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Portrait of Liam Conlon, MP for Beckenham and Penge

Liam Conlon

MP for Beckenham and Penge

Labour (Co-op)

About This MP

AI-generated

“A Labour backbench MP with near-total party loyalty who has shown independence on end-of-life amendments.”

Liam Conlon is the Labour (Co-op) MP for Beckenham and Penge, elected in 2024. He serves on transport-related committees, including the Bus Services (No. 2) Bill [HL] committee since June 2025, and previously sat on the Railways Bill committee in early 2026.

Voting Patterns

Conlon's voting loyalty is very high (99%), but his attendance is notably low (15%). On policy areas, he generally supports workers’ rights protections and trade union powers, and backs renter protections. He has mostly voted against prison sentencing, bus services regulation, transgender rights, and climate-change measures, with a mixed record on Universal Credit and other welfare votes.

Notable Positions

  • Supports workers' rights protections
  • Supports trade union powers
  • Supports renter protections
  • Generally opposed to prison sentencing
  • Generally opposed to transgender rights

Financial Interests

Declared financial interests include land and property (within or outside the UK), miscellaneous interests, and visits outside the UK.

Generated 21 February 2026

Voting Activity

How this MP participates in parliamentary votes. These numbers describe activity, not effectiveness.

15%
Low

How often this MP votes

Labour (Co-op) average: 33%

What does this mean?

The percentage of parliamentary votes (divisions) this MP participated in. MPs may miss votes for legitimate reasons including ministerial duties, constituency work, or illness.

99%
Very high

How often this MP votes with their party

Labour (Co-op) average: 99%

What does this mean?

Political Position

Estimated from voting record, not self-declared. This is a simplified model — real politics is more complex than a single axis.

LEFTRIGHT
Centre-left(34)
Based on 109 votes on ideologically significant topics — more votes means a more reliable estimate.

Career & Roles

2 positions

Current

Committee

Bus Services (No. 2) Bill [HL]

Since Jun 2025

Previous

Committee

Railways Bill

Jan 2026 - Feb 2026

Financial Interests

3 declarations

Figures include only interests with declared monetary values from the Register of Members' Financial Interests. Some categories (e.g. hospitality, overseas visits) may not have monetary values recorded, so the total may not reflect all declared interests.

Recent Activity

32 events

Opposition day motion: student loans

NO
3 weeks ago88 / 266Rejected

Opposition day motion: fuel duty

NO
3 weeks ago103 / 259Rejected

Finance (No. 2) Bill: Third Reading

AYE
1 month ago292 / 161Passed

Finance (No. 2) Bill

Finance (No. 2) Bill Report Stage: Amendment 6

NO
1 month ago175 / 292Rejected

Finance (No. 2) Bill

Finance (No. 2) Bill Report Stage: Amendment 5

NO
1 month ago172 / 283Rejected

Finance (No. 2) Bill

Finance (No. 2) Bill Report Stage: New Clause 11

NO
1 month ago174 / 292Rejected

Finance (No. 2) Bill

Courts and Tribunals Bill: Second Reading

AYE
1 month ago304 / 203Passed

Courts and Tribunals Bill

Courts and Tribunals Bill: Reasoned Amendment to Second Reading

NO
1 month ago203 / 311Rejected

Courts and Tribunals Bill

Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 106

AYE
1 month ago304 / 177Passed

Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill

Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 102

AYE
1 month ago315 / 163Passed

Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill

Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 44

AYE
1 month ago315 / 109Passed

Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill

Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 41

AYE
1 month ago316 / 171Passed

Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill

Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 38

AYE
1 month ago307 / 173Passed

Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill

Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 17

AYE
1 month ago306 / 182Passed

Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill

Railways Bill

Parliamentary role · 7 Jan 2026

The percentage of votes where this MP voted the same way as the majority of their party. High loyalty is typical; most MPs vote with their party on most issues.

5rebel votes
Occasional

Rebel votes

What does this mean?

Times this MP voted differently from the majority of their party. This can reflect independent judgement, but context matters — some rebel votes are on procedural matters, others on major policy.