The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Access to Justice
To highlight the importance of access to justice as a fundamental principle of the rule of law and empower individuals to exercise their rights, challenge discrimination, and reduce inequalities.
To foster parliamentary and public understanding of access to justice by acting as a forum for discussion and debate.
Current Officers
Vice-Chair
Lord Willy Bach
Member
Bambos Charalambous MP
Member
Lord McNally
Member
Lord Falconer
Member
Sarah Russell MP
Member
Abtisam Mohamed MP
Co-Chair
Catherine Atkinson MP
Member
Jake Richards MP
Member
Rupa Hug
Member
Baroness Kennedy
Member
Andy Slaughter MP
Member
Tony Vaughan MP
Vice-Chair
Paul Kohler MP
Member
Kevin Bonavia MP
Member
Lord Sandhurst
Member
Lord Sandhurst
Member
Rachel Taylor MP
Member
Bell Ribeiro-Addy MP
Vice-Chair
Neil Shastri-Hurst MP
Member
Warinder Juss MP
Member
Lord Bellamy
Member
Lord Shamash
Member
Karl Turner MP
Member
Alberto Costa MP
Member
Henry Tufnell MP
Member
Lod Colin Low
Member
Baroness Bennet
Member
Linsey Farnsworth MP
Member
Jayne Kirkham MP
Secretariat
The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Access to Justice is the result of a merger between the APPG on Legal Aid and the APPG on Pro Bono and Public Legal Education.
Secretariat support for the APPG on Access to Justice is provided by Legal Aid Practitioners Group
Meetings
The APPG meets regularly when Parliament is sitting to discuss topics that are important in the legal aid sector and to hear from those that work within it.
Access the APPG website to learn more.
Inquiry into Sustainability of the Legal Aid Sector – The Westminster Commission
The Westminster Commission on Legal Aid is a cross-party initiative formed by the APPG on Legal Aid to examine the state of the legal aid sector as it emerges from the COVID-19 pandemic. The full effects of the pandemic on the economy are yet to unfold. We are now in the largest recession on record, with the economy having contracted by 20.4% between April and June 2020. The Office of National Statistics has said that the recession brought on by the pandemic has led to the largest fall in quarterly GDP on record with the Money and Pensions Service highlighting that some sectors will be hit harder than others. The Money and Pensions Service have also identified that many of the worst impacts will be felt by those who are least financially resilient – low income families, younger people and students, parents with dependent children, women, BAME, renters, the self-employed, those working variable hours and in the gig economy. Emerging from the pandemic, many of these individuals are likely to need legal advice and be unable to afford it. Their ability to access justice will be dependent heavily on the continued availability of publically funded legal aid.
Over the last year, the Commission held the following oral evidence sessions: criminal legal aid; family legal aid; civil (non-family) legal aid; the publicly funded bar; access to justice; and the future of the legal aid workforce (experiences of junior practitioners). It also carried out extensive desk-based research, and further engagement with expert practitioners, to provide context to and a broader exploration of the issues and concerns raised by witnesses at the oral evidence sessions.
Overall, they found that the service being provided to the public is not sufficient and the legal aid profession as it stands is not sustainable.