Statement of Authorship and Intent
For Public Registration of The Great Reform Charter
The Great Reform Charter, authored by Mr Abbey Gougouch, is a formally documented constitutional and civic work, created in direct response to the structural absence of enforceable democratic accountability within the United Kingdom. The Charter draws on first-hand institutional correspondence and public record to confirm that Members of the English Parliament are under no legal obligation to represent, engage with, or respond to the electorate, either before, during, or after elections.
This work is grounded in a non-partisan, restorative framework. It calls for national reflection and constitutional rebalancing across four central pillars of public life: the Crown, the Church, Parliament, and the Media. Each is addressed not in opposition, but in the spirit of principled reform and moral responsibility. The Charter asserts that these institutions, together, bear a shared duty to uphold democratic legitimacy and public trust. Where this duty has been neglected or structurally evaded, the Charter advocates for clarity, redress, and realignment.
The work avoids the language of political agitation. It does not propose revolt or ideological opposition. Instead, it reaffirms a civic obligation to restore honour, balance, and lawful accountability in public service. It explicitly distances itself from campaign rhetoric, assigning no blame to individuals but drawing sustained attention to institutional conditions and inherited constitutional assumptions that permit disengagement without consequence.
The Charter forms the foundation for the Reform Educational Awareness Program (REAP), a structured, non-commercial outreach initiative designed to raise awareness of the issues outlined in the Charter. REAP is subordinate to and shaped by the ethos and content of the Charter itself.
This document is made public for civic education and national reflection. It is protected in its full structure, voice, and intent. Authorship, moral ownership, and all intellectual rights are reserved by the originator. No modification, republication, or derivative use is permitted without prior written authorisation.
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