Make Contempt of Parliament a Criminal Offence

Currently The House of Commons typically refers allegations of contempt to the Committee of Privileges, a cross-party committee that investigates and reports on the matter. While historical powers once allowed for imprisonment. This needs to change to make it a Criminal Offence.

40 Signatures

Status
Open
Opened
Friday 24th April 2026
Last 24 hours signatures
1
Signature Deadline
Saturday 24th October 2026
Estimated Final Signatures: 216

Reticulating Splines

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Currently, "Contempt of Parliament"— for example misleading a House or refusing to testify—is not a criminal offence. We argue that Parliament’s ancient powers to punish contempt are now unenforceable, that this creates an accountability gap, and that witnesses can obstruct democracy without the legal consequences that might apply in a Court of Law.

We call for contempt of Parliament to be made a statutory criminal offence to:

Ensure Select Committees can compel evidence and are not mislead.
Show no one is above democratic oversight.


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Constituency Data

Reticulating Splines