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Portrait of Suella Braverman, MP for Fareham and Waterlooville

Suella Braverman

MP for Fareham and Waterlooville

Reform UK

About This MP

AI-generated

“A former Home Secretary and highly loyal Reform UK MP who attends votes regularly and has a few high-profile rebellions on selective issues.”

Suella Braverman is the MP for Fareham and Waterlooville, first elected in 2015. She has held senior government roles including Home Secretary and Attorney General, and has a long parliamentary career with a notably high attendance record for her party.

Voting Patterns

She votes with her party on the vast majority of divisions (100% party loyalty, well above the party average for attendance). She has three recorded rebel votes. Her political stance sits around the centre-right (54/100). On key topics, her record is mixed: strong support for immigration controls, generally against the Rwanda deportation scheme, and a pattern of mixed votes on welfare, taxation, NHS funding, and other areas.

Notable Positions

  • Supports immigration controls (generally voted for).
  • Generally votes against the Rwanda deportation scheme.
  • Rebel vote: AYE on Abortion (Northern Ireland) Regulations 2022 (22 June 2022) against party line.
  • Rebel vote: AYE on Planning and Infrastructure Bill Report Stage: Amendment 69 (9 June 2025) against party line.
  • Rebel vote: AYE on Universal Credit (Removal of Two Child Limit) Bill: Second Reading (3 February 2026) against party line.

Financial Interests

She has 35 declared financial interests, including multiple ad hoc payments related to employment, gifts/benefits from UK sources, and land/property interests.

Generated 21 February 2026

Voting Activity

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

69%
Average

How often this MP votes

Reform UK average: 41%

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.

100%
Very high

How often this MP votes with their party

Reform UK 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
Centrist(54)
Based on 338 votes on ideologically significant topics — more votes means a more reliable estimate.

Career & Roles

9 positions

Previous

Government

Home Secretary

Oct 2022 - Nov 2023

Government

Home Secretary

Sept 2022 - Oct 2022

Government

Attorney General

Sept 2021 - Sept 2022

Government

Minister on Leave (Attorney General)

Mar 2021 - Sept 2021

Government

Attorney General

Feb 2020 - Mar 2021

Government

Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Exiting the European Union)

Jan 2018 - Nov 2018

Financial Interests

35 declarations · £77,204 total

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

39 events

Victims and Courts Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 2

NO
2 weeks ago295 / 162Passed

Victims and Courts Bill

Victims and Courts Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 1

NO
2 weeks ago291 / 158Passed

Victims and Courts Bill

Draft Higher Education (Fee Limits and Fee Limit Condition) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2026

NO
3 weeks ago277 / 98Passed

Draft Employment Rights Act 2025 (Investigatory Powers) (Consequential Amendments) Regulations 2026

NO
3 weeks ago368 / 107Passed

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

AYE
1 month ago175 / 292Rejected

Finance (No. 2) Bill

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

AYE
1 month ago172 / 283Rejected

Finance (No. 2) Bill

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

AYE
1 month ago174 / 292Rejected

Finance (No. 2) Bill

Home Secretary

Government role · 25 Oct 2022

Home Secretary

Government role · 6 Sept 2022

Attorney General

Government role · 10 Sept 2021

Minister on Leave (Attorney General)

Government role · 2 Mar 2021

Attorney General

Government role · 13 Feb 2020

Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Exiting the European Union)

Government role · 9 Jan 2018

Education, Skills and the Economy Sub-Committee

Parliamentary role · 1 Dec 2015

Draft Investigatory Powers Bill (Joint Committee)

Parliamentary role · 5 Nov 2015

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.

3rebel votes
Rare

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.