Voting Record — Lord Peach (26117)

Lord Peach

Note: our records only go back to 1997 for the Commons and 2001 for the Lords (more details).

FromToPartyRebellions (explain...)Attendance (explain...)Teller
21 Nov 2022 still in office Crossbench 10 votes out of 21, 47.6% 21 votes out of 219, 9.6% 0 times

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Interesting Votes

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

See also all votes... attended | possible

HouseDateSubjectLord PeachCrossbench VoteRôle
Lords23 Oct 2023Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill - Commons Amendments and Reasons — Motion J1 (as an amendment to Motion J) minorityaye Rebel
Lords23 Oct 2023Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill - Commons Amendments and Reasons — Motion B1 (as an amendment to Motion B) Majorityaye Rebel
Lords12 Sep 2023Energy Bill [HL] - Commons Amendments — Amendment to the Motion on Amendment 187 minorityno Rebel
Lords4 Jul 2023National Security Bill - Commons Reason and Amendment — Motion B1 (as an amendment to Motion B) Majorityaye Rebel
Lords3 Jul 2023Illegal Migration Bill - Report (2nd Day) minorityaye Rebel
Lords28 Jun 2023Illegal Migration Bill - Report (1st Day) — Amendment 6 minorityaye Rebel
Lords8 Jun 2023Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Bill - Commons Reasons — Motion B1 (as an amendment to Motion B) minorityaye Rebel
Lords8 Jun 2023Financial Services and Markets Bill - Report (2nd Day) — Amendment 15 minorityaye Rebel
Lords28 Mar 2023Public Order Bill - Commons Amendments and Reason — Motion A1 (as an amendment to Motion A) minorityaye Rebel
Lords30 Jan 2023Public Order Bill - Report (1st Day) — Amendment 1 minorityaye Rebel

Policy Comparisons

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

No policies match this person's votes. You can edit or make a policy that will appear here.
AgreementPolicy

Possible Friends (more...)

Shows which Lords voted most similarly to this one in the 2019-present, Westminster Parliament. This is measured from 0% agreement (never voted the same) to 100% (always voted the same). Only votes that both Lords attended are counted. This may reveal relationships between Lords that were previously unsuspected. Or it may be nonsense.

AgreementNameParty
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