Wednesday, 30 July 2025

YouGov UK Poll published

 

Recent Poll results published:


The YouGov Survey Results Sample Size: 2243 Adults in GB 

Fieldwork: 28th - 29th April 2025 - the full results are online here -https://yougov.co.uk/society/articles/52664-most-britons-are-in-favour-of-dog-licences

85% of Britons think there should be some form of dog licence, with 54% believing it should be a requirement for owning any breed.

54% believe you should require a licence to own a dog of any breed as a pet, alongside a further 31% who believe that you should require a licence to own dogs belonging to certain breeds as a pet.

8% of the public think you should not require a licence to own a dog of any breed as a pet.

Among dog owners, 45% thought there should be a blanket dog licence, with 38% supporting one for certain breeds.



Tuesday, 29 July 2025

Animal Welfare (Import of Dogs, Cats & Ferrets) Bill progresses

The Animal Welfare (Import of Dogs, Cats and Ferrets) Bill has now passed its 3rd reading in the House of Commons on the 4th July and been passed up to the House of Lords where the first reading has taken place - a formality which signals the beginning of the Bill through the Lords.

The second reading of the Bill is due to take place on 5th September, this is a general debate on all parts of the Bill.

A copy of the Bill, as amended, can be found here: https://bills.parliament.uk/bills/3790/publications

The Bill aims to help end puppy smuggling, to ban imports of animals with mutilations and to reduce the risk of some diseases being imported.

#PuppySmugglingBill #flopdontcrop

Overview of the Bill:

The Animal Welfare (Import of Dogs, Cats and Ferrets) Bill makes provision to restrict the commercial importation and non-commercial movement of dogs, cats and ferrets into the United Kingdom from third countries on grounds of animal welfare. 

The Bill introduces an enabling power to address the problem of low-welfare imports of dogs, cats and ferrets into the United Kingdom. 

The power must be used to prohibit the bringing into Great Britain of puppies and kittens under six months and dogs and cats that are mutilated or heavily pregnant. 

The Bill also seeks to address the current issue of commercial imports being disguised as non commercial movements by amending the rules that govern the non-commercial movement of dogs, cats and ferrets into Great Britain from third countries.