MP for Great Yarmouth
“A consistently loyal, right‑leaning backbencher who largely votes with his party while showing selective support for mental health and renter protections.”
Rupert Lowe is the MP for Great Yarmouth, representing the Restore Britain party. He was elected on 4 July 2024 and serves on the Public Accounts Committee; his record shows full party loyalty and a right‑leaning voting profile on many issues.
He has 100% party loyalty with no rebel votes and voting attendance in line with the party average. On policy, his record mixes opposition to workers’ rights protections and to trade union powers with support for mental health services, prison sentencing, renter protections, and climate change measures; he has generally opposed bus service regulation and shows a mixed stance on transgender rights.
There are 88 declared financial interests across several categories, with the largest shares in employment earnings (ad hoc payments) and shareholdings. Other declared interests include land and property, donations and other support for MP activities, gifts and hospitality, and visits outside the UK.
Generated 21 February 2026
How this MP participates in parliamentary votes. These numbers describe activity, not effectiveness.
How often this MP votes
Restore Britain average: 6%
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
Restore Britain average: 100%
Estimated from voting record, not self-declared. This is a simplified model — real politics is more complex than a single axis.
1 positions
Public Accounts Committee
Since Oct 2025
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 Higher Education (Fee Limits and Fee Limit Condition) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2026
NODraft Employment Rights Act 2025 (Investigatory Powers) (Consequential Amendments) Regulations 2026
NOFinance (No. 2) Bill: Third Reading
NOFinance (No. 2) Bill
Finance (No. 2) Bill Report Stage: Amendment 6
AYEFinance (No. 2) Bill
Finance (No. 2) Bill Report Stage: Amendment 5
AYEFinance (No. 2) Bill
Finance (No. 2) Bill Report Stage: New Clause 11
AYEFinance (No. 2) Bill
Courts and Tribunals Bill: Second Reading
NOCourts and Tribunals Bill
Courts and Tribunals Bill: Reasoned Amendment to Second Reading
AYECourts and Tribunals Bill
Public Accounts Committee
Parliamentary role · 21 Oct 2025
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.