracts in full. | We have raised the issue to the wider public that government is still not complying with its own Transparency Policy and proactively publishing pandemic contracts. | |||||
83 | Unaccompanied asylum seeking children | We supported children's charity Article 39 in taking a novel Family Court case, arguing that missing unaccompanied asylum seeking children should be made "wards of court", and appointed Children's Guardians to assist in locating them and safeguarding them once they're found. The Court clarified who had legal responsibility for the children, but did not make them wards of court. | The case clarified the law, confirming that Local Authorities have responsibility to safeguard unaccompanied asylum seeking children within their jurisdiction. We also convened a group of NGOs in writing to the parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights, which they accepted as evidence to their inquiry into asylum seekers' human rights. | |||||
84 | Climate change protesters - Amy and Giovanna | We supported Amy and Giovanna, climate change and fuel poverty protesters, who were pursuing an appeal against a finding of contempt of court for addressing the jury on the reasons for why they took part in the protest. They withdrew their appeal for strategic reasons. | Through this campaign we alerted the public to the over-zealous methods being deployed by the judiciary to control protesters. Our supporters are highly engaged with this campaign and have expressed outrage that a judge could prevent defendants from providing their defence in court and wanting to defend our democratic right to a fair trial. | |||||
85 | Private equity tax challenge | We challenged an apparent loophole where HMRC treats some private equity fund manager's profits as "capital gains" not "trading income" - and taxes them less as a result. Following our legal action, UK tax authorities have abandoned this sweetheart deal for private equity fund managers. HMRC conceded the key argument we raised, accepting that “carried interest” where appropriate “would be taxable as trading income in the hands of UK tax resident individuals". | This clarification means HMRC may now be able to collect an estimated £420m in taxes, and has attracted significant attention from the media and the public; over 70,000 people signed our petition asking for fairer taxation for buyout fund managers. | |||||
86 | Home Office's unpublished spiking report | Following our threat of legal action, the Home Office promised to release their report into its plan to tackle drink spiking before the end of autumn. | ||||||
87 | Coal mining at Ffos-y-Fran | After we initiated our claim, the mining company agreed to stop work on the 30th November. | The mining company agreed to leave after tireless campaigning work from our partners at Coal Action Network, and under significant public pressure following coverage of our joint legal action. | |||||
88 | Net Zero II | We teamed up for a second time with Friends of the Earth and ClientEarth to hold the Government to account over reaching net zero; we argued that the Carbon Budget Delivery Plan (the new climate strategy that the Government was required to produce folllowing our successful Net Zero I legal challenge) breaches the Climate Change Act. As a result of the litigation, we were able to release to the public and Parliament key information on the risks associated with the climate policies which the Government had refused to publish. | Through our work in the media we were highly effective at raising awareness of this issue, we successfully used key political moments to make a wider impact. We proactively generated wide press coverage in the national and specialist press including securing a Guardian front page. | |||||
89 | Scottish Infrastructure Investment Plan | Two years after its publication, the Scottish Government had failed to comply with its legal duty to publish details about the climate impact of their £26bn Infrastructure Investment Plan. We took the first formal step in legal proceedings in September 2023; in reply it committed to urgently remedying its breach of the Climate Change (Scotland) Act 2009 and on 16 January 2024 they published an assessment. | We raised awareness through a number of media pieces, and continue to work on the campaign alongside ERCS. | |||||
90 | Gagging juries - Trudi Warner | We're campaigning about Trudi Warner, who was threatened with legal proceedings for holding a placard outside a London court. Her sign, about juror's right to acquit a defendant according to their conscience, referred to a legal right established in 1670 which also appears on a plaque at the entrance to the Old Bailey, yet she could face up to two years in prison. The High Court refused the Government's application for permission to bring a case against her. | The response to Trudi's story from GLP supporters and from the wider public has been overwhelming - many have shown solidarity with Trudi by copying her placard and taking a photograph of themselves with her and have attended our livestream Q&A to discuss her case. The media coverage we generated for Trudi helped to attract attention from the UN Rapporteur who included Trudi's case in a damning review of the UK Government's treatment of protest. It also helped contribute to public outrage about Trudi's treatment which may have helped persuade Labour to drop her case. | |||||
91 | NHS data | We're preparing a legal challenge to address patients' concerns about how their data is used for a range of purposes within the NHS - and how they can exercise their GDPR rights to object to that processing. | ||||||
92 | ||||||||
93 | 2024 | |||||||
94 | Palantir/IQVIA contract redactions | The NHS's contracts with Palantir over its new Federated Data Platform - and biotech firm IQVIA, who are providing "Privacy Enhancing Technology" for the system - contain huge numbers of fully redacted pages without any reasoning or explanation. Following our threat of legal proceedings, the unredacted contracts have now been published. | ||||||
95 | Onshore wind | The Government has excluded onshore wind from the list of "nationally significant" infrastructure projects in its Energy National Policy Statements. Building on our success in our previous Energy National Policy Statements challenge, we're pressing the Government to explain why they've left it out, and put onshore wind back into the policy. After an oral renewal hearing, the Court has granted us permission to bring this challenge. | We engaged thousands of supporters, amplifying their voices in support of wind power, and helped build pressure on the Government to bring onshore wind back into focus. Labour committed, both before and after the election, to prioritise renewable energy, and we are now settling our case following the new Government’s promise to lift the ban. We'll be keeping a close watch to ensure Labour follows through on this commitment. | |||||
96 | Conservative Tax Calculator data harvesting | We've launched a legal challenge to address the Conservative Party's misleading - and, we say, unlawful - attempt to gather data about potential voters by offering them tax information. | ||||||
97 | Ofcom/GB News | Ofcom's CEO Melanie Dawes indicated that "the standard for someone like the BBC ... is a different one from that of a channel that has an audience of maybe four to five per cent of the viewing public", suggesting channels like GB News were held to an (unlawful) lower standard of impartiality. In formal correspondence, Ofcom has now confirmed the same standards apply to all broadcasters. | We engaged members of the public, who shared our concerns about media regulations and slipping standards of impartiality and offered their support to our legal challenge; we've since seen a more active approach from Ofcom to regulating overly partisan outputs, including from GB News. | |||||
98 | Green Homes | A ministerial statement is holding back local councils from improving their energy efficiency standards for property developers - despite warnings that to meet our Net Zero target, all new buildings must be zero carbon by 2025. We're working with community group Rights Community Action, who are bringing a legal challenge to stop the Government holding back progress. The Court has refused the challenge in the first instance; the matter is now being appealed. | We helped raise the political profile of this issue; our campaign was endorsed by key voices in the housing space such as Kevin McCloud, and we engaged thousands of members of the public in writing to Michael Gove, the Housing Minister, highlighting the importance of housing policy in tackling the climate crisis and rising energy bills. | |||||
99 | Voter ID | The Government's new voter ID rules have a discriminatory impact on people from marginalised groups, who are less likely to have qualifying ID documents and may be less able to obtain them. The Government refused to amend the list to prevent these discriminatory impacts; we worked with Alice, an affected citizen, to challenge that decision. Unfortunately, the Court refused permission for the case to proceed. | Through this campaign we alerted the public to the need for voter ID, and raised awareness of the warnings from the Electoral Commission to the Government that certain groups could face problems with the list of acceptable ID including those with disabilities. | |||||
100 | Right to Swim | South West Water responded to one of their pipes bursting in December 2023 by sending up to three million litres of untreated sewage to a pumping station spilling into the sea at Exmouth. This made it unsafe for local bathers, including Jo Bateman, who usually swims there every day - we're supporting her legal claim against South West Water for nuisance and continuing to push the Government and water companies to take action so we can all enjoy a right to swim. | ||||||
101 | Puberty Blockers ban | We worked with TransActual and a young trans person being refused treatment to bring a legal challenge against a ban on prescribing puberty blockers to trans youth, brought in in the last days of the Conservative Government then defended by Wes Streeting as Labour Health Secretary. The Court dismissed our case. | The publicity we generated around the case and the evidence we put out prompted several Labour MPs to speak out publicly against the Health Secretary's decision and may have helped faciliate the BMA's vote on the treatment. We also helped highlight the lack of consultation with trans people which had been missing from the debate. | |||||
102 | ||||||||
103 | ||||||||
104 | NOTE THAT THIS TABLE IS CORRECT UP TO THE END OF JULY 2024 AND WE WILL UPDATE QUARTERLY | |||||||
105 | ||||||||
106 | Legal outcome | Number | Percentage of can say | |||||
107 | Win | 33 | 45.83% | Contains some further info, particularly useful for case documents on GLP's v old cases | ||||
108 | Mixed | 15 | 20.83% | |||||
109 | Loss | 24 | 33.33% | |||||
110 | Total where we can say | 72 | 100.00% | |||||
111 | Can't say including because presently unresolved | 11 | n/a | |||||
112 | Total inc. n/a | 83 | n/a | |||||
113 | ||||||||
114 | Campaigning outcome | Number | Percentage of total | |||||
115 | Win | 49 | 59.04% | |||||
116 | Mixed | 17 | 20.48% | |||||
117 | Can't say | 3 | 3.61% | |||||
118 | Nothing further | 14 | 16.87% | |||||
119 | Total | 83 | 100.00% |