Skip to content

e-petitions: the first 100 days

e-petitions homepage

Last Saturday marked 100 days since the new e-petitions service was launched by GDS and the Office of the Leader of the House of Commons. The service continues to be incredibly popular -on average 18 people have signed an e-petition every minute since the service started.

e-petitions also maintains a very high social and mainstream media profile, with significant television and press coverage, especially when a petition nears or reaches the 100,000 signatures threshold required to trigger a debate in Parliament.

e-petitions statistics

There isn’t much of a pattern in terms of traffic to e-petitions on a day to day or week to week basis, with the range of daily visitor numbers to the site fluctuating between 2,000 and 350,000. It’s also interesting to note that approximately half of all submitted e-petitions are rejected for failing to meet the service’s terms and conditions - including duplication, defamation and relating to things the government can’t act on.

As I write there have been six e-petitions that have achieved the target of 100,000 signatures  (one of which has now closed) and are now eligible for debate in the House of Commons.

Of the six e-petitions which have passed the 100,000 threshold, two have been debated (the London riots and Hillsborough petitions), two are scheduled to be debated (Fuel Duty and Babar Ahmad – as part of a wider extradition debate) and one has been accepted for debate but will not be scheduled until the new year (Immigration). The only other outstanding petition, financial education in schools, is waiting for an MP to approach the Backbench Business Committee (who schedule e-petition debates), which should happen this month.

Despite some initial concerns voiced in social media (and ironically the subject of a number of e-petitions) that 100,000 signatures was too high, it is interesting to note that most of the petitions that have reached this target, have done so within one week – despite a 12 month allowance. Sitting and watching the Twitter stream when popular e-petitions receive media coverage or other high profile promotion, it’s easy to see how.

Commenting on these statistics, the Leader of the House of Commons, Sir George Young MP, said

I welcome the positive public response to the e-petitions site, which is an important way of building a bridge between people and Parliament.”

The special relationship

Not long after we launched e-petitions, the White House  announced they are were also about to launch an online petitions service - ‘We the people’. In doing so, they acknowledged having kept a keen eye on our work with e-petitions. Although there are enough differences in the way the systems operate to make direct comparisons a bit misleading (the US target for a response is 25,000 signatures, just increased from 5,000;  you get a formal response in the US rather than a formal debate in the UK; and the US, of course, has about five times the population of the UK) a quick look at the numbers can still be instructive.

‘We the People’ received 12,000 petitions and collected 1.2 million signatures in just over a month, at around 31,000 per day. Some quick number crunching shows a similar volume and rate of petitions and signatures between the two services in the early days.

What does this tell us? Well, what it does make clear is that there is a real appetite for online petitioning and that the widespread use of social media can make them a powerful tool for engaging with governments.

Iteration, iteration, iteration

Since we launched e-petitions, we’ve made a number of improvements to the service, including updates to the FAQ list, the addition of a feedback mechanism, increasing capacity to meet the higher than expected demand and  fixing the issues we faced on launch. As a result of this feedback, we are engaging across government and planning a release to add some of the more commonly requested features from users, ensuring that e-petitions continues to meet their needs. At that point, we’ll share the open source code. Here’s to the next 100 days….

Peter Herlihy is the Product Manager for e-petitions and Delivery Manager for the @GovUK corporate platform.

12 Comments Post a comment
  1. Thanks for your update (and stas!). Conversely, a recent study from Brunel on the effectiveness of local (e)Petition facilities has revealed that the number of local petitions has increased very slowly. In my opinion there should be more flow and syndication between local and central systems. For example, how many petitions have been rejected or need to be re-directed? How will this work with the digital dimension of the European Citizens Initiative?

    Likewise, why wasn’t the formal ePetition interoperability standard adopted?

    ..but what I really want to know is – what was the equality of users like? Is this a tool for the elite?

    16/11/2011
    • Peter Herlihy #

      Hi Fraser,

      Thanks for taking the time to comment. I agree with you that we should do more to improve the flow between local and central petitioning. As you note, there are a number of e-petitions coming in that are not in the gift of central government to act on, a number of which are local government issues as as such are being rejected from e-petitions. If a petition is rejected on these grounds, it would be great to ‘refer’ these to a more appropriate place. A capability we haven’t yet delivered in the service.

      It is an evolving product, we continue to iterate and we have learned a lot already. We are also working with, and feeding our thoughts into, the development of the ECI, who are interested in the lessons that we have learned.

      Regards e-petition being a tool for the elite and questioning the equality of users: I think the incredibly broad range of topics that e-petitions have been created about, tell us that there is a diverse range of users. We may take an opportunity to introduce some snap survey at some point to validate that, as your point is a very important one, this tool should be for everyone.

      22/11/2011
  2. Andrew Brigthwell #

    Hi Peter, Is there any way of getting hold of the data? It’d be lovely to have a good look at the numbers.

    21/11/2011
    • Peter Herlihy #

      Andrew, good question. Some of it, yes. Some of it (personal detail), no.

      We haven’t yet developed the detailed reporting that will allow us to produce and share the data we collect (of course, we have the raw data). This is high on the list of things we are likely to do in the next release, currently being scheduled, but ought to be in the next couple of months.

      22/11/2011
  3. innannna #

    Reblogged this on My Blog and commented:
    This is some idea !

    02/08/2012

Trackbacks & Pingbacks

  1. Gov justifies e-petitions as MPs mull upping debate threshold :: WES Computing
  2. UK Government e-petitions site gets 18 signatures a minute | Digital Politico
  3. Don’t mention the EU. Don’t mention the EU! DON’T MENTION THE EU!! « Kevin Townsend
  4. What happened at the 2nd AgileTea camp? | Government Digital Service
  5. Project Ideas by iancremona - Pearltrees
  6. How Latvia turns online petitions into policy « RODRIGO DAVIES
  7. Happy birthday e-petitions – a year in numbers | Government Digital Service

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,305 other followers

%d bloggers like this: