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This is a growing movement. England's democratic deficit has been ignored for too long — and we intend to change that.

Building the case, raising awareness

English Democracy exists because a specific, concrete and long-overdue constitutional question has been ignored by the political establishment for over three hundred years. We are in the process of raising awareness of the democratic imbalance and structural unfairness at the heart of the Westminster system — and building the evidence base that makes that case impossible to dismiss.

We are committed to keeping this site updated with the latest information, news and progress on this active campaign. The argument is being made. The history is being told. The evidence is on the record.

Please check back regularly for updates — this is a living campaign, not a static document.

Three things that move this forward

01
Read and share
The most powerful thing you can do right now is read the case, share it with people you know, and help build the audience for this argument.
02
Talk about it
Raise the West Lothian question in conversation. Ask your MP why England has no parliament. The more people ask, the harder it becomes to ignore.
03
Stay engaged
Return to this site as it grows. Follow the campaign as it develops. Constitutional change requires sustained, informed public pressure — not a single moment.

Where this campaign is heading

Awareness is the necessary first step. But awareness without political representation is incomplete. If this campaign generates the interest and support we believe this subject deserves, we have a clear next objective.

A political party for English citizens

If we can garner the interest and support this subject needs, we plan to launch a political party to represent the English citizens of the United Kingdom — one dedicated solely to achieving true democratic reform and ensuring that all regions of these islands receive the proper democratic balance and respect they all deserve.

This would not be a nationalist party in any conventional sense. It would be a constitutional party — one that argues for England's place within a fairer, more stable union, and that holds the political establishment accountable for the democratic deficit it has created and sustained.

We are not there yet. But the groundwork being laid on this site — the historical record, the constitutional argument, the documented evidence of how the current system has failed English voters — is the foundation that any serious political movement requires.

The question is not whether England deserves a parliament. History answers that clearly. The question is whether enough people care enough to demand one.