Make them listen.
Whether it is a government decision, a company treating you unfairly, an employer ignoring your rights, or an energy supplier refusing to fix a problem — TheMany finds everyone who needs to hear about it and helps you contact them all at once, from your own email address, in your own words.
How it works
Every body. At once.
Your MP, local councillors, the relevant government departments, regulators, ombudsmen, and the organisation responsible — all contacted simultaneously. No one can claim they were not informed.
Legally protected.
Every issue comes with the relevant legislation, tracked legal deadlines, and a clear escalation path. From employment rights to energy billing disputes to FOI requests — if they ignore you, TheMany helps you push harder.
Nothing traced back.
TheMany holds no personal data. No name, no email, no records. What you raise stays between you and the people who need to hear it.
A tool most people don't know they have
A letter can be ignored.
An FOI request cannot.
Under the Freedom of Information Act, any public body — a council, an NHS trust, a government department — is legally required to respond to your request within 20 working days. Not eventually. Not if they feel like it. Within 20 working days, by law. A Subject Access Request carries the same legal force: they must hand over every piece of data they hold about you within 30 days. These are not polite asks. They are legal obligations with consequences for failure.
20
Working daysto respond to an FOI request. No extensions without justification. Failure can be reported to the Information Commissioner's Office.
30
Days to fulfil a Subject Access Request. Every email, note, or record they hold about you — they must give it to you.
£0
Cost to you. FOI requests and SARs are free to make. For them, responding to hundreds of them is not.
What happens when hundreds of people do this at once.
A single FOI request is easy to deal with quietly. Three hundred FOI requests about the same planning decision, the same hospital waiting list, the same school funding cut — all arriving in the same week — is a different matter entirely.
Each one must be answered individually. Each one creates a paper trail. Each one is logged. The information they disclose — or refuse to disclose — becomes public record. Journalists can request it. MPs can cite it. Lawyers can use it.
At scale, the administrative burden alone can exceed the cost of simply fixing the problem. And every refusal, every delay, every non-answer becomes evidence that they are hiding something.
TheMany identifies when an FOI or SAR would strengthen your case, files it alongside your submission, and tracks every deadline for you — so the legal clock starts ticking the moment you send, and you always know exactly when they are required to respond and when they have run out of time.
Ready to be heard?
It takes about five minutes. No account. No data stored. Your email, your words, every relevant body — all at once.
Start your submissionAdd TheMany to your phone, no app store needed.
Once it is on your home screen it works exactly like any other app. And nobody knows it is there except you.
Android
- 1
Open this page in Chrome.
- 2
Tap the three dots menu in the top right corner.
- 3
Tap Add to Home Screen and you are done.
iPhone
- 1
Open this page in Safari.
- 2
Tap the Share button at the bottom of the screen.
- 3
Tap Add to Home Screen and you are done.
About AI in TheMany
We understand why people are wary of AI, and honestly, that wariness makes sense. The people with the most access to it asked themselves two questions first. How do we use this to gain more control, and how do we use this to make more money? Neither of those things benefits you.
We asked a different question. How do we use this to give ordinary people a voice they have never had before?
Here is exactly what AI does in TheMany and nothing more. It takes what you have told us in your own words and turns it into a clear, well-structured email. That is it. It does not store your information, it does not learn from you, it does not report anything anywhere.
Your words, your concern, your voice — just presented in a way that is harder to ignore. We thought you deserved to know that.
How we keep you anonymous
We do not know who you are. That is intentional. TheMany does not ask for your name. It does not store your email address. It does not keep records of what you have raised or who you have contacted.
The only thing we use is the first part of your postcode to find your local representatives, and we do not store even that.
Your tracking information, your FOI requests, your deadlines, your submission history, live only on your own device encrypted under your control. Not ours.
If we were ever asked to hand over information about our users, our honest answer would be that we do not have any. We built it this way on purpose. You are here to hold power to account. The last thing you need is someone holding your data over you.