UK politics: No 10 says no final decisions after leak reveals jury trials might be scrapped except for alleged rapists and killers – as it happened
David Lammy, the justice secretary, has written to officials and other ministers suggesting only rape, murder and manslaughter cases might be heard by juries under plans to overhaul the courts system.According to a report in the Times, in the document Lammy said there was “no right” to a jury trial in the UK and that drastic action is needed to reduce crown court backlogs.Downing Street insisted that no final decision has been taken, but did not deny that Lammy, deputy PM as well as justice secretary, is considering getting rid of juries for most trials.According to the Times, Lammy proposed that ony only rape, murder, manslaughter and “public interest” cases would be heard by juries.It says this could result in 75% of cases being heard by a judge alone.
In July, in a report for the government, Sir Brian Leveson, a former judge, proposed a partial restriction of the right to a jury trial.He recommended that a large number of mid-ranking offences should be heard by a judge sitting with two magistrates.The Lammy proposal goes much further.Asked about the Times report, the PM’s spokesperson said:Jury trials will remain a cornerstone of our justice system for the most serious cases.No final decisions have been taken, but it is right that we ask whether there are cases that need not be heard by a jury.
Asked if the PM would be comfortable with a situation where the only cases that went before a jury were homicides and rapes, the spokesperson added:I think we’re slightly getting ahead of things.We are looking at the review, no decisions have been taken, and we will respond accordingly.Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, said:David Lammy once proudly defended jury trials, but now he’s in office he’s getting rid of them in virtually every case.Scrapping this pillar of our constitution because of the administrative failure to reduce the court backlog is a disgrace.Jury trials for all except the most serious crimes such as rape, murder and manslaughter are set to be scrapped under radical proposals drawn up by David Lammy.
Millions of low-paid workers in the UK are to get a pay rise of 4,1% next year, as Rachel Reeves confirmed that minimum wage rates will go up as part of the government’s ambition to improve living standards,Rachel Reeves is expected to press ahead with scrapping about £300m in tax breaks for the Motability scheme that helps provide cars for disabled people, in a move likely to spark concerns among some Labour MPs,Ministers have backed a plan for a third runway at Heathrow to be in operation by 2035 as they opted for the longer, costlier runway drawn up by the airport’s owners as the basis for its expansion,For a full list of all the stories covered on the blog today, do scroll through the list of key event headlines near the top of the blog.
Wes Streeting, the health secretary, has accused Kemi Badenoch of abandoning a cross-party consensus on the health needs of trans children.He spoke out after the Tory leader declared that “no child is born in the wrong body” and condemned plans for a pilot of puberty blockers for young people to go ahead.Referring to the pilot, Badenoch posted a message on social media saying:No child is born in the wrong body.I cannot believe we are back to square one, with NHS England backing an experimental trial of puberty blockers on healthy, vulnerable children, ignoring the damage already done.The No1 rule of medicine is “do no harm”.
This is activist ideology masquerading as research,I’m urging MPs of all parties to sign this letter from me and Shadow Health Secretary @stuartandrew, calling for Wes Streeting to step in and stop this trial before more damage is done to children who are too young to understand what they are doing to themselves,In April last year a landmark report by Hilary Cass, a leading paediatrician, said that children who wanted to change gender were being let down because they were being exposed to interventions for which the medical evidence was weak,It called for restrictions in the use of puberty blockers, and it said cross-sex hormones should only be used with “extreme caution” with under-18s,The report was welcomed in the Commons by Streeting, the then shadow health secretary, and by the Conservative party.
MPs, like Badenoch, who were alarmed about the increasing number of children getting medical help to transition, were particularly supportive, and in October last year Badenoch praised Cass for producing “a seminal report that has provided clarity and saved many children from making irreversible decisions that would harm their long-term health”,Although Cass expressed caution about children getting medical help to transition, her report included evidence from children who found puberty blockers helpful and she recommended a trial of puberty blockers to establish evidence as to what the long-term effects are,Cass also accepted that gender incongruence is a condition and she said:There is broad agreement that gender incongruence, like many other human characteristics, arises from a combination of biological, psychological, social and cultural factors,Responding to the Badenoch letter, Streeting said:I’ll reply formally and fully, but I’m surprised by this letter,The Conservatives commissioned the Cass Review and accepted its recommendations in full.
I did, too, and am implementing it.I’m keen to maintain a cross-party approach on such a sensitive issueTory aides claim Badenoch never agreed with all the recommendations in the Cass report.Lawyers are also appalled by the idea of jury trials being removed for most criminal cases.This is from Mark Evans, president of the Law Society of England and Wales.This extreme measure on jury trials goes far beyond the recommendations made by Sir Brian Leveson in his independent report.
This is a fundamental change to how our criminal justice system operates and it goes too far,Our society’s concept of justice rests heavily on lay participation in determining a person’s guilt or innocence,Allowing a single person to take away someone’s liberty for a lengthy period or decide a potentially life changing complaint would be a dramatic departure from our shared values,We have not seen any real evidence that expanding the types of cases heard by a single judge will work to reduce the backlogs …The Leveson proposals were an uncomfortable compromise, only justifiable given the extensive challenges our justice system faces,To go beyond Leveson’s proposals is a step too far.
With a sensible combination of funding and structural change, the government can solve the criminal courts backlog without resorting to extremes,This is from Dame Alison Saunders, the former director of public prosecutions, on Times Radio,I’m really surprised that David Lammy has gone this far,This isn’t what Leveson in his review recommended,Without doubt, something fundamental needs to be done and something quite dramatic needs to be done to improve the criminal justice system because we’ve seen now there’s a record-breaking 80,000 backlog of cases in the crown court and cases taking up to four years coming to trial …But to suddenly say ‘we’re going to do away with jury trials in the majority of cases’ I think is a reaction that is surprising, and I’m not sure bears real examination.
And this is from Stephanie Needleman, legal director at the law reform organisation Justice.As one of the best trusted parts of the criminal justice system, juries are a key means of safeguarding fairness and public confidence.Reducing jury trials to curb delays is like reducing engine safety checks to get flights off the ground faster.There are fairer, safer options.Juries represent the diversity of society and deliver more equal outcomes – for example, as the current lord chancellor [David Lammy] found in his Lammy Review, Black and Chinese women are found guilty at much higher rates than white women by magistrates but not by juries.
The Liberal Democrats say scrapping jury trials for most criminal cases would be “disgraceful”.Responding to the Times report, Jess Brown-Fuller, the Lib Dem justice spokesperson, said:This is completely disgraceful, the UK Government is dismantling our justice system and failing victims in the process.David Lammy himself acknowledged while in opposition that criminal trials without juries are a bad idea - and yet here we are.In recent months, we have seen the Ministry of Justice flounder from one scandal to another; enough is enough.Lammy must get a handle on the failing justice system, to ensure that victims are given the support they deserve.
The answer does not lie in removing jury trials.David Lammy, the justice secretary, has written to officials and other ministers suggesting only rape, murder and manslaughter cases might be heard by juries under plans to overhaul the courts system.According to a report in the Times, in the document Lammy said there was “no right” to a jury trial in the UK and that drastic action is needed to reduce crown court backlogs.Downing Street insisted that no final decision has been taken, but did not deny that Lammy, deputy PM as well as justice secretary, is considering getting rid of juries for most trials.According to the Times, Lammy proposed that ony only rape, murder, manslaughter and “public interest” cases would be heard by juries.
It says this could result in 75% of cases being heard by a judge alone.In July, in a report for the government, Sir Brian Leveson, a former judge, proposed a partial restriction of the right to a jury trial.He recommended that a large number of mid-ranking offences should be heard by a judge sitting with two magistrates.The Lammy proposal goes much further.Asked about the Times report, the PM’s spokesperson said:Jury trials will remain a cornerstone of our justice system for the most serious cases.
No final decisions have been taken, but it is right that we ask whether there are cases that need not be heard by a jury,Asked if the PM would be comfortable with a situation where the only cases that went before a jury were homicides and rapes, the spokesperson added:I think we’re slightly getting ahead of things,We are looking at the review, no decisions have been taken, and we will respond accordingly,Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, said:David Lammy once proudly defended jury trials, but now he’s in office he’s getting rid of them in virtually every case,Scrapping this pillar of our constitution because of the administrative failure to reduce the court backlog is a disgrace.
Keir Starmer has apologised to teachers after encouraging pupils to do the “six, seven” thing on a school visit, Jamie Grierson reports.If you have no idea what the “six, seven” craze is, it’s all explained here.Children’s health in England has been getting worse, Wes Streeting, the health secretary, has said.Speaking at a conference organised by King’s Fund, a health thinktank, and the children’s charity Barnardo’s, Streeting said that poor health was linked to poverty and he signalled that this would be a priority in the budget tomorrow.Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves have already all but confirmed that tomorrow’s budget will scrap the two-child poverty cap – widely seen as the single best measure that would reduce child poverty.
In his speech, Streeting said:Children in England are sicker today than the generation of a decade ago – in fact, they face some of the poorest health outcomes in Europe,Obesity in five and six year olds is at its highest level since records began – a health timebomb that leaves them at greater risk from some of the biggest killers like cancer and heart disease later in life,The leading cause of hospital admissions amongst kids aged between five and nine is to have their rotting teeth pulled out,And so what does it say about us, as a country, if we ignore a situation where our children are sicker, less happy, and less active than their peers around the world?What kind of start in life are we giving our children?And if we allow it to continue, then what kind of future are we leaving to them?Our children will lead shorter, less healthy lives,Our NHS will buckle under a tidal wave of chronic conditions.
Our society will become fractured, as those in work will be paying more to care for a growing number unable to work,And our economy will suffer, because our businesses will be denied the talent the next generation could offer,Those are all reasons to act,But what’s more: health problems do not fall on children evenly,Childhood obesity and tooth decay are both more common in the most deprived communities.
Deprivation worsens mental health.There’s no getting away from the stark truth that the poorest kids are in the poorest health.And when a child is too sick for school, then the trajectory of their whole life is on the line …As we look ahead to the budget tomorrow, it is worth remembering this: ever since Keir Hardie founded the Labour party, our historic purpose has been to eliminate child poverty, ensure no child is left behind, and provide every child with the best start in life.Rachel Reeves’s plan to slash the annual cash Isa limit by 40% could lead to higher mortgage rates and deter consumers from saving, finance bosses have said.Rupert Jones has the story.
The Conservative party has criticised the decision to let mayors introduce a levy on overnight stays (see 3,29pm), calling it a “tax on British holidays”,James Cleverly, the shadow housing secretary, said:Hotels and B&Bs already pay VAT at 20%, corporation tax, business rates and national insurance,Both business rates and national insurance have already been hiked up by the Labour government,This is therefore yet another Labour tax on British holidays, pushing up costs for hard-pressed families, and yet another kick to British hospitality.
Local authorities can already introduce business improvement districts, as has happened in Manchester, allowing a levy to raise funds for the costs of tourism,But this is agreed by local firms through a referendum, ensuring the funds are only raised if they boost the hospitality sector,Instead, Labour are imposing yet another new tax on local hospitality firms,According to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, the power to impose a tourist tax will be available to the mayors of strategic authorities (or combined authorites),These include metro mayors, but increasingly strategic authority mayors are being set up in rural areas, and so that term is now being used less.
The government has not said what a maximum overnight levy might be, but it is meant to be “modest”.The consultation will consider whether or not an upper limit should apply.Keir Starmer said talks on a potential ceasefire in Ukraine are “moving in a positive direction” as he spoke to leaders of the war-torn nation’s allies, PA Media reports.PA says:The prime minister led a call with leaders of the so-called “Coalition of the Willing” this afternoon after talks between Ukraine and the US in Geneva over the weekend appeared to bear fruit for a path to peace.Addressing a virtual meeting of the coalition from the cabinet room in 10 Downing Street, Starmer said of the latest talks: “Progress was made and I welcome some of the developments that have now come forward.
“It was a chance to ensure that the draft plan fully reflects Ukraine’s interests and lays the ground for a lasting peace.”He added that Ukraine had “proposed some constructive changes”, supported by European national security advisers.The PM said: “I do think we are moving in a positive direction and indications today that in large part the majority of the text, Volodymyr [Zelenskyy] is indicating, can be accepted.”Today’s call follows talks between US and Ukrainian representatives in Geneva over the weekend about a peace plan set out by Donald Trump’s administration following discussions with Russia.With less than 24 hours to wait until the budget, government departments are getting some of the announcements out of the door already.
(See 12.24pm and 3.29am for examples.) The more interesting stories are the ones about what hasn’t been officially announced yet.Here are some examples