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Self explanatory title. I abhor that nicey nicey, politically correct, pseudo-Christianity which almost always supports leftwing attitudes - which in most cases are profoundly anti-Gospel. This Blog supports persecuted Christians. This Blog exposes cults. This Blog opposes junk science. UPDATED DAILY. This is not a forum. This Blog supports truly Christian websites and aids their efforts. It is hardhitting and unashamedly evangelical so if it offends - please do not come to this site!
Wednesday, July 01, 2026
Tribunals - In Their Present Form - MUST Go! - AWESOME Reporting, Alan!
Britain’s addiction to tribunals is bankrupting the country.
Canadian businessman Alan Hibben has unpicked the UK’s culture of complaining and found a parallel justice system that wastes time and money
Alan Hibben
As a Canadian businessman resident in the UK for my wife’s job, I have become very interested in the things that have made this once-great country the disaster that it is today. I don’t want to pick on the UK, as Canada has many of its own examples of things not working. But now, as I am in my 70s and don’t work full-time, I have had more time to look in detail at the causes of Britain’s decline.
That is how I noticed one glaring issue that, so far, no one has sought to address – the country has become suffocated by tribunals, which are driven by a culture of constant complaining.
I became aware of the scale of the problem after a friend who works in asset management told me about how he had been caught up in an employment tribunal. A young man who was a contract employee was, for various reasons, passed over for a full-time staff job. So he did what English people do, which is complain to an employment tribunal. Given the fact that he didn’t get the full-time job, he asked the tribunal to award him the salary of the full-time job for the rest of his life – the equivalent of a few million pounds.
The company was quite concerned about the claim and fought it. By the end, they were down several hundred thousand pounds in legal fees and various other costs, while the complainant didn’t pay a penny. For the most part, he represented himself. Eventually, he was awarded around £20,000 for “injury to feelings” because he claimed some of his colleagues were mean to him. He felt he had been discriminated against because he was male and from an ethnic minority background. That’s when I started to think, “In what other areas of life are tribunals being used this way?”
I found out that my friend’s case was the tip of the iceberg. More than 80 statutory regimes – from tax to benefits to child support – have an accompanying tribunal system, and the result is a tremendous waste of time, effort and money. Over the past 30 years, the tribunals have become a sprawling parallel justice system that covers issues, including employment, immigration and Freedom of Information requests.
The tribunal system was actually designed to streamline cases that didn’t need to go to court, and to keep matters that were too small to justify the expense out of the justice system. Now, it is so inefficient, costly and suffocating that it has had the opposite effect.
As a Canadian businessman resident in the UK for my wife’s job, I have become very interested in the things that have made this once-great country the disaster that it is today. I don’t want to pick on the UK, as Canada has many of its own examples of things not working. But now, as I am in my 70s and don’t work full-time, I have had more time to look in detail at the causes of Britain’s decline.
That is how I noticed one glaring issue that, so far, no one has sought to address – the country has become suffocated by tribunals, which are driven by a culture of constant complaining.
I became aware of the scale of the problem after a friend who works in asset management told me about how he had been caught up in an employment tribunal. A young man who was a contract employee was, for various reasons, passed over for a full-time staff job. So he did what English people do, which is complain to an employment tribunal. Given the fact that he didn’t get the full-time job, he asked the tribunal to award him the salary of the full-time job for the rest of his life – the equivalent of a few million pounds.
The company was quite concerned about the claim and fought it. By the end, they were down several hundred thousand pounds in legal fees and various other costs, while the complainant didn’t pay a penny. For the most part, he represented himself. Eventually, he was awarded around £20,000 for “injury to feelings” because he claimed some of his colleagues were mean to him. He felt he had been discriminated against because he was male and from an ethnic minority background. That’s when I started to think, “In what other areas of life are tribunals being used this way?”
I found out that my friend’s case was the tip of the iceberg. More than 80 statutory regimes – from tax to benefits to child support – have an accompanying tribunal system, and the result is a tremendous waste of time, effort and money. Over the past 30 years, the tribunals have become a sprawling parallel justice system that covers issues, including employment, immigration and Freedom of Information requests.
The tribunal system was actually designed to streamline cases that didn’t need to go to court, and to keep matters that were too small to justify the expense out of the justice system. Now, it is so inefficient, costly and suffocating that it has had the opposite effect.
A huge industry has sprung up around it. Somebody has to skim off the money, and in this case, most of the time, it’s the lawyers. I don’t want to criticise them, as they are professionals, but the incentive is obviously for them to continue trying to squeeze out what they can get for their client.
There are many such examples from employment tribunals where, as in asylum cases, the person complaining often pays nothing, not even if they lose. The company they have complained about, meanwhile, will have spent between £7,200 and £50,000 before the first witness is called, according to our research – and that is just for the most marginal cases. In fact, many cases that are heard in tribunals should have been thrown out before they reached that stage – a point that presiding judges often make themselves. It is an own goal.
Over the course of working on our report, we came across countless, staggering examples of wasted resources. In one property dispute from January of this year, where a landlord had claimed £47,000 from leaseholders in service charges, these costs were reduced by just £400 – after a full tribunal that would have cost many multiples of the sum awarded. There may have been no other way to solve this other than through a tribunal, but it does make you wonder whether a better triage system is needed.
In another case against HMRC, a group of opportunistic taxpayers who had used stamp duty land tax avoidance schemes were awarded £1 after a costly full hearing. They claimed they had been unfairly investigated by the taxman and appealed for costs amounting to over £80,000. The tribunal upheld their appeal, but only on a technicality. Ultimately, the taxpayers weren’t entitled to the stamp duty land tax relief – they had just got lucky (hence the award of only £1). But, because the claimants won, the costs were paid by HMRC.
These pale in comparison with an example from the Information Tribunal (formerly known as the Data Protection Tribunal), where an individual had waged a one-man war against various public bodies for 30 years. He had been making information requests, demanding investigations and appeals from a university, then a council, since 1992. This continued until a tribunal found a way to stop it. Again, the complainant never paid a penny.
We settled on including just a few examples in the report, as there were so many, and so many of them were completely farcical. Others, meanwhile, just show a system that is failing at its core. Special educational needs and disabilities (Send) is another area I focus on, because the Government or local councils lose up to 95 per cent of cases brought by parents over provision, funding and alleged discrimination against their children.
The public sector wastes £60m to 80m a year on such disputes, and the law makes it virtually impossible for a Send case to be overturned. The problem there isn’t the tribunal itself – it is the system that underpins it. And yet applications have risen exponentially in recent years – they held steady at 3,000 to 4,000 per year until 2016, but last year hit 23,861. There have been 21,344 in the first nine months of this year.
I believe much of this could quite easily be addressed. In previous decades, when a small fee was introduced for tribunals, it decreased the case load dramatically. For example, when employment tribunal fees were introduced in 2013, claims fell by 69 per cent. Then, when the Supreme Court struck them down in 2017, claims rose by 39 per cent.
Some of these things are real problems that need real solutions. The focus must be on them. Until it shifts, every day there will be another crop of cases that cost an awful lot of money yet will get nowhere.
Fulani Terrorists Kill Even More Christians.
Fulani terrorists kill 28 Christians in central Nigeria
25 Jun, 2026 13:35 EDTFulani herdsmen guided toward Christian leaders on Monday (June 22) killed 28 Christians, including a pastor, in a raid on a village in Plateau state, Nigeria, sources said. CD.
So Many Do Not Even Recognise The War Being Waged Against Us.
The restoration of the West can't happen without Christianity - and more people are realising it!
If day one of the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) conference focused on the deconstruction of Western civilization, day two turned to the equally challenging question: what will it take to rebuild it? CD.
Pembrokeshire County Council. Pah!
Church in Wales threatens legal action over attempt to secularise faith school.
Cilgerran Voluntary Controlled Primary School. (Photo: Church in Wales)The Church in Wales is threatening legal action against Pembrokeshire County Council if it persists with a plan to remove church status from Cilgerran Voluntary Controlled Primary School.
The Church said the plan represents a threat to church education in the county, which is also the birthplace of Wales’ patron saint, David. Additionally, the Church noted that 97 per cent of responses to the consultation on the proposal opposed the plan.
The Church argued that removing church status from the school in such a manner was discrimination against faith schooling.
In response, the Church has said it will not make the school grounds available to a subsequent secular school. This would effectively mean that a school has been closed down, rather than changing the nature of an existing school.
The Church suggested that the council has a poor record when it comes to supporting faith schools, pointing to the case of Manorbier Church in Wales Voluntary Controlled School which the council decided to close earlier this month. Students numbers had been declining since a fire damaged the school in 2022, with remaining students using temporary accommodation for much of their education.
Despite apparently receiving promises from the council that the school would be rebuilt, nothing was done and the school has declined to the point where closure is seen as the only viable option.
A spokesperson for the Church in Wales said, “Pembrokeshire County Council’s behaviour in the case of Manorbier VC School has been utterly unconscionable. The Council has presided over a catalogue of delay, incompetence and broken promises resulting in the literal destruction of a thriving school which has served its community for more than 150 years.
“Taken together with the gratuitous attack on the church status of Ysgol Cilgerran, this amounts to a targeted assault on the inclusive Christian education which Church in Wales schools have provided to their communities for generations.
“That the council should be pursuing this potentially discriminatory action against Church schools in the county which is the cradle of Christianity in Wales, and which takes pride in being the birthplace and shrine of our nation’s Patron Saint, is a bitter irony. We are not prepared to allow it to happen and we look to the county’s elected representatives to halt this destructive course of action.”
Faith Is The Key.
Faith is the key to the West’s renewal, says Os Guinness.
Os Guinness delivering the closing address to the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship's 2026 conference at the London Olympia. (Photo: Parsons Media)Esteemed theologian Os Guinness closed out the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) conference in London last night with a call to the West to return to its biblical foundations.
Guinness said the challenge of the day was to build “a global, human-friendly future, not just for England or America or Europe, but for people all around the world longing for a world with a high view of the sanctity of life, of the dignity of the individual person, of equality and dignity for all, and liberty and justice for all”.
That will not happen if society only turns to “the easy, the convenient, the fashionable and the comfortable”. Nor will it happen without faith. CD.
Success For This Blog.
June has been a mighty time for this Blog with a new record of over 1.2 million visits to the site in June of 2026.
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