MP for Poole
“A loyal Labour backbencher with a record of selective rebellion and a focus on workers’ rights and public services.”
Neil Duncan-Jordan is a Labour (Co-op) MP for Poole, elected in 2024. He sits on the Cheltenham Borough Council Markets Bill committee (since 2026-02-12), reflecting involvement in private member’s legislation. The data does not provide additional details about his previous career.
The MP shows high party loyalty (98%) but very low attendance (17% of votes). He has around 10 rebel votes against the party. On policy, he generally votes in favour of workers’ rights, trade union powers, protest rights, mental health services and VAT changes; he has tended to vote against transgender rights, prison sentencing and publicly owned railways; his voting on Universal Credit has been mixed (23 aye, 20 no).
Declares two financial interests: donations or loans related to his MP activities, and gifts, benefits and hospitality from UK sources.
Generated 21 February 2026
How this MP participates in parliamentary votes. These numbers describe activity, not effectiveness.
How often this MP votes
Labour (Co-op) average: 34%
The percentage of parliamentary votes (divisions) this MP participated in. MPs may miss votes for legitimate reasons including ministerial duties, constituency work, or illness.
How often this MP votes with their party
Labour (Co-op) average: 99%
Estimated from voting record, not self-declared. This is a simplified model — real politics is more complex than a single axis.
1 positions
Cheltenham Borough Council (Markets) Bill
Since Feb 2026
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.
Draft Agriculture (Delinked Payments) (Reductions) (England) Regulations 2026
AYESteel Industry (Nationalisation) Bill: Reasoned Amendment to Second Reading
NOSteel Industry (Nationalisation) Bill
King's Speech Motion for an Address
AYEKing's Speech Motion for an Address: amendment (p)
NOKing's Speech Motion for an Address: amendment (l)
NOKing's Speech Motion for an Address: amendment (o)
NOKing's Speech Motion for an Address: amendment (i)
NODraft Asylum Seekers (Reception Conditions) (Amendment) Regulations 2026
AYEPension Schemes Bill: Government Motion relating to Lords Reason 88X
AYECollective Defined Contribution Pension Schemes Bill
Cheltenham Borough Council (Markets) Bill
Parliamentary role · 12 Feb 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.
Rebel votes
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.