Bureau of Investigative Journalism fundraises to take the UK Government to court over Russian Report
The non-profit organisation is crowdfunding £40,000 for a last-ditch effort to force the authorities to publish findings on Russian electoral interference before the British public votes in the 2019 general election
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Non-profit organisation The Bureau of Investigative Journalism (TBIJ) has launched a £40,000 crowdfunding campaign to take the UK Government to court over its refusal to publish the report into Russian interference into British politics.
Rachel Oldroyd, managing editor, TBIJ explained that journalists have been trying for weeks to get the report published. But at this stage, there is not enough time to go down the FOI request route and get the findings published before the public heads to the polls.
Left with little other options, the organisation has turned to crowdfunding to start legal proceedings next week in the pursuit of publishing the report.
"We have run out of road and decided as journalists we still have a duty to help get the information to the public, so have resorted to legal action," she explained.
At least £10,000 was initially needed to go to court and an initial cap of £30,000 - the full crowdfunding amount - was set. However, after this met, this cap was increased with a new target of £40,000.
Should the Bureau not hear from Downing Street regarding publication of the report, lawyers for the TBIJ intend to file for a judicial review tomorrow (19 November 2019).
This would enable the case to be sustained through a predictably drawn-out process. Leftover money from the case will be put towards subsequent journalism. Since launching the campaign last week (13 November 2019), the fundraiser has received more than £40,000 in four days.
"I think it shows there is a genuine public interest and concern about this - this is not about us as journalists getting a story out," Oldroyd said.
"This is about meddling with elections and democracy. The whole select committee wants this published, it’s not as if there are voices saying we don’t want it published. It’s suppression."
Note: This article was updated on 18 November 2019 by Daniel Green. The initial crowdfunding campaign target was reported as £30,000. Since publication of the original article, the target has increased to £40,000 and the article has been updated to reflect this.
Dan McLaughlin (Reach plc, left) and Jacob Granger (JournalismUK, right) in conversation at Newsrewired on 26 November 2025. Credit: Mark Hakansson / Marten Publishing