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Strategic Litigation Against Public Participation Bill

Second Reading

9.34am

Wayne David 

(Caerphilly) (Lab)

I beg to move, That the Bill be now read the Second time.

I have been a Member of Parliament for near­ly 23 years. [Hon. Members: “No!] I know it is dif­fi­cult to believe for some, but it is true. This is the first occa­sion on which my name has been drawn in the pri­vate Member’s Bill bal­lot; I am pleased to say my name was drawn fourth. I thought long and hard about the most appro­pri­ate and best piece of draft leg­is­la­tion to bring for­ward. I decid­ed on this Bill, because I gen­uine­ly think it is incred­i­bly impor­tant, and I will set out to the House why that is.

The Bill tack­les strate­gic lit­i­ga­tion against pub­lic par­tic­i­pa­tion cas­es, wide­ly known as SLAPPs, in all their forms. Last year, I and the Labour Opposition wel­comed the mea­sures enact­ed in the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 that ensured that SLAPPs relat­ing to eco­nom­ic crime can be tack­led. I am pleased to bring for­ward a Bill to expand on that. Reform to pro­tect free­dom of speech and the pub­lic inter­est is some­thing that all par­ties in Parliament hold dear. In all debates in this House and the oth­er place there has been a broad con­sen­sus about the need for reform to tack­le the per­ni­cious effect of SLAPPs. However, in both Houses it has been clear that the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act does not go far enough.

SLAPPs have tak­en and do take many forms. It is vital to bring for­ward leg­is­la­tion that gen­uine­ly tack­les the issue in a holis­tic and round­ed sense. There are many exam­ples of SLAPPs. I will refer to a few high-pro­file cas­es that have reached court and received some pub­lic­i­ty, and to oth­ers that have not received that much publicity.

I begin with a case that I am sure hon. Members will be aware of, because it has attract­ed a great deal of atten­tion. In 2022, a defama­tion case was report­ed­ly brought against the jour­nal­ist Tom Burgis, the Financial Times and pub­lish­ers HarperCollins by a Kazakh min­ing com­pa­ny. The case con­cerned a book by Burgis enti­tled “Kleptopia: How Dirty Money is Conquering the World”.

A defama­tion case was brought by Roman Abramovich against jour­nal­ist Catherine Belton and HarperCollins regard­ing her book “Putin’s People”. It is an excel­lent book and well worth read­ing. There was a legal assault on the book through a num­ber of law­suits in quick suc­ces­sion, jus­ti­fi­ably pro­vok­ing a group of cam­paign­ers for free expres­sion to state that London’s courts were becom­ing the venue of choice for legal action designed to “quash crit­i­cal jour­nal­ism”. Catherine Belton, the author of “Putin’s People”, has called for the intro­duc­tion of reforms to tack­le this glob­al indus­try, based here in London. Hopefully, the Bill will begin to address this sig­nif­i­cant prob­lem seriously.

Then there is the case of Amersi v. Leslie. A British busi­ness own­er, Mohamed Amersi, brought a defama­tion case against Charlotte Leslie, a for­mer Conservative MP and man­ag­ing direc­tor of the Conservative Middle East Council. I am famil­iar with the case, because I am the shad­ow Minister for the mid­dle east and north Africa. The case con­cerned a memo on Amersi’s back­ground and deal­ings with Russia. It was put togeth­er in response to his attempt to become the chair of CMEC. The claim by Amersi was struck out, because he had failed to show how the memo caused seri­ous harm to his reputation.

It is not only high-pro­file cas­es that involve SLAPPs. There is the case of Nina Cresswell who named a per­son who vio­lent­ly sex­u­al­ly assault­ed her after her orig­i­nal report was dis­missed by the police. She com­mend­ably want­ed to alert oth­er women who may become vic­tims of sex­u­al assault. The man who was named sued her for defama­tion. Ms Cresswell won a land­mark judg­ment last year, but the very fact that she had to fight the case at all demon­strates the huge gaps that SLAPP claimants are only too ready to exploit, and we need to address that fact.

I have also heard sto­ries of patients who have left neg­a­tive reviews for botched plas­tic surg­eries being issued with SLAPP claims by the sur­geons. I have heard of ten­ants who have spo­ken out about their unin­hab­it­able hous­ing being issued with SLAPP claims by their land­lords. That is wrong and it must be stopped.

I have giv­en a few exam­ples of rel­a­tive­ly high-pro­file cas­es, and also of some that are not so well known. There are many cas­es that do not attract any atten­tion in court and there are many more that we do not know about because indi­vid­u­als are intim­i­dat­ed before legal pro­ceed­ings actu­al­ly com­mence. The data that the Government have is only the tip of the ice­berg. As I have sug­gest­ed, SLAPPs are extreme­ly per­ni­cious before any action reach­es court. Pre-action let­ters and legal pres­sure are applied well before pro­ceed­ings are ini­ti­at­ed. This often results in the search or the inves­ti­ga­tion being with­drawn before pub­li­ca­tion, or, in some cas­es, in a whole vari­ety of dif­fer­ent areas, the effec­tive­ness of threats and intim­i­da­tion are such that the cas­es nev­er see the light of day. Accordingly, that will nev­er be reflect­ed in avail­able data.

Then we come to the press in this coun­try. Let us remem­ber that, as a coun­try that cham­pi­ons free­doms both here and abroad, we must ensure that our free press, which is a real pil­lar of our democ­ra­cy, nev­er feels so vul­ner­a­ble that it self-cen­sors on vital mat­ters in the pub­lic inter­est. No one in the United Kingdom is above the law. Furthermore, no one should be above prop­er scruti­ny on a mat­ter of pub­lic interest.

As to the data we have, the pro­vi­sion of fig­ures from the Coalition Against SLAPPs in Europe are deeply con­cern­ing in them­selves. It esti­mates that there were 29 SLAPPs in England and Wales in 2022. That is up from 25 in 2021 and 11 in 2020. CASE’s August 2023 report record­ed that the total fig­ure in Europe over the past decade was 793.

Richard Foord 

(Tiverton and Honiton) (LD)

The hon. Member men­tions the Coalition Against SLAPPs in Europe. I won­der whether he agrees with the Anti- SLAPP Coalition that the pro­posed Bill, as draft­ed, would intro­duce a sub­jec­tive test, requir­ing a court to infer the state of mind and pur­pose of the fil­er. Does he agree with me that that would cre­ate com­plex­i­ty, costs and delay, which would poten­tial­ly make the Bill ineffective?

Wayne David 

It is an issue that has to be con­sid­ered care­ful­ly, and, indeed, it has been giv­en a great deal of con­sid­er­a­tion and much debate.

Chris Clarkson 

(Heywood and Middleton) (Con)

On that point, will the hon. Gentleman give way?

Wayne David 

May I just respond to the oth­er point that has been made? It is vital that this issue is con­sid­ered prop­er­ly and deeply. I hope very much that, if we are suc­cess­ful today, the debate will con­tin­ue into Committee, so that fur­ther con­sid­er­a­tion may be giv­en to that issue. At the moment, I am erring on the side of what is sug­gest­ed by my pri­vate Member’s Bill. I think the Bill strikes a bal­ance. It is not quite accu­rate to talk about sub­jec­tiv­i­ty and objec­tiv­i­ty, because a judge will have to make a deter­mi­na­tion on the facts that are pre­sent­ed and his knowl­edge of how the case is being con­duct­ed. At the moment I err in favour of say­ing that there is a false dichoto­my, but it is some­thing that should be con­sid­ered fur­ther in Committee.

Chris Clarkson 

I join in con­cor­dance with the hon. Member for Caerphilly (Wayne David). This is an excel­lent piece of leg­is­la­tion and I am very broad­ly in sup­port of it. I just want­ed to respond to the com­ment from the hon. Member for Tiverton and Honiton (Richard Foord). Subjectivity is actu­al­ly a fun­da­men­tal part of our legal sys­tem already: we talk often of the man on the Clapham omnibus. It is the rea­son­able­ness test, so I do not think there is any­thing in the Bill that is out of scope or inappropriate.

Wayne David 

I am inclined to agree with that com­ment, as my Bill sug­gests, but it is some­thing that needs to have more air­ing and more con­sid­er­a­tion. Detailed con­sid­er­a­tion in Committee would be an appro­pri­ate place for that to happen.

As oth­ers have said many times, most SLAPP-relat­ed activ­i­ty takes place below the radar before a for­mal court case and court claim is issued. There are a num­ber of rea­sons why SLAPPs are so bad, and why SLAPPs claimants are so suc­cess­ful in their warped objec­tive of per­pe­trat­ing them. Commonly, the com­par­a­tive­ly mod­est means of a defen­dant are lever­aged against them to encour­age retrac­tion or the aban­don­ment of the impor­tant research that would shine a light on ques­tion­able behav­iour. Bullying tac­tics can include huge threat­ened litigation 

costs and dam­ages, and all of the unbear­able con­se­quences such as bank­rupt­cy and loss of homes and liveli­hoods, as well as the emo­tion­al dis­tress that entails. All of that can cause huge hard­ship and psy­cho­log­i­cal pressure.

Sadly, many peo­ple are not able to with­stand all of that. So many of the cas­es are like David and Goliath, but if David had no sling­shot. I should be clear about why the unfair­ness of a legal sys­tem that allows all of that has to be chal­lenged and changed. That is why I am bring­ing for­ward the Bill today. We must erad­i­cate the harms caused by that kind of aggres­sive lit­i­ga­tion. We must pro­tect pub­lish­ers, authors and advo­cates from spu­ri­ous claims and empow­er them to forge ahead with pub­lish­ing legit­i­mate sto­ries. Grounded, well-researched inves­tiga­tive report­ing must be pro­tect­ed, not reined in for fear of colos­sal legal costs. We must do our utmost to pro­tect and empow­er ordi­nary peo­ple, and give them the con­fi­dence to use the legal sys­tem of this coun­try to ensure fair­ness in the pub­lic interest.

Of course, pro­tect­ing jour­nal­ists or any­one else can­not be at the expense of deny­ing claimants their rights of access to jus­tice. But at present, the fact that claimants can wrong­ly exploit the jus­tice sys­tem to obfus­cate the trans­paren­cy that is essen­tial in a healthy democ­ra­cy means that an impor­tant bal­ance must be struck. As things stand, that is clear­ly not the case, and that is why I call for urgent reform today. Robust action to counter SLAPPs in all their forms is need­ed and it is need­ed now.

I have sought to work along­side the Government to ensure that the approach under­pin­ning the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act—which was pos­i­tive­ly received across civ­il soci­ety, media and the legal pro­fes­sions, includ­ing the regulators—remains large­ly intact in the Bill as it achieves what is nec­es­sary. The Bill will there­fore keep, for the most part, the def­i­n­i­tion of a SLAPP claim in the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act, but it will also broad­en the scope and cap­ture all SLAPPs in future. In future, any SLAPPs cas­es in which speak­ing out is in the pub­lic inter­est, includ­ing for pub­li­ca­tions on eco­nom­ic crime, will be caught.

Let me address the com­po­nents of the def­i­n­i­tion. First, the claimant will have act­ed to restrain the defendant’s exer­cise of their right to free­dom of speech. Secondly, the exer­cise of that right will have been in the pur­suit of the pub­lic inter­est, or expos­ing poten­tial wrong­do­ing or oth­er bad behav­iour, such as ille­gal­i­ty or untruths, or mat­ters to do with pub­lic health and safe­ty or the cli­mate and the envi­ron­ment. Thirdly, the claimant will have mis­used lit­i­ga­tion for its threat to cause harm to the defen­dant, specif­i­cal­ly through harass­ment, stress or expense, which is beyond that which can be ordi­nar­i­ly expect­ed in prop­er­ly con­duct­ed lit­i­ga­tion. The last point includes an impor­tant dis­tinc­tion. Legal cas­es almost always bring a mea­sure of stress and expense to the par­ties involved, giv­en their seri­ous nature.

As I have said, SLAPP claims are often designed to gen­er­ate exces­sive stress and expense in pur­suit of a rem­e­dy that is a mere fig leaf, or excuse to allow the real harm that the claimant wish­es to cause. One thing that dis­tin­guish­es a SLAPP claim is that the legal action is not pur­sued for the appro­pri­ate rem­e­dy, but as a means, in its own right, of bring­ing oppres­sion to bear. To safe­guard against that harm in an effec­tive and pro­por­tion­ate way, includ­ing by ensur­ing that legitimate 

claims can pro­ceed, the Bill will intro­duce a new ear­ly dis­missal test. Claimants will have to show that they are more like­ly than not to suc­ceed at tri­al. Where they can­not do so, the case will be struck out.

In addi­tion, much of the harm in SLAPP claims lies in the risk of adverse costs that defen­dants face. A prop­er­ly func­tion­ing ear­ly dis­missal mech­a­nism will assist in remov­ing many of the risks to the defen­dant. However, for SLAPP claims that are not dis­missed ear­ly, the Bill will intro­duce a new costs regime that pro­tects defen­dants from costs that they would usu­al­ly pay if they lost the case. That will ensure that defen­dants can defend them­selves prop­er­ly and that the risk of costs does not force them to set­tle claims unnec­es­sar­i­ly. The under­pin­ning prin­ci­ples of that new cost regime are includ­ed in the pro­vi­sions, but the detail will be intro­duced under the usu­al cost regime-mak­ing pow­ers through rules of court.

Together, those pro­vi­sions will ini­tial­ly require only new civ­il pro­ce­dure rules to give them shape and max­imise their effec­tive­ness, as the evi­dence avail­able shows that SLAPPs are focused on civ­il pro­ceed­ings. However, the pro­vi­sions can be extend­ed by reg­u­la­tions to any oth­er pro­ceed­ings as nec­es­sary, such as the online pro­ce­dure rules. I trust that the Government will make nec­es­sary reg­u­la­tions when claimants who are well resourced and able to exploit any per­ceived loop­hole choose oth­er courts in which to pur­sue SLAPPs. That will also help to ensure that the Bill is future-proofed. SLAPPs are like­ly to evolve, and we need legal infra­struc­ture to be robust enough to meet future challenges.

As a result of the Bill, the courts will have the nec­es­sary tools and guid­ance to deal swift­ly with all SLAPPs, which aim to sti­fle free­dom of speech. Investigative jour­nal­ists will also be empow­ered to expose wrong­do­ing in all its forms, what­ev­er that may be. It is my hope that defen­dants in such cas­es will, as a con­se­quence, feel safe from attempts to wrong­ly exploit our legal sys­tem. Journalists and oth­ers will be empow­ered to shine a light on crim­i­nal mis­con­duct wher­ev­er they find it, what­ev­er form it takes, with­out fear of spu­ri­ous claims being made against them.

Unscrupulous indi­vid­u­als or cor­po­ra­tions brazen­ly mis­use our courts and legal sys­tem to fur­ther their agen­das, to the detri­ment of the pub­lic inter­est, though it is wrong to do so as a mat­ter of prin­ci­ple. The pub­lic must know about wrong­do­ing and cor­rup­tion, so that our demo­c­ra­t­ic soci­ety can func­tion and the rule of law can be pre­served. This Bill recog­nis­es the breadth and depth of SLAPPs; cur­rent­ly, the law focus­es sole­ly on eco­nom­ic crime, but SLAPPs can be found in all areas of the law. This all-embrac­ing leg­is­la­tion against SLAPPs is, I believe, a tru­ly sig­nif­i­cant step in ensur­ing free­dom of speech and remov­ing a clear abuse of our legal sys­tem. I there­fore urge col­leagues across the House to give the Bill their full support.

9.55am

Nicola Richards 

(West Bromwich East) (Con)

We in this House should all be proud of this country’s inter­na­tion­al rep­u­ta­tion for uphold­ing the rule of law. In the cur­rent glob­al cli­mate, and fol­low­ing the recent mur­der of Russian oppo­si­tion leader Alexei Navalny, that is a free­dom that we can­not take for grant­ed. Navalny was an incred­i­bly brave man, and his wife 

should be an inspi­ra­tion to us all. Navalny want­ed the world to know the truth about what kind of man Putin is, and today, we are help­ing him in that aim. The pro­tec­tion of our legal sys­tem must be a pri­or­i­ty for all in this House, ensur­ing that this country’s rep­u­ta­tion con­tin­ues long into the future. For that rea­son, I thank the hon. Member for Caerphilly (Wayne David) for bring­ing this Bill before Parliament today, and I urge all col­leagues to sup­port it. We are here because we have to beef up the law to fur­ther ensure that we do not allow our legal sys­tem to be manip­u­lat­ed and abused by bad-faith actors wish­ing to shut down free­dom of the press and free­dom of speech.

In 2021, an inves­ti­ga­tion by The New York Times found that in four of the six pri­or years, lit­i­gants from Russia and Kazakhstan had been involved in more civ­il cas­es in England than any oth­er for­eign nation­als. Those cas­es sought orders to freeze the assets of peo­ple world­wide. Individuals and corporations—many from coun­tries where the free­doms we enjoy in this coun­try do not exist—use strate­gic lit­i­ga­tion against pub­lic par­tic­i­pa­tion claims to harass and intim­i­date jour­nal­ists and authors out of shar­ing infor­ma­tion that those par­ties do not want seen or known. The prime exam­ple is a case brought by mul­ti­ple Russian bil­lion­aires, includ­ing for­mer Chelsea own­er Roman Abramovich, who attempt­ed to sue the author and pub­lish­er of the book “Putin’s People”. That book delved deep into the rela­tion­ships between those oli­garchs and Russian President Vladimir Putin—a rela­tion­ship that those indi­vid­u­als cared deeply about when it suit­ed them, but jour­nal­ists can face legal action for point­ing that out.

As has been men­tioned, a Kazakh min­ing com­pa­ny brought a case against anoth­er jour­nal­ist, Tom Burgis, over the con­tents of a book that he pub­lished about ille­gal­ly gained mon­ey in the glob­al econ­o­my. Thankfully, that attempt to silence a jour­nal­ist failed. I have raised the issues sur­round­ing “Putin’s People” before in this Chamber, along­side many col­leagues from across the House, includ­ing my hon. Friend the Member for Isle of Wight (Bob Seely), whose work on this issue I com­mend. The point of these law­suits is to threat­en the defen­dants with colos­sal legal costs—we are talk­ing about amounts that no nor­mal per­son can afford—and harass and intim­i­date them into capit­u­lat­ing. “Putin’s People” author Catherine Belton and her pub­lish­er were left with a stag­ger­ing £1.5 mil­lion legal bill fol­low­ing the case brought against them.

Today’s Bill presents us with the oppor­tu­ni­ty to fur­ther pre­vent such attempt­ed silenc­ing of authors and jour­nal­ists by Russian bil­lion­aires, or any oth­er bad-faith actor. It would put in place new rules, so that claims deemed to be SLAPPs could be dis­missed and defen­dants could be pro­tect­ed from pay­ing the claimant’s legal costs, unless that was jus­ti­fied. The Government have been strong in their con­dem­na­tion of SLAPPs, and I was proud to see the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 recent­ly receive Royal Assent. That Act allows judges to throw out SLAPPs relat­ing to eco­nom­ic crime, which is a good first step: at least 70% of the SLAPP cas­es iden­ti­fied by the Foreign Policy Centre in 2022 were con­nect­ed to finan­cial crime and cor­rup­tion. However, we can­not and must not stop there, so I wel­come the fact that the Government are sup­port­ing the Bill. We need to pre­vent all forms of SLAPPs once and for all, and this Bill is the mech­a­nism for doing that.

The urgency of this issue can­not be over­stat­ed. The Coalition Against SLAPPs in Europe found that 820 SLAPPs took place in Europe in 2023, com­pared with 570 in 2022—a 44% increase. The United Kingdom was named a SLAPP hotbed, and the forum of choice for would-be SLAPP ini­tia­tors. A Birmingham Law School pro­fes­sor has said that the high costs of defama­tion lit­i­ga­tion and the abil­i­ty of for­eign claimants to resolve dis­putes in the UK has made this coun­try an ide­al loca­tion for SLAPPs.

Other leg­is­la­tures have already tak­en action. Several US states have intro­duced sim­i­lar laws, and the European Parliament is expect­ed to approve sim­i­lar anti-SLAPP direc­tives next week. As a result, if we do not pass this Bill today, Britain risks being left behind in an area in which we should be proud­ly lead­ing. As more places pro­hib­it SLAPPs, the chance that more cas­es will be brought in the UK increas­es further.

We must be clear that the only pur­pose of SLAPPs is to silence crit­ics; they have no legal mer­its. We must act to pro­tect this country’s inter­na­tion­al rep­u­ta­tion for uphold­ing the rule of law, and our hard-fought free­doms of speech, jus­tice and the press. We must ensure that jour­nal­ists and pub­lish­ers can pub­lish infor­ma­tion, backed by sources and facts, con­cern­ing any indi­vid­ual, no mat­ter the size of their bank account.

We in this coun­try are proud of the lead­er­ship we have shown fol­low­ing the bloody Russian inva­sion of Ukraine, and pass­ing this Bill would be a small but impor­tant way of con­tribut­ing to that lead­er­ship. I again thank the hon. Member for Caerphilly for bring­ing this Bill to the Chamber, and I look for­ward to sup­port­ing its pas­sage through the House.

10.00am

Apsana Begum 

(Poplar and Limehouse) (Lab)

I com­mend my hon. Friend the Member for Caerphilly (Wayne David) for his work in bring­ing this Bill to the House, and I thank cam­paign­ers for what they are doing to pre­vent the mis­use of lit­i­ga­tion to sup­press free­dom of speech. Democratic and press free­doms are fun­da­men­tal to our rights and to chal­leng­ing cor­rup­tion and the abuse of pow­er. When whistle­blow­ers speak out and jour­nal­ists and a free press report the truth, soci­ety is bet­ter for it.

Just this week, Julian Assange’s extra­di­tion appeal closed at the Royal Courts of Justice. It is con­cern­ing to hear that he is unwell and unable to appear in court. I am con­scious that the pro­ceed­ings are ongo­ing, but I want to say that human rights are cen­tral to what is hap­pen­ing in his case. The issue is not just how he has been treat­ed, sim­ply for telling the truth; if extra­dit­ed, he could be at risk of treat­ment amount­ing to tor­ture, and oth­er forms of ill-treat­ment and pun­ish­ment, includ­ing the death penalty.

Julian Assange’s case has pro­found con­se­quences for press free­dom and democ­ra­cy around the world. We can­not say that we stand for press free­dom if that free­dom exists only if it does not chal­lenge cer­tain pow­ers, or go beyond what they want. As my hon. Friend said, our free­doms are under­mined when the rich and pow­er­ful use the threat of cost­ly legal action to sup­press pub­lic crit­i­cism. That is why, last year, many of 

us wel­comed amend­ments to the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 that gave UK judges new pow­ers to dis­miss law­suits that attempt to silence those speak­ing out about eco­nom­ic crime. However, giv­en the lim­it­ed scope of the Act and cer­tain short­com­ings in its text, those amend­ments fell short of pro­vid­ing mean­ing­ful pro­tec­tion against SLAPPs.

There is inequal­i­ty under the leg­is­la­tion for those sub­ject to SLAPPs that do not relate to eco­nom­ic crime and cor­rup­tion. We know that pow­er­ful men use their pow­er and the law to silence women. The pur­pose of such pro­ceed­ings, often described as gag­ging orders, is to silence, intim­i­date, dis­cred­it and fur­ther dis­em­pow­er sur­vivors. Some cam­paign­ers call it gen­dered cen­sor­ship. It hap­pens in the UK, but it is also a glob­al phenomenon.

Although I wel­come the ambi­tion of the Bill, I believe there may be scope for fur­ther amend­ments about the def­i­n­i­tion of a SLAPP, so that domes­tic abuse is ful­ly cov­ered, par­tic­u­lar­ly in the under­stand­ing of “pub­lic inter­est”. I say that because we all know of a series of libel cas­es in which wealthy men have sought to pro­tect their rep­u­ta­tion when women accuse them of abuse. Current leg­is­la­tion puts sur­vivors at a dis­ad­van­tage. For exam­ple, under the Defamation Act 2013, the defen­dant in libel cas­es can argue a pub­lic inter­est defence, but that is not avail­able to sur­vivors. I appeal to the Government to look at that care­ful­ly, and at how the Bill can be extend­ed beyond the civ­il courts to the fam­i­ly courts.

In January 2022, I par­tic­i­pat­ed in a Backbench Business debate on the use of law­fare and strate­gic lit­i­ga­tion against pub­lic par­tic­i­pa­tion by those seek­ing to sup­press pub­lic debate, bul­ly peo­ple into sub­mis­sion and con­ceal vital infor­ma­tion that is in the pub­lic inter­est. I described my expe­ri­ence of law­fare being used against me. The House will be aware that I was com­plete­ly cleared and vin­di­cat­ed in Snaresbrook Crown court after what I and many oth­ers in my con­stituen­cy and around the UK viewed to have been vex­a­tious lit­i­ga­tion, pur­sued with the pur­pose of shut­ting down my pub­lic par­tic­i­pa­tion as a demo­c­ra­t­i­cal­ly elect­ed social­ist Member of Parliament and a sur­vivor of domes­tic abuse.

The use of law­fare by abusers to pur­sue their cur­rent or ex-part­ner is com­ing to light more and more. I am aware that the occur­rence of civ­il lit­i­ga­tion cas­es of this nature has dras­ti­cal­ly increased, par­tic­u­lar­ly fol­low­ing the wide­ly pub­li­cised Amber Heard ver­sus Johnny Depp case in the US. The most com­mon pro­ceed­ings we see brought are by men accused of sex­u­al mis­con­duct and/or domes­tic vio­lence launch­ing vex­a­tious cas­es in rela­tion to defama­tion, libel, the mis­use of pri­vate infor­ma­tion, harass­ment and press injunctions.

The UN spe­cial rap­por­teur on free­dom of expres­sion, Irene Khan, writ­ing in a ded­i­cat­ed report on gen­der cen­sor­ship in 2021, said:

In a per­verse twist in the #MeToo age, women who pub­licly denounce alleged per­pe­tra­tors of sex­u­al vio­lence online are increas­ing­ly sub­ject to defama­tion suits or charged with crim­i­nal libel or the false report­ing of crimes. Weaponising the jus­tice sys­tem to silence women feeds impuni­ty while also under­min­ing free speech.”

In addi­tion, bar­ris­ters Jennifer Robinson and Dr Yoshida make the argu­ment in their book that the cur­rent sit­u­a­tion strikes an unfair bal­ance between his right to rep­u­ta­tion and her right to free­dom of speech. What is miss­ing in the leg­is­la­tion in the UK as it stands is a recog­ni­tion of 

the impor­tance of her addi­tion­al rights: her right to live a life free from gen­der-based vio­lence and her right to equality.

The prac­tice of abusers weapon­is­ing civ­il lit­i­ga­tion against sur­vivors is a con­tin­u­a­tion of abuse, as well as addi­tion­al trau­ma. I often find myself ask­ing, “If we can­not speak about vio­lence against women and girls, how can we even tack­le it?” By their nature, these cas­es mis­use the courts and are brought against sur­vivors to silence them and re-vic­timise them emo­tion­al­ly and finan­cial­ly. I urge the Government to look at the sit­u­a­tion in the fam­i­ly courts, as well as the civ­il courts. No one should suf­fer domes­tic abuse, and any­one in such a sit­u­a­tion should be sup­port­ed in speak­ing out. It is a mat­ter of pub­lic good and pub­lic interest.

10.07am

Chris Clarkson 

(Heywood and Middleton) (Con)

It is a plea­sure to fol­low the hon. Member for Poplar and Limehouse (Apsana Begum). May I start by con­grat­u­lat­ing the hon. Member for Caerphilly (Wayne David)? He has brought for­ward an excel­lent pri­vate Member’s Bill, and this is entire­ly what we should be doing with Friday sit­tings. I love Friday sit­tings; I have out­ed myself as a geek on mul­ti­ple occa­sions. For me, this is what the job is about—coming here and talk­ing at length about stuff that is impor­tant to people.

I also out myself as a lawyer and wave my LLB about. I am pas­sion­ate about our legal sys­tem and believe keen­ly in it. It is the jew­el in the crown of our state. It is par excel­lence and sec­ond to none. It deeply grieves me when some­thing so impor­tant is per­vert­ed for the nar­row inter­est of a small cadre of peo­ple who have right­ly deduced that a tech­ni­cal flaw is avail­able to them, and they have enough mon­ey to exploit it. The sys­tem should not be exploitable pure­ly because some­one has the finan­cial resource to do it. We should not be able to pur­chase jus­tice in this country—but peo­ple do that.

I will speak to two main issues only that I have deduced from read­ing this pri­vate Member’s Bill—which I will sup­port ful­ly, I has­ten to add. The first is a mat­ter for when the Bill reach­es Committee, and that is how we address the seri­ous prob­lem of forum shop­ping. This coun­try has a par­tic­u­lar­ly robust approach to defama­tion leg­is­la­tion. Imagine that I pub­lish a book like “Putin’s People”, for exam­ple: it could be the case that it is pub­lished in 18 dif­fer­ent coun­tries but that I only get sued in this one, because this coun­try is the one that is most tech­ni­cal­ly adept at allow­ing some­body to get mon­ey out of me and keep me qui­et. That will then pre­vent me from being able to pub­lish that book in oth­er places; effec­tive­ly, that process in one coun­try will gag me in oth­er coun­tries. I think we can do some­thing in that space. The hon. Gentleman has put togeth­er an excel­lent Bill. It is one for the pinstripe-suited—I am actu­al­ly not wear­ing a pin­stripe suit today—geeky bods to get into. We will have to drill down into the Bill to ensure that it is as robust as pos­si­ble, but I am hap­py with its direction.

My sec­ond point is about address­ing what the Bill is real­ly about. It is about not tech­ni­cal amend­ments to the legal system—as much as I love those—but free­dom of speech. Freedom of speech is one of the most fun­da­men­tal rights in every democ­ra­cy. The United States con­sti­tu­tion starts with:

Congress shall make no law respect­ing an estab­lish­ment of reli­gion, or prohibiting…the free­dom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo­ple peace­ably to assem­ble, and to peti­tion the Government for a redress of grievances.”

That is an incred­i­bly pow­er­ful and potent set of claus­es that pre­vents the sit­u­a­tion we are dis­cussing from hap­pen­ing in the United States. We have to rely on arti­cle 10 of the European con­ven­tion on human rights; and I will say now, for the avoid­ance of doubt, that you will get me through a wood chip­per faster than you will get me through a Division Lobby to take us out of that.

Article 10 is incred­i­bly impor­tant, but it is not ade­quate for the task ahead of us, and that is why this is such an impor­tant Bill. As a Member of Parliament, I want to be able to go out and talk about what is cor­rect, right, prop­er and decent, with­out hav­ing to rely on the fact that I have immu­ni­ty in this Chamber, but I can­not do that with­out fear or favour at the moment, because this law­fare system—I think the hon. Member for Poplar and Limehouse coined that term, which is an effec­tive way of describ­ing what is going—is basi­cal­ly being used to destroy one of the fun­da­men­tal prin­ci­ples of our democracy.

The hon. Member for Caerphilly is entire­ly right and prop­er to bring us this Bill. I will enthu­si­as­ti­cal­ly sup­port it; if he needs peo­ple for Bill Committee when it gets to that stage, I will be there—and I am afraid I will be talk­ing a lot.

10.11am

Andy Slaughter 

(Hammersmith) (Lab)

It is a plea­sure to take part in the debate, par­tic­u­lar­ly with you in the Chair, Mr Speaker. This is essen­tial­ly a debate about free speech, which I know is of great con­cern to you not only in this Chamber but out­side it. It is also of par­tic­u­lar con­cern to my hon. Friend the Member for Caerphilly (Wayne David), and I con­grat­u­late him on bring­ing the Bill for­ward. He is quite busy with his oth­er hat on, as the shad­ow Minister for the Middle East, so it is good that he has time to be here on a Friday to pro­mote his Bill. I hope he has the Government’s support.

I would say that this became a live issue for the House when the right hon. Member for Haltemprice and Howden (Sir David Davis) held his January 2022 debate on law­fare and the UK court sys­tem; as with every­thing American, the terms “SLAPPs” has tak­en over the lan­guage here, but law­fare is effec­tive­ly the same thing. On that day, which was real­ly the issue’s first run-out, I replied for the Opposition. There were many strong con­tri­bu­tions, and the debate put the issue on the map, includ­ing on the Government’s map.

Let us give the Government a lit­tle bit of cred­it, although not too much; there has been some progress. We have heard about what is in the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023, deal­ing with the issue of SLAPPs, but in a par­tic­u­lar way and for a par­tic­u­lar type of offence—that is, around eco­nom­ic crime—and the anti-SLAPPs task­force also meets, but it is some­what dis­ap­point­ing that the Government have not brought for­ward their own com­pre­hen­sive leg­is­la­tion on the issue. I hope they will use the agency of my hon. Friend the Member for Caerphilly to get some­thing on the books in the time avail­able in this Parliament. Nevertheless, we have not done the entire job. That is no 

crit­i­cism at all of my hon. Friend, and I do not know whether that is an invi­ta­tion for me to be on the Bill Committee as well.

I will deal with three points that need slight­ly fur­ther atten­tion. The first, which my hon. Friend men­tioned, is the issue of SLAPPs tak­ing place in the dark—pre-issue, as it were. There has been some atten­tion by the Solicitors Regulation Authority to that in issu­ing guide­lines, but there is still quite a strong feel­ing that many SLAPPs were effec­tive long before get­ting to the court­room because of the intimidation—which we should not underemphasise—placed on indi­vid­u­als. They may be authors or jour­nal­ists, but they may just be indi­vid­ual mem­bers of the pub­lic. The intim­i­da­tion may even be of cor­po­ra­tions, and yet they can­not take the risk because they are up against peo­ple with not just deep, but bot­tom­less, pock­ets. We heard about the £1.5 mil­lion cost for Catherine Belton in rela­tion to “Putin’s People”. That was pock­et mon­ey for Abramovich, but for a publisher—let alone a journalist—it is a sig­nif­i­cant sum of mon­ey. A more com­pre­hen­sive view of how SLAPPs act is impor­tant in rela­tion to resources.

I do not want to dis­agree with my hon. Friend, but we need to look at the point that the Anti-SLAPP Coalition and the NUJ have raised—and the hon. Member for Tiverton and Honiton (Richard Foord)—about a sub­jec­tive or objec­tive test. That is not easy. Obviously, there are sub­jec­tive as well as objec­tive tests through­out the legal sys­tem. Nevertheless, there is a real fear that the need for a defen­dant to show sub­jec­tive ele­ments will be a path for the claimant to tie pro­ceed­ings up in knots, com­pli­cate things and drag them out. I do not know what the solu­tion is, but we should at least explore that and lis­ten to the expert organ­i­sa­tions, par­tic­u­lar­ly the National Union of Journalists and the Anti-SLAPP Coalition, which are urg­ing us to take that course.

Richard Foord 

Does the hon. Member think that a minor amend­ment could be intro­duced to add an objec­tive test based on observ­able fea­tures of abuse, to help pre­vent lit­i­ga­tion from being mis­used to sup­press free­dom of speech?

Andy Slaughter 

It sounds like the hon. Member wants to be on the Bill Committee and is draft­ing his amend­ments in his head. I have nev­er known a pri­vate Member’s Bill Committee to be so pop­u­lar. I am not a legal drafts­man and I do not know the answer to his ques­tion, but we need to bot­tom out this issue, because it seems to be attract­ing the most attention.

Other issues have been raised about over­laps with the Defamation Act, and costs. There are pro­vi­sions on costs in the Bill, but it is about whether they are dri­ving down costs as far as they can, and about pub­lic inter­est. A num­ber of areas could be fur­ther explored, even in this short Bill. Costs are a vital but often neglect­ed part of the legal process. This is a hob­by-horse of mine. We have just dis­cussed the Media Bill in the House, and the repeal of sec­tion 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013, which in effect takes Leveson part 1 out of the equa­tion with regard to hav­ing a lev­el play­ing field for vic­tims of press abuse—if I can put it that way.

On SLAPPs, the Government appear to sup­port leg­is­la­tion such as this to pre­vent costs being used as a weapon to pre­vent peo­ple get­ting their just deserts and 

their day in court, but there is a dif­fer­ent sit­u­a­tion when it comes to the media itself—I can­not for the life of me see the dif­fer­ence. Of course, Leveson cuts both ways; Leveson also pro­vid­ed a for­mu­la for pro­tect­ing small pub­lish­ers against exact­ly the sort of peo­ple who take part in SLAPPs—indeed, he could have used the word “SLAPPs” in his report. It also pro­tects the inno­cent vic­tims of press abuse because the press magnates—not jour­nal­ists and small pub­lish­ers but major publishers—also have bot­tom­less pockets.

In his response or dur­ing the pas­sage of the Bill, could the Minister think again, at the very least, about how the Government will approach the issue of small pub­lish­ers and jour­nal­ists being sued in order to pro­tect the so-called privacy—often the nefar­i­ous activities—of very wealthy indi­vid­u­als and cor­po­ra­tions. This can affect any­one, includ­ing jour­nal­ists like Tom Burgis, who won his case. The expe­ri­ence did not dis­cour­age him, because next week I am hop­ing to go to the launch of his lat­est book, “Cuckooland: Where the Rich Own the Truth”. Let me give him a lit­tle plug—it will soon be avail­able from all good book­shops. It takes huge courage for some­one to risk every­thing sim­ply in the course of pros­e­cut­ing their employ­ment, when there is the risk of bank­rupt­cy or being dropped by their publisher—although that was not at risk, I have to say, in Tom’s case.

We heard about the case of Charlotte Leslie, a for­mer col­league of ours, who was effec­tive­ly per­se­cut­ed through the courts. We are lucky; we have the pro­tec­tion of priv­i­lege here. However, when we step out­side this place, we can become a vic­tim in that way, just like any­body else who is, with good intent, sim­ply try­ing to tell the truth.

This even affects organ­i­sa­tions such as the Serious Fraud Office, which is still being pros­e­cut­ed through the courts by the Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation. The Serious Fraud Office launched the action in good faith, and there was what I would call retal­ia­to­ry SLAPP action. Although the orig­i­nal action by the SFO has been dis­con­tin­ued, the SLAPP con­tin­ues. It real­ly does look like a top­sy-turvy world when organ­i­sa­tions that we should rely on to reg­u­late society—in which I include inves­tiga­tive jour­nal­ists, Members of Parliament, and cer­tain­ly crim­i­nal inves­ti­ga­tion organisations—themselves become the vic­tims of those they wish to call out.

That is why we urgent­ly need a much more com­pre­hen­sive approach to SLAPPs, and that is why I ful­ly wel­come the Bill and will sup­port it today. However, I think we can do more work on this. In respond­ing today, I hope the Government will express their strong sup­port and their desire to go further.

Mr Speaker 

I call the shad­ow Minister.

10.21am

Kevin Brennan 

(Cardiff West) (Lab)

This could be quite a big day for the Welsh, with my hon. Friend the Member for Caerphilly (Wayne David) intro­duc­ing his Bill and my hon. Friend the Member for Newport West (Ruth Jones) intro­duc­ing hers lat­er, I hope. I also hope to move from the Front Bench to the Back Benches to intro­duce my own Bill lat­er in pro­ceed­ings, so that is three Welsh Bills this morn­ing. Of course, on the Front Bench we also have my right hon. Friend the Member for Alyn and Deeside (Mark Tami) from the Opposition Whips Office, so it real­ly is a big morn­ing for the Welsh.

My hon. Friend the Member for Caerphilly and I came into the House togeth­er in 2001—it is hard to think that that is near­ly 23 years ago. I con­grat­u­late him on his first out­ing in all that time pro­mot­ing a pri­vate Member’s Bill this morn­ing. I am glad he was suc­cess­ful in the bal­lot, as it is an impor­tant Bill. For years, strate­gic law­suits have enabled the wealthy and pow­er­ful to weaponise their wealth to sue crit­ics into silence. As hon. Members have said, it is impor­tant that this House votes to put an end to these tac­tics that gag the press and intim­i­date peo­ple ask­ing legit­i­mate ques­tions by threat­en­ing them with enor­mous legal costs—lawfare, as it has been referred to today.

I thank those who have par­tic­i­pat­ed in the debate: my hon. Friends the Members for Poplar and Limehouse (Apsana Begum) and for Hammersmith (Andy Slaughter), and the hon. Members for Heywood and Middleton (Chris Clarkson) and for West Bromwich East (Nicola Richards). They all spoke extreme­ly effec­tive­ly in sup­port of the Bill, but also raised appro­pri­ate ques­tions about how it should pro­ceed in Committee. I am pleased that the Bill has cross-par­ty sup­port, and I under­stand the Government are in full sup­port of it. I can con­firm that it has the sup­port of those on the Labour Front Bench as well.

It is a step for­ward that the scope of pro­tec­tion pro­vid­ed for in the Bill is not lim­it­ed, as is cur­rent­ly the case, to eco­nom­ic crime. SLAPPs, often mas­querad­ing as defama­tion or pri­va­cy claims, are not real­ly about seek­ing jus­tice, but about impos­ing silence—exploiting the finan­cial and emo­tion­al strain of pro­ceed­ings to dis­cour­age indi­vid­u­als from exer­cis­ing their right to speak on mat­ters of pub­lic interest.

Labour has long recog­nised the dan­ger posed by SLAPPs to our demo­c­ra­t­ic val­ues. We have already com­mit­ted to intro­duc­ing leg­is­la­tion to halt the abil­i­ty of Russian oli­garchs and the super-wealthy such as Roman Abramovich, who has already been men­tioned today, to use their wealth as a weapon against those who dare to scru­ti­nise their actions. The back­ground to my hon. Friend’s Bill is root­ed in a dis­turb­ing trend of legal harass­ment. From aggres­sive pre-action let­ters to the tar­get­ing of vul­ner­a­ble finan­cial defen­dants, SLAPPs under­mine the foun­da­tions of account­abil­i­ty and free­dom of speech. The enor­mous legal costs threat­ened by SLAPPs serve not jus­tice, but the sup­pres­sion of truth.

The Bill is not mere­ly a response to a grow­ing trend of legal harass­ment, but a dec­la­ra­tion of our val­ues as a soci­ety that cher­ish­es free speech and the rule of law. It broad­ens the scope beyond eco­nom­ic crimes, offer­ing pro­tec­tion across all pub­lic inter­est dis­course to ensure that no avenue is left for the mis­use of our legal sys­tem to sup­press legit­i­mate scruti­ny and account­abil­i­ty. The legal reforms pro­posed by my hon. Friend in his Bill are both nec­es­sary and time­ly. They reflect a deep under­stand­ing of the chal­lenges posed by SLAPPs, as out­lined in the evi­dence ses­sions of sev­er­al par­lia­men­tary Committees. By pro­vid­ing mech­a­nisms for ear­ly dis­missal and costs pro­tec­tion, and extend­ing pro­tec­tions to all courts and tri­bunals, we are for­ti­fy­ing our defences against the abuse of legislation.

As we con­sid­er the pro­vi­sions of the Bill, let us remem­ber the individuals—and, indeed, institutions—who have been unjust­ly tar­get­ed by SLAPPs. Their strug­gles under­score the imper­a­tive for this leg­is­la­tion. I acknowl­edge the efforts of cam­paign­ers, includ­ing the UK Anti-SLAPP 

Coalition, for their tire­less work in bring­ing this issue to light. We must ensure that our legal sys­tem serves jus­tice, not the inter­ests of those who seek to wield it as a tool of oppression.

I acknowl­edge the issues that have been raised about the Bill. I am sure they will be rehearsed in Committee when we will have a deep­er dis­cus­sion on them. In addi­tion to the con­cerns that have been raised, we need to make sure—although I am sure it does not—that the Bill does not pre­vent ordi­nary peo­ple who wish to restrain the pub­li­ca­tion of libels and intru­sions by wealthy pub­li­ca­tions from being able to do so in law. As my father always used to say, in life we should help the weak against the strong. I know that that is my hon. Friend’s inten­tion in bring­ing for­ward his Bill.

I urge all hon. Members to sup­port the Bill. In doing so, we are tak­ing a stand against the tac­tics that gag our press, intim­i­date our cit­i­zens and erode our democ­ra­cy. It is a step for­ward in an ongo­ing effort to pro­tect free­dom of expres­sion and to ensure that those who seek to report on wrong­do­ing can do so with­out fear of ret­ri­bu­tion. In the fight for jus­tice and account­abil­i­ty, there is no room for silence. The Bill can help to end the scourge of SLAPPs and reaf­firm our ded­i­ca­tion to the prin­ci­ples of democ­ra­cy and freedom.

10.26am

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Justice 

(Mike Freer)

I con­grat­u­late the hon. Member for Caerphilly (Wayne David) on bring­ing for­ward the Bill, and the numer­ous cam­paign­ers who have been press­ing this issue for many years. As we have heard, SLAPPs are an abuse of our courts and our laws by cor­rupt indi­vid­u­als who seek to sti­fle free speech and a free press—two of the linch­pins of our democracy.

I can­not talk about the spe­cif­ic case that the hon. Member for Poplar and Limehouse (Apsana Begum) raised, but I can reas­sure her that the Bill widens the scope beyond what is in the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 and that it now talks about all kinds of behav­iours. I am more than hap­py to dis­cuss the spe­cif­ic issues with the hon. Member for Caerphilly, as it is his Bill, to see what we can do to ensure that we either reas­sure or accom­mo­date her on the spe­cif­ic issues she wish­es to see covered.

This issue became increas­ing­ly press­ing when the Russian oli­garchs and allies of Putin used this process for their own ends. Alongside them, we saw behav­iour by multi­na­tion­al cor­po­ra­tions or dis­rep­utable land­lords to use and abuse our process­es. SLAPPs must always be tak­en seri­ous­ly and tack­led swift­ly. In this House, we have the abil­i­ty and the priv­i­lege to ensure that such abus­es are addressed head-on. This House stands for free speech and for hold­ing the pow­er­ful to account, and for always seek­ing to ensure that the best inter­ests of the pub­lic, in the widest sense, are being served by the law.

SLAPPs-style lit­i­ga­tion is an abuse of pow­er designed to inhib­it pub­lic inter­est inves­ti­ga­tions and report­ing. The harm that SLAPPs cause is not only that they sti­fle pub­lic com­ment by forc­ing its removal or edit­ing it; they also dis­cour­age jour­nal­ists, aca­d­e­mics and cam­paign­ers from inves­ti­gat­ing issues in the first place, leav­ing mat­ters of pub­lic inter­est undis­cov­ered and the British pub­lic in the dark. In this way, the effect of SLAPPs is far more 

per­ni­cious. We can­not sit by and allow our media to feel that some peo­ple and organ­i­sa­tions can­not be sub­ject to scruti­ny just because they have unlim­it­ed finan­cial fire­pow­er to mobilise aggres­sive legal tac­tics. To quote Andrew Galizia, whose moth­er Daphne, a Maltese inves­tiga­tive jour­nal­ist, was mur­dered in 2017:

The aim of these law­suits is to deprive the tar­get of time and resources, and to deter oth­ers from tak­ing up the same story.”

His moth­er was sub­ject to 43 law­suits at the time of her death.

Regardless of whether a claim is aimed at an author, an aca­d­e­m­ic, a jour­nal­ist or a pri­vate indi­vid­ual, this abuse of the law to muz­zle the free press must not go unchecked. We will not allow our jus­tice sys­tem to be abused. In the Government’s response to our orig­i­nal call for evi­dence, we said that although there are pow­ers enabling courts to strike out cas­es as an abuse of process, these pow­ers need to be strength­ened to coun­ter­act the very sophis­ti­cat­ed and aggres­sive actions brought by SLAPP claimants.

The House will be aware of some high-pro­file cas­es that have shone a light on SLAPPs—cases such as that brought against the British jour­nal­ist Tom Burgis, whom Members have already men­tioned, who was sued for libel in the High Court by ENRC, an oli­garch-owned min­ing com­pa­ny, fol­low­ing his pub­li­ca­tion of “Kleptopia: How Dirty Money is Conquering the World”. There were mul­ti­ple claims issued against Tom Burgis by ENRC, tar­get­ing him as an indi­vid­ual author rather than his pub­lish­er. These claims con­cerned his tweets, pod­casts and arti­cles that men­tioned his book. The case was dis­missed ear­ly on. The state­ments com­plained about were found not to be defam­a­to­ry and Mr Burgis was vin­di­cat­ed, but how many more cas­es do not reach our court­rooms due to the intim­ida­to­ry tac­tics and costs run up by aggres­sive claimants before pro­ceed­ings are even ini­ti­at­ed? I think that is the point made by the hon. Member for Hammersmith (Andy Slaughter), and I will address a cou­ple of his points at this juncture.

We have engaged with the SRA and will con­tin­ue to do so. As the hon. Member men­tioned, warn­ing notices have already been issued. The fines for mis­be­hav­iour by solic­i­tors firms have been increased, and pre-action behav­iour is a legit­i­mate cause of con­cern. The Government will con­tin­ue to engage with the reg­u­la­tor to see how that can be fur­ther addressed. As so many peo­ple have vol­un­teered to be on the Public Bill Committee, I am sure that, with the indul­gence of the hon. Member for Caerphilly, we can look at the issue in more depth.

There is evi­dence that the num­ber of SLAPPs is increas­ing year on year. There were 11 cas­es in the UK in 2020, 25 in 2021 and 29 in 2022. Such wor­ry­ing and abu­sive con­duct, where­by those with deep pock­ets attempt to finan­cial­ly bul­ly dis­sent­ing voic­es, is unac­cept­able in our democ­ra­cy. The courts must not be a pawn in these under­hand attempts to cov­er up cor­rup­tion and wrongdoing.

SLAPPs are a mod­ern-day strug­gle between David and Goliath: we have indi­vid­ual jour­nal­ists, aca­d­e­mics and authors up against extreme­ly wealthy indi­vid­u­als and cor­po­rates with unlim­it­ed resources on their side. We can­not let this type of intim­i­da­tion and harass­ment stand. It is right that wrong­do­ing and dubi­ous deals are laid bare for the world to see, and those who expose such behav­iour should not be afraid of the repercussions 

of doing so. That is why the Government lis­tened and intro­duced the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 to tack­le SLAPP claims con­nect­ed to finan­cial misdeeds.

That Act meant we were the first coun­try in the world to leg­is­late against SLAPPs at a nation­al lev­el. Although we can argue over whether it was over­due, we were cer­tain­ly the first to do it, and we ought to take pride in the fact that this leg­is­la­ture act­ed faster than most. The Act gave cov­er to only a small part of the SLAPPs regime, and it tar­get­ed only one part of eco­nom­ic crime, which is why this pri­vate Member’s Bill seeks to address the gaps. It will make sure that the def­i­n­i­tion of SLAPPs is more comprehensive.

The hon. Member for Tiverton and Honiton (Richard Foord) raised the issue of behav­iour in the test of objec­tiv­i­ty and sub­jec­tiv­i­ty. The issue of sub­jec­tiv­i­ty is not unusu­al, and the court will con­sid­er all evi­dence before it comes to an assess­ment, includ­ing an expla­na­tion from the claimant as to why their claim is rea­son­able. The courts are, of course, well versed in tak­ing that infor­ma­tion into account. The test of sub­jec­tiv­i­ty or intent is not unusu­al, and it is well estab­lished in our court sys­tem. Clause 2 gives spe­cif­ic exam­ples of SLAPPs-type behav­iour. I believe there is a care­ful bal­ance between the stan­dard prac­tice of intent and tight­en­ing things up to give objec­tive guid­ance to the judi­cia­ry on what con­sti­tutes SLAPPs-type behaviour.

The Bill fol­lows the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act in estab­lish­ing a cost-pro­tec­tion regime that lim­its legal costs in SLAPPs claims, pro­tect­ing defen­dants from the obscene costs run up by claimants to increase the intim­ida­to­ry effect of their claim. This will also help to address the glar­ing inequal­i­ty of arms between the par­ties in these cases.

Of course, one of the big steps for­ward is the abil­i­ty to secure ear­ly dis­missal so that these cas­es do not rum­ble on and rack up fees, par­tic­u­lar­ly for defen­dants. The abil­i­ty to strike out cas­es at an ear­ly stage is a big part of the cost-pro­tec­tion armoury. Our reforms also have to ensure a bal­ance between defend­ing peo­ple from SLAPPs-type behav­iour and pro­tect­ing access to jus­tice, which is a fun­da­men­tal part of our sys­tem. It is for the courts and the judi­cia­ry to deter­mine whether a case is a SLAPP and whether it has mer­it. We have act­ed to remove the lev­el of fear and risk that these cas­es can engen­der. The Government are glad to wel­come and sup­port this Bill, which builds on the impor­tant progress already made.

I thank the hon. Member for Caerphilly for seiz­ing the moment to intro­duce a pri­vate Member’s Bill. This is an oppor­tune time to build on what we have done so far, and to make it more com­pre­hen­sive. As he out­lined so well, the Government have found that the scourge of SLAPPs is unfor­tu­nate­ly spread­ing into new areas, such as sex­u­al harass­ment, clin­i­cal neg­li­gence and land­lord and ten­ant dis­putes. The pur­pose of this Bill is to tack­le such behav­iour. If the behav­iour looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it’s a SLAPP. [Interruption.] Sorry, that is rather clum­sy English. I am sure Hansard will cor­rect me.

This Bill is a major step for­ward, and it is time to leg­is­late. The major­i­ty of SLAPPs were thought to be linked to eco­nom­ic crime, but it is time to move on and make the def­i­n­i­tion more all-encompassing.

I will cov­er a cou­ple of points raised by hon. Members. My hon. Friend the Member for West Bromwich East (Nicola Richards) raised the Belton case again. Information from all SLAPPs cas­es formed part of the call for evi­dence, so I can reas­sure her that the activ­i­ties in the Belton case will be part of the foun­da­tion of this Bill.

My hon. Friend the Member for Heywood and Middleton (Chris Clarkson) spoke about forum shop­ping, which I will look at, and I am sure he will raise it in his cus­tom­ary fash­ion in Committee. I am sure the hon. Member for Caerphilly will urge him not to talk quite as much as he promises.

It is a cred­it to this Parliament that Members of all par­ties have ral­lied to sup­port action on this issue and to intro­duce new laws to help ensure the integri­ty of our jus­tice sys­tem and to sup­port the free­doms and pro­tec­tions that we all cher­ish. In some ways, a pri­vate Member’s Bill is the most fit­ting way to com­plete what the Government started.

I have spo­ken about the work we are doing with the Solicitors Regulation Authority to ensure that it tight­ens up its reg­u­la­tion, and we will con­tin­ue to engage with it. I pay trib­ute to the UK Anti-SLAPP Coalition, which has been an enor­mous­ly effec­tive stake­hold­er. The coali­tion has sup­port­ed the Government’s efforts, and I thank it for its con­sis­tent engage­ment and clar­i­ty on this issue.

The Department for Culture, Media and Sport launched the SLAPPs task­force last September, with a remit to devel­op non-leg­isla­tive rec­om­men­da­tions to tack­le SLAPPs. Good progress is being made on a num­ber of fronts, and I thank the Secretary of State for her tire­less commitment.

Internationally, the UK was rep­re­sent­ed as an expert mem­ber of the Council of Europe’s Working Group on SLAPPs, which con­clud­ed its man­date in December 2023. The draft rec­om­men­da­tion which was pro­duced over the course of two years will now make its way to the Committee of Ministers, and we trust that it will be even­tu­al­ly adopt­ed in all 46 mem­ber states.

The Government act­ed last October by leg­is­lat­ing against SLAPPs, because we must not allow our courts to be abused and our legal sys­tem manip­u­lat­ed. We are there­fore pleased to sup­port the Bill, and will continue 

to ensure that those who speak out against cor­rup­tion, who hold the pow­er­ful to account and who guard our free­doms through their voic­es are protected.

Let me again thank the hon. Member for Caerphilly for pro­mot­ing the Bill. I also thank the offi­cials at the Ministry of Justice for pro­vid­ing all the nec­es­sary sup­port as we move forward.

10.40am

Wayne David 

With the leave of the House, I am very pleased that we have had such a good debate. It is laud­able that so many Members in all parts of the House have tak­en the time to attend and to make such excel­lent con­tri­bu­tions. I also pay trib­ute to peo­ple and organ­i­sa­tions out­side the House, notably the UK Anti-SLAPP Coalition. It has worked tire­less­ly on this issue for some time, and its input has been of tremen­dous val­ue. I thank the Ministry of Justice and its civ­il ser­vants for their assis­tance, its brief­in­gs and its con­struc­tive engage­ment at all times.

There are a num­ber of issues that many Members con­sid­er par­tic­u­lar­ly impor­tant, such as the so-called issue of sub­jec­tive tests. I am inclined to agree with what the Minister said in sum­ming up the debate, but I accept that there is room for fur­ther dis­cus­sion, and we will be able to deal with it in some detail if the Bill goes into Committee.

I agree that cost is a fun­da­men­tal issue. A num­ber of Members have cit­ed exam­ples in which it is enor­mous­ly impor­tant in ensur­ing that jus­tice is done and is seen to be done. In her evi­dence to a Select Committee, the author Catherine Belton said that in London a sin­gle let­ter cost as much as £9,000, address­ing con­cerns that had been expressed by a num­ber of peo­ple. If one let­ter costs £9,000, we all know how much an entire case could cost. Surely that can­not be right in a demo­c­ra­t­ic coun­try which prides itself on free­dom of speech, in which free­dom of speech is piv­otal, and which allows jus­tice for all.

I hope very much that the Bill will con­tin­ue its progress through the House and will reach the statute book, because I think that that would be a huge step for­ward for par­lia­men­tary democracy.

Question put and agreed to.

Bill accord­ing­ly read a Second time; to stand com­mit­ted to a Public Bill Committee (Standing Order No. 63).

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