Votes
Recent vote results
Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill
MPs held four related Commons votes on Lords amendments to the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill.
Party summary for selected division
The Commons rejected the Lords version but proposed amendments in lieu, so the issue remained within the Bill in a different form.
The latest division was recorded as motion agreed with 256 Ayes and 150 Noes.
The Commons rejected the Lords version but proposed amendments in lieu, so the issue remained within the Bill in a different form.
The latest division was recorded as motion agreed with 256 Ayes and 150 Noes.
The chart above shows how the recorded Ayes and Noes were split across parties.
The Commons said further primary legislation was not needed because school-uniform costs were already subject to statutory guidance reviews and continued monitoring by the Department for Education.
The latest division was recorded as motion agreed with 254 Ayes and 144 Noes.
The Commons said further primary legislation was not needed because school-uniform costs were already subject to statutory guidance reviews and continued monitoring by the Department for Education.
The latest division was recorded as motion agreed with 254 Ayes and 144 Noes.
The chart above shows how the recorded Ayes and Noes were split across parties.
The Commons said the Bill already allowed regulations to set the matters the adjudicator must consider, so it did not accept the Lords restriction.
The latest division was recorded as motion agreed with 259 Ayes and 136 Noes.
The Commons said the Bill already allowed regulations to set the matters the adjudicator must consider, so it did not accept the Lords restriction.
The latest division was recorded as motion agreed with 259 Ayes and 136 Noes.
The chart above shows how the recorded Ayes and Noes were split across parties.
The Commons said existing guidance already covered mobile-phone use in schools, so it did not accept the Lords amendment as necessary.
The latest division was recorded as motion agreed with 248 Ayes and 139 Noes.
The Commons said existing guidance already covered mobile-phone use in schools, so it did not accept the Lords amendment as necessary.
The latest division was recorded as motion agreed with 248 Ayes and 139 Noes.
The chart above shows how the recorded Ayes and Noes were split across parties.
What happened
The Commons said existing guidance already covered mobile-phone use in schools, so it did not accept the Lords amendment as necessary.
The latest division was recorded as motion agreed with 248 Ayes and 139 Noes.
Grouped results summary
Divisions in this vote group
Each row below shows the result and Aye/No counts for that individual division.
Sources
Official records used for the vote result and explanation.
