David Lammy using victims of rape as 'cudgel' to drive court reforms - Labour MP

Charlotte Nichols spoke of her own experiences of being raped

Charlotte Nichols said she was raped at an event she went to as a member of parliament
Author: George Thompson, Harry Taylor, Rhiannon James, George Lithgow and Abbie Llewelyn, Press Association Political StaffPublished 10th Mar 2026

A Labour MP has accused David Lammy of using victims as a “cudgel” to drive through reforms to the courts system, as she spoke of her own experience of being raped.

Charlotte Nichols, who has not previously spoken in the Commons about her experience, said she was raped at an event she attended as a member of Parliament.

She hit out at the Deputy Prime Minister’s plans to curb access to jury trials as MPs debated the Courts and Tribunals Bill, which will see cases with a likely sentence of three years or less being heard by a single crown court judge if passed.

Mr Lammy, who is also the Lord Chancellor, had earlier told MPs they faced a “stark” choice, warning there is an urgent need to address rising court backlogs as he pleaded with them to support the Bill.

Ms Nichols, MP for Warrington North, told the Commons on Tuesday:

"I waited 1,088 days to go to court.

"Every single one of those days was agony, made worse by having a role in public life that meant that the mental health consequences of my trauma were played out in public, with the event that led to my eventual sectioning for my own safety still being something that I receive regular social media abuse from strangers about to this day.

"But here’s the kicker, in this debate, experiences like mine feel like they’ve been weaponised and are being used for rhetorical misdirection, for what this Bill actually is.

"The violence against women and girls sector haven’t had the opportunity to come together to discuss it, and the Government’s framing and narrative has been to pit survivors and defendants against each other in a way I think is deeply damaging.

"We have been told that if we have concerns about this Bill, it is because we have not been raped or because we don’t care enough for rape victims. The opposite is true in my case, it is because I have been raped that I am as passionate as I am about what it means for a justice system to be truly victim focused.

"It is because I have endured every indignity that our broken criminal justice system could mete out that I care what kind of reform will actually deliver justice for survivors and victims of crime more widely."

She added:

"There is so much that we can be doing for rape victims that isn’t the Lord Chancellor using them as a cudgel to drive through reforms that aren’t directly relevant to them.

"As a starting point, Rape Crisis England and Wales have called for five key demands in their Living in Limbo report. Don’t say that this Bill helps deliver justice for rape victims, until it actually, materially does."

Natalie Fleet had earlier spoken in support of the Government, arguing it is “stepping up for victims”.

The Labour MP for Bolsover has previously spoken about her own experience of being groomed and raped.

She told the Commons:

"I can tell you from personal experience, you know what’s worse than being raped? Facing years of waiting to see if people believe you.”

"This is not about denying anybody justice. This is about enabling victims and innocent parties to have a more efficient path to getting that justice," she added.

Ms Fleet said she would do "everything I can to get as many rapists as I can in those courts", adding: "Trials by jury are part of our history, but we have to adapt when trials are taking twice as long as they did in the year 2000, we need to keep up too."

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