MPs support a more accessible democracy


By Kylie Clark
- 21st January 2010

Andrew Dismore, chair of the joint committee on human rights, was one of the speakers at a parliamentary reception yesterday, encouraging MPs to make democracy more accessible for people with learning disabilities.

The reception hosted by disability charity, United Response, was the climax of a three-year campaign, funded by the Electoral Commission, to explore how people with learning disabilities can better engage with the democratic process.

United Response's Every Vote Counts project has produced two sets of interactive guides designed to break through barriers.

The first is targeted at people with learning disabilities, and the second provides political parties with the tools and information to make politics easier to understand for those people with learning disabilities. The guide is available online at: www.everyvotecounts.co.uk

Dismore, who led the human rights committee to produce the first ever select committee report in accessible format, told the audience that the Electoral Commission - and politicians - have a key role to play in making democracy more accessible to all.

Former newsreader and president of United Response, Martyn Lewis, urged the MPs present to sign an early-day motion on the matter, which already has 105 signatures.

Of the 80 per cent of people with learning disabilities supported by United Response in England actually registered to vote, only 16 per cent used their vote at the last general election.

The campaign to up this number to 40 per cent already has cross-party support, demonstrated at the reception by Justine Greening, Conservative MP for Putney, Roehampton and Southfields:

"All parties are supportive of making sure we can go into the next election, with a more open politics than we have ever had before."

Many supporters of United Response's campaign were present at the reception including MPs Stephen Williams, Sir George Young, John Austin, John Barrett, Betty Williams, Patrick Mercer, David Heath and Edward Timpson.

Dame Philippa Russell, chair of the government's Standing Commission for Carers and a lifelong disability campaigner, championed the use of easy-read material for everyone, not only those people with a learning disability.

This should be taken as a key message to all political parties when releasing their manifestos.

Bookmark and Share

Have your say...

Please enter your comments below.

Name

Your e-mail address


Listen to audio version

Please type in the letters or numbers shown above (case sensitive)

Related News

Charities urge health reforms revision

Two professors appointed to Lords

Better care needed for patients with learning disabilities

Labour not calling for tactical Lib Dem vote, says Alexander

Disabled voters 'disenfranchised' by access barriers



Latest news

One third of new MPs took £30,000 pay cut

More than half of the new MPs elected in 2010 took a pay cut to enter Parliament, a report published today revealed.


Post-Panorama: why we must not forget the hard lessons of the last two weeks

The last two weeks have been dominated by two high-profile stories which shone a harsh spotlight on the poor treatment of many people with learning disabilities in our society, writes Jaime Gill, head of press and public affairs for United Response.


Lib Dems and Tories 'get on better than Blair and Brown'

The Conservatives and Liberal Democrats have managed to forge a coalition which is remarkably harmonious, effective and decisive, according to a report by constitutional experts.


Big Society: replacing citizen activism with neighbourliness


'Is the Big Society still on course to deliver?'


Green deal 'will protect consumers'


MPs expenses figures published


UKBA 'still not fit for purpose'


More from Dods