, alongside Lord Chancellor
Shabana Mahmood and Attorney General
Richard Hermer, on 15 July 2024
Inside Housing listed Sackman among eight newly-elected MPs who would be advocates for
social housing in the new
Labour Government due to her experience in planning and environmental law and her work with the charity
Shelter. Appointed
Solicitor General for England and Wales on 9 July 2024, Sackman swore the
Oath of Allegiance on a
Hebrew Bible, being informed that her preferred
Hertz Chumash was not held in the
House of Commons Library, and the 1743 edition of the Hebrew Bible was too delicate to take out from its collection. In her
maiden speech on 22 July 2024, Sackman paid tribute to her predecessor MP
Mike Freer, and compared herself to another of her predecessors,
Lady Thatcher, saying that,
unlike Margaret Thatcher, she fundamentally believed in the existence and value of society. Sackman noted that, in recent times, some politicians have chosen to use "North Londoner" as an insult, but she and her constituents wear it as a badge of pride. Sackman promised to "tirelessly call out
anti-Semitism and
Islamophobia", and voiced support for the Bills in the
2024 King's Speech as a vehicle to restore British public services. In response to the
2024 United Kingdom riots when
Red Flare leaked messages from
far-right wing Telegram groups naming
North Finchley as a possible gathering place outside immigration law specialists, Sackman called such targeting "disgusting" and on the day of the planned riot convened a
meeting of unity with Jewish and Muslim leaders to deepen community cohesion. Securing additional funding in the
2024 UK Budget, for the
Crown Prosecution Service to support Rape and Serious Sexual Offences (RASSO) teams, on 2 December 2024, after 146 days in office as Solicitor-General, Sackman was appointed
Minister of State for Courts and Legal Services at the
Ministry of Justice, following
Louise Haigh's resignation from HM Cabinet with
Heidi Alexander being promoted as
Secretary of State for Transport.
Politics Assisted-dying views Sackman supported
Kim Leadbeater's
Private Member's Bill introducing
assisted suicide into law and sat on the House of Commons Committee examining the legislation. Publishing an
open letter to her constituents on 28 November 2024 in support of the
Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, Sackman stated her central reason for supporting this
Bill was respect for individual autonomy and she was struck by that in dying we have no control. Quoting
Rabbi Jonathan Romain that the Bill is about shortening death, not shortening life – in her own words: "the right to choose is an expression of the liberty which is, in essence, what makes life so precious". == Personal life ==