• Take 10,000 refugees from Syria.
    The refugee crisis is the worst humanitarian disaster to affect Europe and its neighbours since WW2. We must act now to protect those who are fleeing a war-zone which was of the West's making.
    51 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Patrick Greenough
  • Free the 'vice' journalists in Turkey
    These journalists are accused of working with and for two enemies??? These arrests are more to silence the Turkish press. Free them and allow them to continue their work. This is outrageous behaviour and achieves nothing but grief.
    7 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Julia Haworth
  • We'll take Syrians into our homes
    Syrian refugees are leaving their beloved country due to the civil war and pressure from Assad and ISIS. Syrian nationals are experiencing persecution and genocide , depending on race and faith. In World War Two Britain offered sanctuary to thousands of Jews fleeing persecution. Once again we should open our country and our homes to these people. This is a global humanitarian crisis. These are not economic migrants: they are refugees of a crisis of which Britain is partly responsible. We owe it to these people, as fellow humans , to extend sanctuary as relief from their suffering. It is purely by chance that they were born in Syria and we in the UK. Were the situation to be reversed we would hope the same from them.
    31 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Alice Johnston
  • Refugees Welcome
    The Great British People and the real UK stand for World Peace and International Friendship. David Cameron has sponsored terrorists and a fascist regime in Kiev. If there is one person who needs removal from the UK it is David Cameron.
    4 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Eva and Paul Bright Picture
  • The Refugees.
    What sort of Nation are we and our government. WHERE IS THE LOVE AND COMPASSION GONE. Please sign.
    2 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Russell Cornish
  • Saving Refugees in the Med
    The people wouldn't take such risks if it didn't offer them better hope than they had at home. They will still come regardless and boats will still capsize and children will still drown if we do nothing to help reduce the amount. This is a human tragedy and we must increase what we are doing to help the victims.
    2 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Michael Birchmore
  • Stop premium charges on benefit helplines
    People who are struggling to survive, should not be charged for calling numbers to arrange benefits.
    10 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Ryan Castledine
  • Provide more support for refugees
    I believe this country should be showing more compassion to refugees who are seeking safety. We need to consider helping these people feel safe and allow those in danger a safe haven in this country. We need to help reduce the number of people drowning because of the desperate situation they are in and take the lead from other european countries who are trying to help these people.
    5 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Paul Leeming
  • Show humanity and give asylum to refugees
    The world is facing the worst refugee crisis since the Second World War. We need to plan and take humane measures both short and long term to do what is right
    30 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Janice Illingworth
  • Save our local surgery - Balham
    The surgery currently serves over 4000 patients in our local area. The one GP we have left at the surgery is struggling to attract younger doctors to work at the practice, mainly because the premises needs modernising and developing. This will require an investment of funds from NHS England or from a benevolent property developer. Our GP is reluctant to move but feels she has no choice. If there is no money to develop the premises, the proposal is to merge with a 7000 patient surgery on the other side of town. I feel there is so much to lose if this move should take place, especially the loss of community, which I think will never recover once it has been lost
    3 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Des Figueiredo
  • Ban buy-to-let landlords refusing DSS payments from the homeless.
    There is an epidemic of homelessness in the United Kingdom. It is illegal under The Equality Act 2010. for a business to discriminate against individuals based on their sex, sexual orientation, physical/mental disability or race, and YET... Homeless individuals are more likely to be: - Male - Suffering from mental illness - Suffering from physical disability - From the LGBT community - From black and minority ethnic backgrounds By refusing DSS (housing benefit) as a method of paying rent, letting agents and buy-to-let landlords are indirectly discriminating against sections of society which would be protected under law, because they are homeless. Please sign and share
    16 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Nick Hanson
  • Scrap the £5 deposit from the Oyster card and let poor people back on the bus.
    It is important because London's buses no longer accept cash. For many people on low income having £5 locked away in a card is simply not an option. This makes it impossible for many of the people we share the city with to use public transport. This creates a class of people who are entirely unable to use the bus even when the do have the £2 fare for their journey. The scheme seems to serve no purpose beyond providing TFL with a large amount of their service users capital in the bank. A cynic might argue that it's a social engineering device designed to keep the poorest in our society out of sight and out of mind from the everyday population, however even it is simply an oversight brought in by a committee who earn enough money to never have experienced this problem, it is a system that is not fit for purpose. To argue that the deposit is a deposit on the card is simply nonsense. When the deposit is refunded, the card becomes a useless piece of plastic waste that cannot even be reinstated by repaying the £5 interest levy. There is no good reason whatsoever that an oyster card should not be available at any time of the day free of charge to anyone who wishes to pay the correct fair for their journey. As an occasional rough sleeper and a person unable to claim job seeker benefits due to having no permanent address, I have on numerous occasions found myself having to cash out my card and then pay a premium on the bus simply in order to get myself to the occasional work I am able to find, and then even should I make enough tips to afford the bus, and even if I finish work during the hours where it's actually possible to purchase an oyster card, I still need to find an additional £5 over and above the fare just to get home. This compounds poverty in numerous ways. Not only am I then forced to pay a higher fee on the train but frequently find myself unable to travel at all if my journey requires a bus. I am then forced to reflect on the long occasionally dangerous walk home, as I burn off far more of my hard earned calories than I need whilst empty buses simply pass me by, that London values my time as little as my safety and basic humanity. A perfect illustration of how this serves as a very real and easily resolvable example of how poverty creates more poverty can be shown by the following story. "Having cashed out my oyster card to afford the train into town to look for work, I had essentially nothing left at the end of the day. I invested my last 1.30 on a pen. I used the pen to make street art. Enough people wanted to patronise me that I made 11.10 and something to eat. I was now delighted to find that after my days work i had enough money to restock a new pen for the following days work, put a five pound deposit on an oyster card, use the remaining money to pay my fare and have enough change to drink some water on the way home. Except i couldn't, because there was no where in the city i could purchase an oyster card. Instead i was forced to wear out my shoes and burn all the calories i had earned wandering the streets to keep warm for the next three hours before eventually being let into the station. At this point i found there where still no facilities to purchase an oyster card, leaving me the option to spend 6.90 on a one way ticket, leaving me a valid oyster card with 4.80 credit down short of what i would have made, or spending another hour of my life waiting for the rush hour when the price of a single oyster trip would leave me exactly as poor as the the one way ticket, but with my money trapped in a transit system i no longer felt confidence in. Neither of these options felt like the best way for me to increase the odds that i could afford a regular monthly ticket in the future so i just walked onto the train through the unstaffed barriers." TFL is there to serve all of our fellow citizens and visitors, and it is disgrace that people on the breadline are disadvantaged and dehumanised by the necessity of keeping capital that they do not posses inside TFL's bank account simply in order to gain access to the public transportation system.
    15 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Andy MacKay