Your MP is YOUR elected representative. It is their job to listen to your concerns and raise them in Parliament. When enough constituents write about the same issue, MPs are obligated to act. Every single email matters. Every voice counts. This is a British Sikh family whose rights have been taken away without a trial, without a charge, without a single day in court. If we do not speak up for them, who will? This is not someone else's problem — this is our community, our brother, our family. Silence is not an option.
Political pressure is the single most powerful tool available to ordinary citizens. When MPs receive a significant volume of correspondence on an issue, they are compelled to raise it with Ministers, ask Parliamentary Questions, request debates, and demand answers from the government. This is how laws are changed. This is how injustices are overturned. Your one email joins hundreds of others to create a wave of pressure that cannot be ignored. One family cannot fight the government alone — but a community standing together can move mountains.
Absolutely not. Writing to your MP is a fundamental democratic right protected by law. It is one of the most basic freedoms in British democracy. Millions of people write to their MPs every year about issues they care about — from planning applications to human rights. There is no risk whatsoever. Your MP works for you. You are simply asking them to do their job. No one has ever been in trouble for writing a respectful letter to their elected representative. This is your right. Use it.
Yes. Your correspondence with your MP is confidential. MPs have a duty to respect the privacy of their constituents. Your letter is between you and your representative. It is not shared publicly, it is not reported to any authority, and it is not placed on any list. You are simply a constituent exercising your democratic right.
MPs have a duty to acknowledge correspondence from their constituents. Even if they cannot resolve the issue directly, your letter is logged and counted. The more letters they receive, the harder it becomes to ignore. If enough of us write, it becomes a political issue they cannot avoid. And remember: your email creates a formal record. It is documented evidence that the Sikh community raised this issue and demanded answers. History will remember who spoke up — and who stayed silent.
This is not about politics. This is about a family. A young wife who had to leave her job. A little girl who doesn't understand why her life changed overnight. A man who spent his life serving his community and is now unable to buy groceries without government permission. You don't need to be political. You just need to be human. It takes two minutes to send an email. Two minutes that could help bring justice to a family that has been destroyed. If this happened to your brother, your son, your neighbour — wouldn't you want someone to speak up?
Less than two minutes. The tool has already drafted the letter for you. All you need to do is enter your postcode, add your name, and click send. That's it. Two minutes. A family's future may depend on whether you take those two minutes today.