Our Work in Parliament
Just 1% of national spend on cancer research has been allocated to brain tumours
Parliamentary Petitions
Petitions about brain tumours are created and driven by individuals.
Parliamentary e-petitions are an opportunity for our supporters and activists to be heard by Government and Parliament. The Government formally recognises such petitions and are required to respond.
For a petition to be successful it is important that it is written in such a way that action can be taken – we can help with this.
Read more Show lessHow the House of Commons petitions process works
Once a member of the public creates a petition on the Parliamentary website it will stay open for six months, as long as it is approved.
If a petition attracts 10,000 signatures, the Government will issue a response.
Should a petition reach 100,000 signatures, the Petitions Committee will consider the petition for debate in Parliament.
Debates involve MPs giving speeches as well as statements from a Government Minister and a member of the Official Opposition.
Members of the public can request to watch but are not permitted to speak in the debate.
Whilst we welcome the additional exposure that campaigning on platforms such as Avaaz, 38 Degrees, Change.org etc can bring, we focus our resources on challenging the Government via our own Petitions or those on the official Parliamentary e-petitions website.
Task and Finish Working Group on brain tumour research
In February 2018, a Department of Health & Social Care (DHSC) Task and Finish Working Group, which was established following an unprecedented e-petition where 120,129 signatories demanded more investment in brain tumour research, published its conclusions.
Chaired by Professor Chris Whitty, the DHSC Chief Scientific Adviser, and including clinicians, charities, other officials and a patient carer, the Working Group closely analysed the complex issues around research into brain tumours in the UK.
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