Supporting charities' right to campaign

Quakers in Britain are supporting the Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations (ACEVO), defending charities' right to campaign.

Bright pink banner says Quakers for peace
Quakers defending charities' right to work for just and peaceful society.

This week, 20 Conservative MPs complained to the Charity Commission about the Runnymede Trust's response to a report by the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities. That report has been widely discredited.

In an open letter to the prime minister, Quakers in Britain showed their solidarity with the Runnymede Trust and all civil society organisations working to create a just and peaceful society.

The full ACEVO statement is here

“In a debate in parliament yesterday Sir John Hayes (Conservative) said that he and 20 other members of the House had written to the Charity Commission to complain about the Runnymede Trust's response to the report by the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities. A report that has now been widely discredited including by academics referenced in the report and the UN. Further to this Sir John asked for assurance from minister Kemi Badenoch that she make representations across government to “stop the worthless work—often publicly funded—of organisations that are promulgating weird, woke ideas…"

“Many charities exist because the state has failed and a clear example of the failure of the state is a failure to dismantle race inequality in Britain. This is not the first time that MPs have complained to the Charity Commission when charities have sought to raise awareness about or tackle the issues that are harming people that MPs are elected to serve. The changes that charities are asking for are not “worthless" or “weird" but focused on solving some of this country's most enduring challenges.

“In 2014 Conservative MP Connor Burns complained to the Charity Commission about an Oxfam campaign which linked cuts in benefits to poverty. Last year Conservative MPs who have come together as the 'Common Sense Group' called for a Charity Commission investigation into Barnardo's after it published an article explaining white privilege. The Charity Commission CEO has already made it clear, in a blog written in response to complaints made about the National Trust's work on colonialism, that 'Charities are allowed to campaign and to take controversial opinions in support of their purpose…'

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The changes that charities are asking for are not “worthless" or “weird" but focused on solving some of this country's most enduring challenges.

- ACEVO statement

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“Yesterday's debate in parliament comes in the same week that the Greensill lobbying scandal has shown that those with power and connections have access to the heart of the government while those campaigning on social justice issues are frequently denied an audience, in the same year that the government has introduced a bill that closes down the space to protest, and in the same decade in which we have seen a Lobbying Act that created a chilling effect on civil society campaigning, party political appointments to senior roles in non-ministerial departments (including the Charity Commission) and in public bodies. While party political appointments to important public offices have occurred under successive governments of different parties, the Good Law Project is currently seeking to end that practice by bringing a judicial review. This judicial review has been joined by the Runnymede Trust who are challenging the equality of the hiring practices.

“Many of the issues that charities deal with are political, not party political (which is against charity law) but political in the sense that they are issues of the people. Civicus, a global alliance dedicated to strengthening citizen action, defines the civil space in the UK as 'narrowed'. Civic space means the space in which citizens and civil society organisations are able to organise, participate and communicate without hindrance. This means that civic action is more constrained in the UK than it is in neighbouring countries like the Republic of Ireland and fellow G7 countries like Germany and Canada.

“We stand in solidarity with all those working to end racism and recognise that organisations run by racialised people and organisations seeking to tackle inequality are disproportionately targeted by attempts to discredit and quieten them. We also stand with all charities and civil society organisations working for the public good to create the kind of safe, just and free society that benefits us all."

Full list of signatories is here, including Paul Parker, Recording Clerk for Quakers in Britain