
Moral Maze The Jury: Moral Innovation or Historic Relic?
Dec 4, 2025
Guest
Mona Siddiqui
Guest
Tim Stanley
Guest
Inaya Folarin Iman

Guest
Matthew Taylor
Guest
Tom Simpson
Guest
Anna Coote
Guest
Fiona Rutherford
Guest
Sir Simon Jenkins
Sir Simon Jenkins, a seasoned journalist, critiques the jury system as outdated, comparing it to international alternatives. Fiona Rutherford, from the Justice group, defends juries for building societal trust and diversity. Anna Coote advocates for citizens' juries, emphasizing their potential to enhance public decision-making. Tom Simpson raises concerns about accountability in citizens' assemblies. The discussion balances the historical significance of juries against modern needs, questioning whether reforms enhance or undermine justice.
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Episode notes
Backlog Drives Jury Reform Debate
- The proposal to limit juries aims to clear an 80,000-case backlog and speed trials.
- Reformers argue jury trials are a tiny (≈3%) but time-consuming part of the crisis.
Sir Simon Jenkins' Juror Experience
- Sir Simon Jenkins described three jury stints and found them inefficient and haphazard.
- He argued juries are not a citadel of liberty and favour continental judge-led models.
Use Judges With Civilian Assessors
- Replace juries with a judge plus two assessors to blend expertise and ordinariness.
- Look to mainland European systems for quicker, fairer outcomes with fewer prisons.



