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Voting Record — Liam Byrne MP, Birmingham, Hodge Hill (11360)

Liam Byrne is currently Chief Secretary, HM Treasury

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 Lab 6 votes out of 998, 0.6% 998 votes out of 1232, 81.0% 0 times
15 Jul 2004 11 Apr 2005 Lab 2 votes out of 220, 0.9% 220 votes out of 272, 80.9% 0 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

HouseDateSubjectLiam ByrneLab VoteRôle
10 Jun 2009Became Chief Secretary, HM Treasury
10 Jun 2009Stopped being Minister of State, Cabinet Office
7 Oct 2008Became Minister of State, Cabinet Office
7 Oct 2008Stopped being Minister of State (the Cabinet Office and Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster), Cabinet Office
6 Oct 2008Stopped being Minister of State (Borders and Immigration; Minister for the West Midlands; (also in HM Treasury)), Home Office
6 Oct 2008Stopped being Minister of State (Borders and Immigration; Minister for the West Midlands; (also in HM Treasury)), HM Treasury
6 Oct 2008Became Minister of State (the Cabinet Office and Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster), Cabinet Office
Commons3 Jul 2008MPs' allowances — External audits and no more furniture — rejected minorityaye Rebel
Commons19 May 2008Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill — Sibling compatibility only regenerative tissue — rejected minorityno Rebel
25 Jan 2008Became Minister of State (Borders and Immigration; Minister for the West Midlands; (also in HM Treasury)), Home Office
25 Jan 2008Stopped being Minister of State (Borders and Immigration; Minister for the West Midlands), Home Office
25 Jan 2008Became Minister of State (Borders and Immigration; Minister for the West Midlands; (also in HM Treasury)), HM Treasury
1 Aug 2007Became Minister of State (Borders and Immigration; Minister for the West Midlands), Home Office
1 Aug 2007Stopped being Minister of State, Home Office
28 Jun 2007Became Minister of State, Home Office
28 Jun 2007Stopped being Minister of State (Immigration and Asylum), Home Office
9 May 2007Became Minister of State (Immigration and Asylum), Home Office
9 May 2007Stopped being Minister of State (Immigration, Citizenship and Nationality), Home Office
Commons7 Mar 2007House of Lords Reform — Composition Option 6 (80 per Cent. Elected) Majorityno Rebel
Commons7 Mar 2007House of Lords Reform — Composition Option 5 (60 per Cent. Elected) — rejected minorityno Rebel
Commons7 Mar 2007House of Lords Reform — Composition Option 4 (50 per Cent. Elected) — rejected minorityno Rebel
23 May 2006Became Minister of State (Immigration, Citizenship and Nationality), Home Office
23 May 2006Stopped being Minister of State, Home Office
8 May 2006Became Minister of State, Home Office
8 May 2006Stopped being Parliamentary Under-Secretary, Department of Health
Commons14 Mar 2006Animal Welfare Bill — New Clause "8" — Docking of dogs' tails — Working dogs Majorityaye Rebel
11 May 2005Became Parliamentary Under-Secretary, Department of Health
HouseDateSubjectMr Liam ByrneLab VoteRôle
11 Apr 2005Stopped being a member of the European Scrutiny Committee
22 Feb 2005Became a member of the European Scrutiny Committee
Commons26 Jan 2005Modernisation of the House of Commons Majorityno Rebel
Commons3 Nov 2004Members' Allowances Majorityno Rebel

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
14% Abortion, Embryology and Euthanasia- Against
100% Ban fox hunting
0% Civil aviation pollution - For limiting
100% Control Orders
100% Crossrail - In favour
100% Fox hunting - Ban
8% Gambling - Against permissiveness
0% Hold a UK referendum on Lisbon EU Treaty
100% Homosexuality - Equal rights
100% House of Lords Reform
100% Identity cards - For introduction
0% Iraq Investigation - Necessary
85% Ministers Can Intervene in Coroners' Inquests
0% No detention without charge or trial
100% Nuclear power - For
97% Parliamentary scrutiny - Reduce
100% Post office - in favour of Government policy
0% Post office closures - against
0% Protesting near Parliament - Unrestricted
50% Recreational drugs - Against legalization
63% Schools - Greater Autonomy
99% Smoking ban - In favour
39% Stop climate change
2% Termination of pregnancy - against
100% Terrorism laws - For
0% The UK should not ratify the Lisbon Treaty
61% Transparency of Parliament
100% Trident replacement - In favour
50% University education fees - For top up fees
50% University education fees - Should be free
50% University tuition fees
50% Voting age - Reduce to 16
0% 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% Tony BlairSedgefieldLab
100.0% Gordon BrownKirkcaldy & CowdenbeathLab
99.4% Margaret BeckettDerby SouthLab
99.0% Charles ClarkeNorwich SouthLab
98.9% David BlunkettSheffield, BrightsideLab