Remembering David Shutt

It was with great sadness that JRRT learned of the death on 30 October 2020 of our friend and colleague David Shutt, Lord Shutt of Greetland OBE.

David joined the board of JRRT, then known as the Joseph Rowntree Social Services Trust, in 1975. He gave great service to the Trust as one of our longest-standing and most influential directors, overseeing our finances and helping to guide our political direction throughout his tenure. He served as Chair from 2007 to 2010. Throughout his service, his firm Quaker beliefs and Liberal principles helped keep the Trust moving along the lines set out for us in 1904 by our founder, Joseph Rowntree. David played a key role in the Power Inquiry (a joint project with the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust) and kept the Trust focussed on the purity of elections, including voter registration and party funding reform; causes that remain central to the work of JRRT’s grantees today.

In 2000, David was appointed as a working peer, and served as Spokesman for the Liberal Democrats on International Development and then Northern Ireland, as well as Liberal Democrat Deputy Whip in the Lords, and then Chief Whip. When the Coalition Government was created in May 2010, David was appointed to a ministerial position as the Government Deputy Chief Whip in the House of Lords.

David resigned from the Trust’s board in 2010 when he went into government, but remained an active, valued and vocal advocate of JRRT as a member of the company. His commitment, kindness and humour were much valued and will be greatly missed.

JRRT sponsors the annual David & Goliath Award at the SMK National Campaigner Awards in memory of David.

SMK National Campaigner Awards 2020

The Sheila McKechnie Foundation (SMK) was set up 15 years ago to honour and preserve the memory of legendary campaigner Sheila McKechnie. Sheila described herself as a ‘fully paid up member of the awkward squad’. This mind-set, combined with formidable research and a commitment to constructing a watertight argument, made her campaigning powers legendary.

 

The SMK National Campaigner Awards

Each year, SMK celebrates the best campaigns and campaigners – whether working locally or nationally, and from individuals and community groups to people working in large organisations. Their interest is in finding those who have made change happen – most effectively, creatively and courageously.

The SMK David and Goliath Award was sponsored by the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust, and reflects one of our key aims: to strengthen the hand of those individuals and small organisations which fight large scale and systemic injustice.

In 2020, there was an especially strong field of nominees for the award, and the judges agreed that all those nominated would be very worthy winners.

The award was presented to Diarmaid McDonald and Plan B on Orkambi. Through this campaign, and through Diarmaid’s work, the families of children with cystic fibrosis have been able to fight the powerful pharmaceutical industry, and to ensure that the drugs their children need are fairly priced and available through the NHS.

The judges, including JRRT director Professor Sue Mendus, applaud the courage and tenacity of the winners and congratulate them on successfully fighting this Goliath.

 

Visit www.smk.org.uk/awards for more details.

Networking for democracy

“Our democracy faces serious challenges. Substantial new efforts are required to counter those challenges – and to build upon and improve our democracy. One of the most effective ways to support this work is to connect the efforts of those pursuing such goals.” 

Cover of Networking for DemocracyJoe Mitchell’s JRRT-funded report Networking for democracy synthesises evidence gathered following two months of interviews across the sector and a small literature review.

 

 

 

JRRT is interested in hearing the views of grantees, applicants and other campaigners on the report’s proposals.

 

Downloads and links: 

Executive Summary 

Full Report 

Google Document (for ongoing comments, corrections and clarifications)

 

Is it time for Automatic Voter Registration in the UK?

A research report by Toby James and Paul Bernal of the University of East Anglia considering the case for Automatic Voter Registration (AVR) was published on Wednesday 29 April 2020. The research was commissioned by the UK Democracy Fund, a pooled fund set up by JRRT.

 

Download the full report here 

 

  • Millions are missing from the electoral registers – the Electoral Commission estimated in September 2019 that some 17% of eligible voters in Great Britain were not correctly registered.

 

  • The delay of the May 2020 elections due to COVID-19 is generating debate about effective digital means of registering citizens ahead of the bumper package of elections in May 2021, with local, Mayoral and elections in the devolved nations.

 

  • Government announcements in late March on Boundary Reviews, which are based on registration data, add further urgency to calls for reform.

 

  • Cross party support is building with backing from the Political and Constitutional Reform Committee in its 2014 report on voter engagement and the APPG on Democratic Participation report in 2019.

 

Is AVR the solution?

 

The research report sets out the array of measures, such as automatic voter registration and assisted voter registration, that could be adopted. It considers the impacts on privacy, data protection, consent and security.

 

Download the full report here