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 661680 of 1,007 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
11 Nov 2025Courts System: Funding

My hon. Friend is absolutely right that we have a mountain to climb, and we cannot fix the foundations overnight. This Government are committed to restoring the public’s confidence in the justice system. That is why, through the spending review, we have committed an additional £450 million to the courts system. That me

crimefiscal-policy
72
11 Nov 2025Courts System: Funding

This Government inherited a justice system on its knees, starved for years of adequate funding, but we are fixing the foundations. We are investing in our buildings, in our people and in a record number of sitting days—sitting at or close to maximum judicial capacity in every jurisdiction. That is how we are fixing the

crimefiscal-policy
57
11 Nov 2025Court Backlogs

I thank my hon. Friend for his question. We are committed to improving timeliness not just in criminal courts but in family courts too, and to providing better support to victims of domestic abuse, who we know make up many of the participants in that litigation. The Pathfinder model is working. It resolves cases faster

crimelocal-government
97
11 Nov 2025Court Backlogs

Behind the backlogs in our courts, and behind each and every one of those case statistics, there is a human story, and there is no doubt that the delays in our criminal courts are taking their toll on victims and all participants in the criminal justice system. However, we are gripping the situation by investing in a g

crimelocal-government
104
11 Nov 2025Courts System: Funding

The hon. Lady is right that our court staff are the backbone of our courts system and they make it tick every day. It is an absolute pleasure, as the Courts Minister, to visit courts like the one she described. I recently visited Snaresbrook Crown court and it was a pleasure to meet staff there. As she says, legal advi

crimefiscal-policy
88
11 Nov 2025Topical Questions

The hon. Member raises a really important point. We need investment, structural reform and modernisation—that is, the adoption of technology. That is why we have asked Sir Brian Leveson to conduct his detailed review. We have got part 1, which suggests to us that structural reform. We are awaiting part 2, which should

crimesocial-care
86
11 Nov 2025Litigation Funding Agreements

As the right hon. Gentleman will appreciate, the report is incredibly detailed and contains a whole host of recommendations. It is important that we go through that very carefully. We have all seen the uncertainty created by the Supreme Court judgment in the PACCAR case. We are looking at what the appropriate response

economy-jobsother
101
11 Nov 2025Legal Aid

Legal aid can be a lifeline and should be available to those who need it, wherever they happen to live. This Government have made substantial new investment in legal aid—both in criminal legal aid, with an additional £92 million a year, and in civil legal aid, where we are investing an additional £20 million a year.

cost-of-livinglocal-government
56
11 Nov 2025Legal Aid

I thank the hon. Member for his question, and I commend all lawyers who provide pro bono support to their clients, which is incredibly commendable. However, it is ultimately a sticking-plaster and no substitute for a well-functioning legal aid system. That is why, as well as increasing fees, we are investing in the tra

cost-of-livinglocal-government
70
11 Nov 2025Access to Justice

This Government are committed to access to justice, and that involves supporting people from every social background to uphold their rights. As I said earlier, we are investing in civil legal aid. We have introduced the greatest expansion in a decade of legal aid through the Hillsborough law, and we continue to provide

crimesocial-careeconomy-jobs
73
11 Nov 2025Access to Justice

My hon. Friend raises a very important issue. If people do not know their rights, they cannot enforce their rights, so raising awareness is incredibly important. It is important that we expand access to legal support where people are living their lives, and the online service where people, especially young people, can

crimesocial-careeconomy-jobs
62
11 Nov 2025Access to Justice

The review of criminal law in this area is incredibly delicate, and we need to look at it in line with common law and case law, but we are keeping it under review.

crimesocial-careeconomy-jobs
33
11 Nov 2025Court Backlogs

I am incredibly sorry to hear about the hon. Lady’s constituent’s experience and I reiterate my sympathies. She articulates, with that case, precisely why it is vital that we pursue reform. Timeliness is an essential ingredient of fairness and the state’s obligation is to deliver fair trials. That is why we will do wha

crimelocal-government
73
29 Oct 2025 Civil Justice Council Review of Litigation Funding

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mrs Harris. I thank the right hon. Member for Skipton and Ripon (Sir Julian Smith) for securing a debate on this very important subject. It gives me an opportunity to cover three of my favourite themes: consumer protection, access to justice and growth, especially as it i

economy-jobscost-of-living
1,103
28 Oct 2025 Lasting Power of Attorney

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Ms Vaz. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Leeds North East (Fabian Hamilton) for continuing to raise awareness on this extremely important subject. While I cannot speak to the individual cases that my hon. Friend raises, I send my deepest sympathies to those individua

social-carecrimeeconomy-jobs
1,373
22 Oct 2025Work of the County Court: Government Response

I understand that am allowed to ask a question, so I will frame this as one. As the Minister with responsibility for the courts, I am tremendously grateful to the work of the Justice Committee. The report on the county court and the lens that the Committee has placed on our civil jurisdiction is incredibly welcome beca

crimeeconomy-jobstechnology
218
20 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

Shocking!

crime
1
13 Oct 2025 Criminal Courts: Independent Review

The hon. Member is absolutely right. As I said, the workforce is key—they are delivering a vital, frontline public service. We need to invest not just in the barristers, but in the rest of the staff who run our courts every single day, and that is why we have made a record investment in criminal legal aid. The hon. Mem

crimeeconomy-jobslocal-government
137
13 Oct 2025 Criminal Courts: Independent Review

I am content to give way, but I am conscious of time, so this may have to be the last intervention.

crimeeconomy-jobslocal-government
21
13 Oct 2025 Criminal Courts: Independent Review

I am happy to follow up with the hon. Member on that. In short, this Government believe that once-in-a-generation reform is necessary to address the crisis in our courts. Everyone agrees that something needs to be done, and we will do what it takes, but we also know that we need to get it right. That is why we are taki

crimeeconomy-jobslocal-government
98
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.