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Voting Record — John Redwood MP, Wokingham (10499)

Note: our records only go back to 1997 for the Commons and 2001 for the Lords (more details).
FromToPartyRebellions (explain...)Attendance (explain...)Teller
5 May 2005 still in office Con 22 votes out of 832, 2.6% 832 votes out of 1232, 67.5% 0 times
7 Jun 2001 11 Apr 2005 Con 6 votes out of 830, 0.7% 830 votes out of 1246, 66.6% 0 times
1 May 1997 14 May 2001 Con 1 vote out of 756, 0.1% 756 votes out of 1273, 59.4% 0 times
9 Apr 1992 8 Apr 1997 unknown votes out of votes out of times
11 Jun 1987 16 Mar 1992 unknown votes out of votes out of times

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Interesting Votes

Votes in parliament for which this MP's vote differed from the majority vote of their party (Rebel), or in which this MP was a teller (Teller), or both (Rebel Teller).

See also all votes... attended | possible

HouseDateSubjectJohn RedwoodCon VoteRôle
Commons1 Apr 2009Deferred Divisions — Ecclesiastical Offices (terms of service) measure minorityaye Rebel
Commons1 Apr 2009Geneva Conventions and United Nations Personnel (Protocols) Bill [ Lords] (Programme) minorityaye Rebel
Commons16 Mar 2009Industry and Exports (Financial Support) Bill — Use of the Chamber (United Kingdom Youth Parliament) minorityaye Rebel
Commons2 Mar 2009Political Parties and Elections Bill — Candidate for MP becoming own election agent does not disclose home address minorityaye Rebel
Commons2 Mar 2009Political Parties and Elections Bill — Home address form must be correct minorityaye Rebel
Commons2 Mar 2009Political Parties and Elections Bill — Parliamentary candidates can keep their home addresses secret minorityaye Rebel
Commons29 Oct 2008Opposition Day — [11th Allotted Day — Second Part] — Bournemouth Borough Council Bill [ Lords] (By Order) minorityaye Rebel
Commons29 Oct 2008Opposition Day — [11th Allotted Day — Second Part] — Bournemouth Borough Council Bill [ Lords] (By Order) minorityaye Rebel
Commons29 Oct 2008Opposition Day — [11th Allotted Day — Second Part] — Manchester City Council Bill [ Lords] (By Order) minorityaye Rebel
Commons10 Jun 2008Counter Terrorism Bill — Specially Appointed Coroners — rejected bothaye Rebel
Commons25 Oct 2007Modernisation of the House of Commons — Handheld email devices Majorityaye Rebel
Commons18 May 2007Freedom of Information (Amendment) Bill — Third Reading minorityaye Rebel
Commons18 May 2007Freedom of Information (Amendment) Bill — Third Reading — Closure minorityaye Rebel
Commons18 May 2007Freedom of Information (Amendment) Bill — Exempt constituents' letters only — rejected minorityno Rebel
Commons18 May 2007Freedom of Information (Amendment) Bill — Continue to disclose MPs' correspondence — rejected minorityno Rebel
Commons18 May 2007Freedom of Information (Amendment) Bill — That the Question now be proposed minorityaye Rebel
Commons7 Mar 2007House of Lords Reform — Composition Option 7 (100 per Cent. Elected) Majorityno Rebel
Commons7 Mar 2007House of Lords Reform — Composition Option 1 (Fully Appointed) — rejected minorityno Rebel
11 Jan 2007Stopped being Policy Group On Economic Competitiveness, Conservative Party
Commons1 Nov 2006Short Speeches minorityaye Rebel
Commons1 Nov 2006September Sittings minorityno Rebel
Commons17 May 2006Deferred Division — Conventions (Joint Committee) minorityaye Rebel
Commons14 Feb 2006Health Bill — New Clause 5 — Smoke-free premises: exemptions — consideration Majorityno Rebel
16 Dec 2005Stopped being Shadow Secretary of State for Deregulation, Deregulation
16 Dec 2005Became Policy Group On Economic Competitiveness, Conservative Party
Commons13 Jul 2005Committees — Administration Committee — Pay for Chairmen of Standing Committees minorityaye Rebel
HouseDateSubjectMr John RedwoodCon VoteRôle
17 Mar 2005Stopped being Shadow Secretary of State for Deregulation, Economic Affairs
17 Mar 2005Became Shadow Secretary of State for Deregulation, Deregulation
Commons14 Dec 2004Mental Capacity Bill — New Clause 5 — Appointment of independent advocates (No. 2) Majorityaye Rebel
Commons3 Nov 2004Election of an MP to more than one seat minorityaye Rebel
9 Sep 2004Became Shadow Secretary of State for Deregulation, Economic Affairs
Commons12 May 2004Deferred Division — Visitor Facilities minorityaye Rebel
Commons4 Feb 2003House of Lords Reform — Option 2 (100 per Cent. Elected) — rejected minorityno Rebel
Commons4 Feb 2003House of Lords Reform — Option 1 (Fully Appointed) — rejected minorityno Rebel
Commons16 Jul 2001Select Committees — Accommodation and Works — Treasury Majorityaye Rebel
HouseDateSubjectMr John RedwoodCon VoteRôle
Commons24 Jan 2001Deferred Divisions - European Communities minorityaye Rebel
Commons13 Dec 2000Deferred Divisions - Fisheries: Total Allowable Catches and Quotas 2001 bothno Rebel
HouseDateSubjectMr John Redwoodunknown VoteRôle
no rebellions, never teller
HouseDateSubjectMr John Redwoodunknown VoteRôle
no rebellions, never teller

Policy Comparisons

This chart shows the percentage agreement between this MP and each of the policies in the database, according to their voting record.

AgreementPolicy
81% Abortion, Embryology and Euthanasia- Against
13% Ban fox hunting
100% Civil aviation pollution - For limiting
1% Control Orders
0% Corporal punishment of children - Against
50% Crossrail - In favour
10% Foundation hospitals - In favour
13% Fox hunting - Ban
69% Freedom of Information Bill 2000 - Strengthen
92% Gambling - Against permissiveness
100% Hold a UK referendum on Lisbon EU Treaty
16% Homosexuality - Equal rights
41% House of Lords Reform
13% Identity cards - For introduction
99% Iraq 2003 - For the invasion
98% Iraq Investigation - Necessary
18% Ministers Can Intervene in Coroners' Inquests
70% No detention without charge or trial
50% Nuclear power - For
1% Parliamentary scrutiny - Reduce
1% Post office - in favour of Government policy
99% Post office closures - against
58% Protesting near Parliament - Unrestricted
84% Recreational drugs - Against legalization
90% Schools - Greater Autonomy
28% Smoking ban - In favour
70% Stop climate change
74% Termination of pregnancy - against
15% Terrorism laws - For
100% The UK should not ratify the Lisbon Treaty
54% Transexuality - Against legal recognition
80% Transparency of Parliament
100% Trident replacement - In favour
2% University education fees - For top up fees
98% University education fees - Should be free
1% University tuition fees
2% Voting age - Reduce to 16
17% War - Parliamentary authority not necessary

Possible Friends (more...)

Shows which MPs voted most similarly to this one in the 2005-present, Westminster Parliament. This is measured from 0% agreement (never voted the same) to 100% (always voted the same). Only votes that both MPs attended are counted. This may reveal relationships between MPs that were previously unsuspected. Or it may be nonsense.
AgreementNameConstituencyParty
100.0% John HowellHenleyCon
97.6% David MundellDumfriesshire, Clydesdale & TweeddaleCon
96.9% Liam FoxWoodspringCon
95.4% Greg KnightEast YorkshireCon
94.9% Michael SpicerWest WorcestershireCon