The Public Whip
Search:
Newsletter (info):

Voting Record — Theresa May MP, Maidenhead (10426)

Theresa May is currently Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (Also Shadow Minister for Women), Work and Pensions, a member of the Members Estimate Committee and a member of the Modernisation of the House of Commons Committee

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 8 votes out of 723, 1.1% 723 votes out of 1224, 59.1% 0 times
7 Jun 2001 11 Apr 2005 Con 4 votes out of 824, 0.5% 824 votes out of 1246, 66.1% 0 times
1 May 1997 14 May 2001 Con 1 vote out of 758, 0.1% 758 votes out of 1273, 59.5% 0 times

External Links

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

HouseDateSubjectTheresa MayCon VoteRôle
8 Sep 2009Became Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (Also Shadow Minister for Women), Work and Pensions
8 Sep 2009Stopped being Shadow Secretary of State for Work & Pensions (Also Shadow Minister for Women), Work & Pensions
27 Jul 2009Became Shadow Secretary of State for Work & Pensions (Also Shadow Minister for Women), Work & Pensions
27 Jul 2009Stopped being Shadow Secretary of State for Work & Pensions and Shadow Minister for Women, Work & Pensions
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
19 Jan 2009Became Shadow Secretary of State for Work & Pensions and Shadow Minister for Women, Work & Pensions
19 Jan 2009Became Shadow Secretary of State for Work & Pensions, Work & Pensions
19 Jan 2009Stopped being Shadow Secretary of State for Work & Pensions, Work & Pensions
19 Jan 2009Stopped being Shadow Leader of the House of Commons, Parliament
6 Jan 2009Became Shadow Leader of the House of Commons, Parliament
6 Jan 2009Stopped being Shadow Leader of the House of Commons, Parliament
Commons3 Jul 2008MPs' salaries — £650 catch-up payment — rejected Majorityaye Rebel
Commons3 Jul 2008MPs' salaries — Increase with Public Sector Earnings Index — rejected Majorityaye Rebel
Commons3 Jul 2008MPs' salaries — Increases capped to 2.3% — rejected Majorityaye Rebel
4 Jun 2008Stopped being a member of the Members Estimates Committee
4 Jun 2008Became a member of the Members Estimate Committee
Commons25 Oct 2007Modernisation of the House of Commons — Handheld email devices Majorityaye Rebel
6 Jul 2007Became Shadow Leader of the House of Commons, Parliament
6 Jul 2007Stopped being Shadow Leader of the House of Commons, Leader of the House of Commons
20 Mar 2007Became a member of the Members Estimates Committee
Commons7 Mar 2007House of Lords Reform — Composition Option 6 (80 per Cent. Elected) Majorityno Rebel
Commons1 Nov 2006Legislative Process (Notice for Amendments in Public Bill Committee) Majorityno Rebel
18 Jan 2006Became a member of the Modernisation of the House of Commons Committee
16 Dec 2005Stopped being Shadow Secretary of State for the Family & Culture, Media & Sport, The Family & Culture, Media & Sport
16 Dec 2005Became Shadow Leader of the House of Commons, Leader of the House of Commons
20 May 2005Became Shadow Secretary of State for the Family & Culture, Media & Sport, The Family & Culture, Media & Sport
20 May 2005Stopped being Shadow Secretary of State for the Family, Family
HouseDateSubjectMrs Theresa MayCon VoteRôle
Commons26 Jan 2005Modernisation of the House of Commons minorityaye Rebel
Commons3 Nov 2004Members' Allowances Majorityaye Rebel
Commons27 Oct 2004New Clause 10 — Victims of persons subject to hospital order with restriction order: representations — Clause 22 — Procedure for determining fitness to plead: England and Wales minorityno Rebel
6 Jul 2004Stopped being Shadow Secretary of State for the Family, Public Services, Health & Education
6 Jul 2004Became Shadow Secretary of State for the Family, Family
15 Jun 2004Became Shadow Secretary of State for the Family, Public Services, Health & Education
15 Jun 2004Stopped being Shadow Secretary of State for Environment and Transport, Environment & Transport
10 May 2004Became Shadow Secretary of State for Environment and Transport, Environment & Transport
Commons4 Feb 2003House of Lords Reform — Option 4 (80 per Cent. Elected) — rejected minorityno Rebel
HouseDateSubjectMrs Theresa MayCon VoteRôle
Commons20 Dec 2000Deferred Divisions - Deregulation minorityaye Rebel
Commons13 Dec 2000Deferred Divisions - Fisheries: Total Allowable Catches and Quotas 2001 bothno 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
82% Abortion, Embryology and Euthanasia- Against
13% Ban fox hunting
100% Civil aviation pollution - For limiting
2% Control Orders
50% Corporal punishment of children - Against
8% Crossrail - In favour
20% 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
31% Homosexuality - Equal rights
31% House of Lords Reform
16% Identity cards - For introduction
99% Iraq 2003 - For the invasion
90% Iraq Investigation - Necessary
1% Ministers Can Intervene in Coroners' Inquests
70% No detention without charge or trial
50% Nuclear power - For
2% Parliamentary scrutiny - Reduce
3% Post office - in favour of Government policy
97% Post office closures - against
70% Protesting near Parliament - Unrestricted
84% Recreational drugs - Against legalization
92% Schools - Greater Autonomy
21% Smoking ban - In favour
95% Stop climate change
94% Termination of pregnancy - against
16% Terrorism laws - For
100% The UK should not ratify the Lisbon Treaty
50% Transexuality - Against legal recognition
58% Transparency of Parliament
100% Trident replacement - In favour
7% University education fees - For top up fees
93% University education fees - Should be free
0% University tuition fees
2% Voting age - Reduce to 16
2% 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
97.7% David CameronWitneyCon
97.2% Nigel EvansRibble ValleyCon
96.9% Richard SpringWest SuffolkCon
96.7% Humfrey MalinsWokingCon
96.5% George OsborneTattonCon