

Why the UK Justice System Must Reform and Why We Need You
The justice system in the UK is breaking down and the consequences are devastating. Thousands of victims and their families are left waiting for years for trials, rulings, or closure. Meanwhile, pending cases pile up, justice is delayed, and public faith in fairness is eroded.
That’s why I launched The Claudes SEN Law Campaign to demand urgent reform. We are calling for a system that delivers justice on time, protects the rights of jurors, and is fully transparent and accountable.
📌 What’s Going Wrong
As of mid‑2025, there are tens of thousands of unresolved Crown Court cases, with many waiting over a year for a trial date.
Magistrates’ courts are not exempt: they, too, carry hundreds of thousands of outstanding cases meaning countless victims and defendants suffer indefinite uncertainty.
The delays don’t just affect legal statistics they affect real people’s lives: families waiting for justice, children denied closure, communities losing faith in fairness.
What We Demand
Timely justice hearings and rulings scheduled and enforced without indefinite delays.
Fair trial protection ensuring jurors’ rights and independent, unbiased decision‑making.
Full transparency and accountability so the public can see what’s happening and trust the system.
Why You Should Care and ACT
Because justice delayed is justice denied. Because victims deserve closure not waiting rooms full of uncertainty. Because every unresolved case chips away at public confidence in fairness.
Your support helps make real change possible. By signing, sharing, or donating, you help amplify our voice, fund advocacy and outreach, and hold institutions accountable.
£10 – Help raise awareness
£25 – Fund legal research
£50 – Support advocacy & outreach
Other: £100 amount what you are able to offer in Support.
➡️ [Petition ] every signature moves us closer to meaningful reform.
➡️ [Fundraise {Please Give What You Can}] your contribution powers our advocacy and efforts for systemic change.
Website ~ GCBR and TCSL Campaign Newsblog