Dear Prime Minister,
We, the undersigned, write to urge you to repeal the unfair Voter ID laws brought in under the last Government.
More than 400,000 were prevented from voting on the day you became Prime Minister. 6.5% of voters of colour reported being turned away from the polls at least once.
The appalling statistics and stories coming out of election day are clear: these anti-democratic laws were an attack on Black and Brown people, and other marginalised communities. They do nothing to further democracy.
Polling shows that minority communities were 2.5 times more likely to be stopped from voting than white people. Yet again, our democracy is working against us, rather than for us.
We know that the last Government put this law in place to further their own party political interests. They knew it was more often poor, Black and Brown people that don’t have the right ID. The former Conservative Minister Jacob Rees Mogg himself even described it as an attempt at “gerrymandering.”
These laws are an attack on the democratic rights of people of colour, and leave people without a say in the running of our country. Our right to vote is even more important at a time when over half of Black children are living in poverty in Britain. People have been denied a say in shaping our country’s future. This has to change before the next election.
Voter ID rules represent a solution no one asked for, to a problem that didn’t exist. Just 0.1% of voter fraud allegations between 2017-2022, when this law was introduced, resulted in a conviction. Two people convicted, Prime Minister. And that was a period covering not one but two general elections. And yet hundreds of thousands have just been prevented from engaging in democracy.
It’s not using a sledge hammer to crack a nut, it’s bringing in a wrecking ball. Rather than spending £180 million of taxpayers' money every decade on unnecessary guidance and clamping down on a non-existent problem, we should simply let people vote – and celebrate them doing so. As the UK’s new Prime Minister, that historic responsibility falls to you.
It doesn’t have to be like this. In many countries, people are placed automatically on their electoral register. That should happen here – but instead in the UK, the previous Government put obstacles in people’s way. The result: historically low turnout.
In a democracy, every vote should count. It’s time our communities got their vote back.
Prime Minister, please scrap voter ID laws, and look urgently at implementing automatic voter registration.
Signed,
Adjoa Andoh, Actor
Afua Hagan, Journalist and broadcaster
Angela McLeary, Lived experience campaigner
Anish Kapoor, Artist
Asha Haji, Global tech founder, advisor
Caleb Femi, Writer, filmmaker and photographer
Caroline Tosal-Suprun, Network Manager, Structural Inequalities Alliance David Harewood OBE, Actor
David Weaver, Chair of Operation Black Vote board
Ekow Eshun, Writer and curator
Femi Oluwole, Human rights & Anti-Brexit campaigner and writer
Gary Younge, Professor and journalist
George The Poet, Spoken word artist and podcaster
Godfried Donkor, Artist
Gracie Mae Bradley, Writer and ex-Director of Liberty
Hope Ikpoku, Actor/musician
Hugh Quarshie, Actor
India Amarteifio, Actor
Jabeer Butt , Chief Executive, Race Equality Foundation
Jackie Kay, Poet and author
Jacqueline Taiwo, Registered Voter
Kamila Shamsie, Writer and novelist
Kanya King CBE, CEO MOBO Org & MOBOLISE
Kemi Alemoru, Journalist
Kingsley Ben-Adir , Actor
Kobna Holdbrook-Smith MBE, Actor
Kolbassia Haoussou, Director of Survivor Empowerment, Freedom from Torture Larry Achiampong, Artist
Lennie James, Actor and screenwriter
Sir Lenny Henry, Actor, comedian and writer
Liz Davies, Emeritus professor
Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Actor
Meka Beresford, Head of Policy, Action for Race Equality
Minnie Rahman, CEO, Praxis
Misan Harriman, Photographer and Chair of the Southbank Centre Naomi Ackie, Actor
Naomi Evans, Co-Founder Everyday Racism
Nels Abbey, Writer
Noma Dumezweni, Actor
Paterson Joseph, Actor and author
Phyll Opoku-Gyimah, aka Lady Phyll (she/her), CEO and Co-Founder of UK Black Pride Reni Eddo-Lodge, Author
Ronx IKHARIA , Doctor, author, activist
Saba Shafi, CEO, The Advocacy Academy
Shabna Begum, CEO, Runnymede Trust
Dr Shola Mos-Shogbamimu, Political & women's rights activist
Sophie Okonedo, Actor
Thomas J Price, Artist
Tiernan Douieb, Writer and comedian
Timi Okuwa , CEO, Black Equity Organisation
Dr Wanda Wyporska, CEO, Safe Passage International
Zak Ové, Artist
Full story in the Guardian.
Join our mailing list
Join our community and stay up to date with our latest work and news.
Media Enquiries
On matters concerning racial justice, we have something to say.