Motion to Sit in Private — 24 Oct 2014 at 09:30

The majority of MPs voted not to hold a private session of the House of Commons.

The text of the motion rejected in the vote was:

  • That the House sit in private.

The House of Commons' Standing Order No. 163 says:

  • If at any sitting of the House... any Member moves 'That the House sit in private' the Speaker... shall forthwith put the question 'That the House sit in private', and such question, though opposed, may be decided after the expiration of the time for opposed business, but such a Motion may be made no more than once in any sitting.

Moving the motion to sit in private is almost always a procedural tactic. By ensuring the defeat of a motion to sit in private at the beginning of the sitting, the mover makes it impossible for any member to move the motion during a subsequent debate.

If such a motion is brought during the debate on a Bill, and fewer than 40 MPs vote in it, then the debate ends immediately regardless of the result (following Standing Order 44). Such an ending of debate occurred on the 14th of March 2003. The points of order following that division show MPs questioning the appropriateness of the tactic.

Moving a motion to sit in private is often done first thing on a Friday morning. Moving the motion ensures it can't be moved later in the day, when MPs might have returned to their constituencies for the weekend and too few members may be present to reach the 40 member threshold leading to the discussion of the business before the house (typically private members' Bills) being brought to an end.

See also What is a motion to sit in private? from the PublicWhip FAQ.

Debate in Parliament | Source |

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All Votes Cast - sorted by constituency

MPs for which their vote in this division differed from the majority vote of their party are marked in red. Also shows which MPs were ministers at the time of this vote. You can also see every eligible MP including those who did not vote in this division.

Sort by: Name | Constituency | Party | Vote

NameConstituencyPartyVote
Richard ShepherdAldridge-BrownhillsConno
Simon HughesBermondsey and Old SouthwarkLDem (front bench)no
George EusticeCamborne and RedruthCon (front bench)no
Julian BrazierCanterburyCon (front bench)no
Edward TimpsonCrewe and NantwichCon (front bench)no
Hugo SwireEast DevonCon (front bench)no
Stephen TimmsEast HamLab (minister)no
Damian HindsEast HampshireCon (front bench)tellno
Brandon LewisGreat YarmouthCon (front bench)no
Anne MiltonGuildfordCon (front bench)no
Edward GarnierHarboroughCon (front bench)no
Bernard JenkinHarwich and North EssexCon (front bench)no
Amber RuddHastings and RyeCon (front bench)no
Bridget PhillipsonHoughton and Sunderland SouthLab (minister)no
Andrew TurnerIsle of WightCon (front bench)tellaye
Philip HolloboneKetteringCon (front bench)no
Heidi AlexanderLewisham EastLab (minister)no
Helen GrantMaidstone and The WealdCon (front bench)no
Desmond SwayneNew Forest WestCon (front bench)no
Jacob Rees-MoggNorth East SomersetCon (front bench)no
Graham AllenNottingham NorthLab (minister)no
Jim FitzpatrickPoplar and LimehouseLab (minister)no
Robert GoodwillScarborough and WhitbyCon (front bench)no
Meg MunnSheffield, HeeleyLabno
Mark SpencerSherwoodCon (front bench)tellaye
Richard BaconSouth NorfolkCon (front bench)no
Andrea LeadsomSouth NorthamptonshireCon (front bench)no
Karen BradleyStaffordshire MoorlandsCon (front bench)no
Therese CoffeySuffolk CoastalCon (front bench)no
Geoffrey Clifton-BrownThe CotswoldsCon (front bench)no
Adrian SandersTorbayLDem (front bench)no
Stella CreasyWalthamstowLab (minister)no
John SpellarWarleyLab (minister)no
John PenroseWeston-Super-MareCon (front bench)tellno
Emma ReynoldsWolverhampton North EastLab (minister)no
Peter BottomleyWorthing WestCon (front bench)no
Julian SturdyYork OuterConno

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