Voting Record — Rosie Winterton MP, Doncaster Central (10648)
Note: our records only go back to 1997 for the Commons and 2001 for the Lords (more details).
| From | To | Party | Rebellions (explain...) | Attendance (explain...) | Teller |
| 6 May 2010 | still in office | Lab | 1 vote out of 631, 0.2% | 631 votes out of 782, 80.7% | 0 times |
| 5 May 2005 | 12 Apr 2010 | Lab | 6 votes out of 1071, 0.6% | 1071 votes out of 1288, 83.2% | 0 times |
| 7 Jun 2001 | 11 Apr 2005 | Lab | 6 votes out of 910, 0.7% | 910 votes out of 1246, 73.0% | 0 times |
| 1 May 1997 | 14 May 2001 | Lab | 3 votes out of 913, 0.3% | 913 votes out of 1273, 71.7% | 0 times |
External Links
- See Rosie Winterton's Parliamentary speeches at: TheyWorkForYou.com
- Contact your MP for free at: WriteToThem.com
- Form a long term relationship with your MP: HearFromYourMP.com
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
| House | Date | Subject | Rosie Winterton | Lab Vote | Rôle | |
| Commons | 19 Oct 2011 | Deferred Division — Adjournment of the house (november 2011, christmas and february 2012) | Majority | no | Rebel | |
| Commons | 14 Jul 2010 | Terrorism Act 2006 (Disapplication of Section 25) Order 2010 | Majority | unknown | Unknown | |
| 11 May 2010 | Stopped being a member of the Speaker's Committee on the Electoral Commission | |||||
| 11 May 2010 | Stopped being Minister of State (Yorkshire and the Humber), Regional Affairs | |||||
| 11 May 2010 | Stopped being Minister of State (Yorkshire and the Humber), Department for Communities and Local Government | |||||
| 11 May 2010 | Stopped being Minister of State (Yorkshire and the Humber), Department for Business, Innovation and Skills | |||||
| House | Date | Subject | Rosie Winterton | Lab Vote | Rôle | |
| 29 Dec 2009 | Became a member of the Speaker's Committee on the Electoral Commission | |||||
| 13 Oct 2009 | Became Minister of State (Yorkshire and the Humber), Department for Business, Innovation and Skills | |||||
| 13 Oct 2009 | Stopped being Minister of State (Yorkshire and the Humber), Department for Business, Innovation & Skills | |||||
| 10 Jun 2009 | Became Minister of State (Yorkshire and the Humber), Regional Affairs | |||||
| 10 Jun 2009 | Stopped being Minister of State (Pensions Reform; Minister for Yorkshire and Humber), Department for Work and Pensions | |||||
| 10 Jun 2009 | Became Minister of State (Yorkshire and the Humber), Department for Communities and Local Government | |||||
| 10 Jun 2009 | Became Minister of State (Yorkshire and the Humber), Department for Business, Innovation & Skills | |||||
| Commons | 13 Mar 2009 | Prayers — Statutory Redundancy Pay (Amendment) Bill | minority | aye | Rebel | |
| Commons | 2 Mar 2009 | Political Parties and Elections Bill — Candidate for MP becoming own election agent does not disclose home address | minority | aye | Rebel | |
| Commons | 2 Mar 2009 | Political Parties and Elections Bill — Home address form must be correct | minority | aye | Rebel | |
| Commons | 2 Mar 2009 | Political Parties and Elections Bill — Parliamentary candidates can keep their home addresses secret | minority | aye | Rebel | |
| 9 Oct 2008 | Became Minister of State (Pensions Reform; Minister for Yorkshire and Humber), Department for Work and Pensions | |||||
| 9 Oct 2008 | Stopped being Minister of State, Department for Work and Pensions | |||||
| 6 Oct 2008 | Became Minister of State, Department for Work and Pensions | |||||
| 6 Oct 2008 | Stopped being Minister of State, Department for Transport | |||||
| 28 Jun 2007 | Stopped being Minister of State (Health Services), Department of Health | |||||
| 28 Jun 2007 | Became Minister of State, Department for Transport | |||||
| Commons | 7 Mar 2007 | House of Lords Reform — Composition Option 1 (Fully Appointed) — rejected | minority | no | Rebel | |
| Commons | 7 Mar 2007 | House of Lords Reform — Support for bicameral Parliament | minority | aye | Rebel | |
| 27 Jun 2006 | Became Minister of State (Health Services), Department of Health | |||||
| 27 Jun 2006 | Stopped being Minister of State (Health Services), Department of Health | |||||
| 9 Jan 2006 | Became Minister of State (Health Services), Department of Health | |||||
| 9 Jan 2006 | Stopped being Minister of State, Department of Health | |||||
| House | Date | Subject | Ms Rosie Winterton | Lab Vote | Rôle | |
| Commons | 26 Jan 2005 | Modernisation of the House of Commons | Majority | no | Rebel | |
| Commons | 26 Oct 2004 | Removal of References to Strangers | minority | aye | Rebel | |
| 13 Jun 2003 | Stopped being Parliamentary Secretary, Lord Chancellor's Department | |||||
| 13 Jun 2003 | Became Minister of State, Department of Health | |||||
| Commons | 4 Feb 2003 | House of Lords Reform — Option 1 (Fully Appointed) — rejected | minority | no | Rebel | |
| Commons | 29 Oct 2002 | New Provision for Earlier Sittings on Wednesdays, and for Thursdays and Fridays | minority | aye | Rebel | |
| Commons | 29 Oct 2002 | New Provision for Earlier Sittings on Wednesdays, and for Thursdays and Fridays | minority | no | Rebel | |
| Commons | 5 Jul 2001 | Members' Allowances, Insurance &c. — Members' Pay (Money Resolution) | minority | aye | Rebel | |
| 11 Jun 2001 | Became Parliamentary Secretary, Lord Chancellor's Department | |||||
| House | Date | Subject | Ms Rosie Winterton | Lab Vote | Rôle | |
| Commons | 7 Nov 2000 | Programming of Bills - I. Programme orders: supplementary provisions | Majority | aye | Rebel | |
| Commons | 26 May 1999 | Line of Route | minority | aye | Rebel | |
| Commons | 10 Dec 1997 | Doctor Assisted Dying | minority | no | 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.
Possible Friends (more...)
Shows which MPs voted most similarly to this one in the 2010-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.
| Agreement | Name | Constituency | Party | |
| No results found | ||||
