Our Plan

We’re fighting for a political system that works for all of us, not just the rich and powerful.

We deserve to live in a country where we all have the power to make our voices heard, and create real change on the issues that matter most to us — whether that’s the cost of living, NHS waiting lists, or crime.

This means cleaning up Westminster, so it no longer rewards people who use our politics for profit. Here are our demands:

Ask 1

Take big money out of politics

There’s no limit on political donations in Britain — and the mega-rich are using that loophole to buy influence over every party.

Whether Labour, Tory, Reform or Green, all political parties need money to campaign for your vote, and rely on donations to fundraise. Currently, there’s no limit on the size of donations you can make to a British political party — and there are loopholes that allow donations to come from shady sources.

This means if you have a lot of money, you can buy a huge amount of influence, and right now donations from foreign sources, anonymous cryptocurrency, and harmful industries like gambling or oil, are all holding huge sway over our politics.

Politicians are selling influence and the mega-rich are buying it.

Our demand: Take big money out of politics. Cap donations to stop our democracy being sold to the highest bidder.
Ask 2

Crack down on corruption and misconduct

Right now there’s very little punishment for bad behaviour in office — in fact, it’s often rewarded with book deals, knighthoods and ambassadorships.

In recent years, our politicians have lied to parliament, dodged taxes, and shared government secrets with a convicted child abuser. None of these dirty facts ended careers. They led to book deals, ambassadorships, and knighthoods.

Our demand: Crackdown on corruption and misconduct. Nobody should be above the law and the worst offenders should go to jail.
Ask 3

Clean out the House of Lords

You don’t need to win an election to run this country. You just need to write a big enough cheque — and the House of Lords proves it.

What happens when a politician is disgraced? They get the chance to leave in style, appointing all their mates to make their fortune in the House of Lords.

These appointments are rarely made on merit. Nearly 1 in 4 people in the House of Lords bought their way in through donations to the political party who nominated them.

Once appointed, peers can claim £371 per day in allowances, even if they only show up for five minutes. They don’t need to vote, speak in debates, or do any work beyond entering the building.

  • Fifteen members of the House of Lords claimed £585,985 in allowances during the 2024–25 parliament without speaking in a single debate or doing any committee work.
  • Michelle Mone was appointed to the Lords by David Cameron. Her husband’s company was later awarded a COVID PPE contract through a ‘VIP lane’. The gowns supplied were unusable and left in storage. Despite this, Mone secretly received £29 million in profits from the deal.
  • There are over 800 people in the House of Lords — the second-largest law-making chamber on earth. Not one of them won a public vote to earn their place.
Our demand: Replace the Lords with a smaller, democratic second chamber. Limits on how long people can serve. No more peerages for donors. No more Lords lobbying for pay.