The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,007 contributions

Speeches by Sackman.

Every Hansard contribution by Sarah Sackman this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

Showing 341360 of 1,007 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Third sitting)

I will not take any more interventions; I want to make progress. The point is that we are already beginning to see the investment aspect of this. The second pillar of how we address the backlog, which many have commented on, is efficiencies, and we have part 2 of Sir Brian’s report. In his speech on his vision for the

crime
161
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Third sitting)

I have visited lots and lots of courts.

crime
8
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Fourth sitting)

We are working hard.

crimeeconomy-jobs
4
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Fourth sitting)

I think the shadow Minister misunderstands me. I am not critiquing our jury trials which, as I have said, are a cornerstone of British justice. I am trying to understand why he has so little faith in the judges of this country.

crimeeconomy-jobs
42
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Fourth sitting)

I do not think we are disagreeing about the importance of judicial accountability or the need for a more diverse judiciary. The Deputy Prime Minister is making huge progress on that and has been a real proponent of that, both when he was in opposition and now in government. What I am talking about is the process for wh

crimeeconomy-jobs
106
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Fourth sitting)

Is the shadow Minister seriously saying that the giving of reasons, constrained by the legal tests that judges have to apply—meeting the criminal standard of proof and applying a logical route to verdict, free from bias and procedural unfairness—is not desirable? I find that an extraordinary proposition.

crimeeconomy-jobs
47
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Third sitting)

The hon. Lady will have seen that with the presentation of the Bill, as is right and appropriate, a suite of documents and material was made available to Members of this House and the wider public. The factsheet that accompanies the Bill includes a series of scenarios, one of which is literally to do nothing, and looks

crime
251
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Third sitting)

Of course that is right. No one is talking about the abolition of jury trials. We have said, and I will say repeatedly, that juries are a cornerstone of the British legal system and of our legal culture. We are preserving jury trials for the most serious cases. By seeking to tackle the shameful delays in our criminal j

crime
218
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Third sitting)

I will give way to my hon. Friend.

crime
8
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Fourth sitting)

As I think I am hearing from the Opposition, given that clause 3 is really meaty and has lots of aspects and that, I suspect, all hon. Members, including myself, have prepared on the basis of the groupings in the selection list, a lot of the detailed points on which hon. Members want answers may get lost if we try to d

crimeeconomy-jobs
85
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Fourth sitting)

I accept that it cannot happen, but equally we do not know what happens in jury deliberation rooms. We do not know how the jury arrived at a verdict. All that a defendant ever finds out is whether they have been acquitted or convicted. One advantage of the Crown court bench division is that the defendant will have the

crimeeconomy-jobs
91
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Third sitting)

I am not sure who to give way to, but I will give way first to the hon. Lady—I will try to be as fair as I can.

crime
28
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Third sitting)

What clause 1 does is remove the ability of a defendant to choose where they are tried, which, at the moment, they have a right to insist on. So we have—

crime
31
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Fourth sitting)

Of course, judges sitting alone do sentence. I understand the point the hon. Member is making in relation to the Crown court bench division, but it is important that my mum, watching at home, understands that judges hand down sentences.

crimeeconomy-jobs
40
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Third sitting)

For those watching on TV—which is probably my mum—I will be absolutely clear: the Government are not abolishing jury trials. The Government are preserving jury trials for the most serious cases, and we are working in this way to ensure that those trials are fair and timely.

crime
47
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Fourth sitting)

I will address clause 2 and respond to some of the remarks the hon. Member for Isle of Wight East made about the equalities impact, as well as the point about efficiencies and the time scale over which they can be realised to address the problem that we all say that we want to address: the backlogs. Clause 2 changes un

crimeeconomy-jobs
1,451
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Fourth sitting)

While I am very proud of our legal system, I do not necessarily take the view that ours is best and we cannot learn from other systems. Indeed, some of the places that we have exported to, such as Canada, are the places that we are looking to learn from when seeking to ameliorate our own system. Does the hon. Gentleman

crimeeconomy-jobs
121
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Third sitting)

Let me finish my sentence; you asked me the question. We are removing the right to elect, and removing it completely. The right to elect means, notwithstanding the fact that under our current system—by the way, the right to elect does not exist in Scotland. I do not think any of us here would suggest for one minute tha

crime
421
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Third sitting)

I will make a little progress. As I have said, where a magistrates court has determined that an offence is suitable for summary trial there, clause 1 removes the ability of a defendant to insist on their choice of venue. The decisions about venue and mode of trial will rest with the court. That allocations process ensu

crime
117
14 Apr 2026Courts and Tribunals Bill (Fourth sitting)

The moment has passed.

crimeeconomy-jobs
4
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.