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 901920 of 1,007 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
12 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty-third sitting)

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Under the Bill as drafted, a panel and the commission are not invested with powers of summons, and the evidence that is heard and requested is not conveyed under oath. It is not a court or a tribunal. Those provisions do not apply, so she is absolutely right. They can make the reques

healthsocial-care
358
12 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty-third sitting)

I thank hon. Members for their interventions. In respect of the standard that would be applied in order for the panel to be satisfied, in practice, as I was saying, the panel would establish a case on the balance of probability in those circumstances only on the basis of strong evidence. In other words, the more seriou

healthsocial-care
245
12 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty-third sitting)

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Ms McVey. As my hon. Friend the Minister for Care and I have made clear throughout debate, the Government continue to remain neutral on the Bill and do not have a position on assisted dying. Once again, my remarks will focus on the legal and practical impacts of the amend

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868
12 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty-third sitting)

We are discussing how to construe the provision in paragraph 5 of new schedule 2. I should reiterate that, obviously, it is the promoter’s intent to have—hon. Members may call it what they will—the safeguard of unanimity behind that provision. If there is any feeling that the drafting does not fully reflect that intent

healthsocial-care
80
12 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty-third sitting)

That might be something that other hon. Members wish to take away with them, whatever the policy intent may have been. In fairness, I do not think that the question of whether there is a requirement to give a positive indication of a decision either way is on the face of the Bill. However, I think that clearly the inte

healthsocial-care
81
12 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty-third sitting)

It is a majority vote for the other decisions that a panel may make, but in respect of certification, the decision is unanimous. Paragraph 5(2) of new schedule 2 states: “Decisions of a panel may be taken by a majority vote”. Such decisions include whether to hear from an additional expert, or whether further investiga

healthsocial-care
159
12 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty-third sitting)

I believe it is in there. Let me find the relevant provision so that I can refer my hon. Friend to it.

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22
12 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty-third sitting)

My understanding is that it would, yes. If I am wrong about that, I will obviously come back to the Committee and correct it, but my understanding is that it would. They are two different things—one is called a certificate of eligibility and one is a High Court declaration—but in terms of how they operate within this l

healthsocial-care
331
12 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty-third sitting)

As I understand it, everything has to be internally coherent in whatever the final draft of the Bill is. Within this structure, because in this case it is a panel that issues the certificate, it is its own sui generis certificate appropriate to this process. The declaration that was referred to in the earlier draft is

healthsocial-care
128
11 Mar 2025Court Backlogs

The last Government left a mess in every single corner of our justice system—our criminal courts and our civil courts. In the process, they let down not just victims of crime but businesses, employees, employers and children in care; every part of our system was left in a complete mess. That is what we are sorting out,

crime
92
11 Mar 2025Court Transcript Costs

The hon. Member is absolutely right that initially there was not enough uptake. The Government acted to drum up awareness of the scheme precisely because we want to test its effectiveness for victims of rape and serious sexual offences. I reassure her that application numbers are up. We are conducting the evaluation, a

crimecost-of-living
73
11 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty First sitting)

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mrs Harris. As I and my colleague and hon. Friend the Member for Aberafan Maesteg have made clear throughout the debate, the Government continue to remain neutral on this Bill and do not take a position on assisted dying. My remarks will therefore focus on the legal and p

healthsocial-care
372
11 Mar 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twenty First sitting)

As I understand it, both in the context of the High Court—which has the ability to speak to whomever it likes—and of the panel, when we come to debate its role, that is a discretion. It is a requirement to hear from the person seeking an assisted death; it is a requirement to hear from the co-ordinating doctor. However

healthsocial-care
177
11 Mar 2025Topical Questions

As the hon. Member well knows, the solicitors profession is highly regulated. We have the Solicitors Regulation Authority, which itself is regulated by the Legal Services Board. All our professionals, whether they are practising in criminal or civil law, are highly respected and highly regulated, and we are indebted to

crime
51
11 Mar 2025Topical Questions

I am really horrified to hear of that case. Of course, as I mentioned earlier, the transcript of sentencing remarks should have been made available free of charge, but I am happy to meet my hon. Friend to discuss how transcripts of trials more broadly can be made available.

crime
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11 Mar 2025Topical Questions

As the Lord Chancellor has said, our priority is delivering swifter justice for victims and bearing down on the Crown court backlog. That is why we have asked Sir Brian Leveson to consider all options, which have to include reclassification of offences and the intermediate court. We have to have a whole-system reform,

crime
71
11 Mar 2025Topical Questions

I am sorry to hear about that tragic case in my hon. Friend’s constituency. Encouraging or assisting suicide is an offence under the Suicide Act 1961, and sending communications that encourage or assist serious self-harm is an offence under the Online Safety Act 2023, but we are going to tighten up the law to address t

crime
80
11 Mar 2025Court Backlogs

I am sorry to hear how long victims in my hon. Friend’s constituency are waiting. That is why we are taking urgent action to bear down on the Crown court backlog, not only by increasing sitting days this year, but by committing to record numbers of sitting days next year. Of course that will not be sufficient to bring

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86
11 Mar 2025Court Backlogs

The magistrates court is being run in a sustainable way. We extended the sentencing powers in order to free up capacity in the Crown court, and that has been sustainable, and we are increasing capacity in our magistracy by recruiting an additional 2,000 magistrates from diverse backgrounds every year. But that is why w

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11 Mar 2025Court Transcript Costs

The Government recognise just how important accessing transcripts can be for certain victims. That is why transcripts of sentencing remarks are available free of charge to the families of victims of fatal road offences, murder and manslaughter. It is also why this Government are running a one-year pilot that offers fre

crimecost-of-living
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.