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Lords Amendment

Sentencing Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 7

Tuesday, 20 January 2026

View bill

What was this vote about?

This was a lords amendment on the Sentencing Bill. The Sentencing Bill sets out reforms to how murder and sexual offences are punished, and it includes provisions on suspending custodial sentences and on how offenders are released on licence. It aims to create clearer, more consistent sentencing and supervision in the community while protecting the public.

  • •Reforms to sentencing for murder and sexual offences.
  • •Rules about suspending custodial sentences and release on licence.
  • •Provisions for release procedures and ongoing supervision in the community.
  • •The bill has progressed through Commons stages (including Committee and Report Stages) and had Lords amendments, which the Commons has disagreed with in at least one instance.

The result

Motion passed
Margin: 192
319
127
Aye (72%)No (28%)

446 of 650 eligible MPs voted (69% turnout)

How each party voted

Labour (Co-op)
Voted for
313 aye0 no88 absent
Independent
Split
3 aye7 no3 absent
Conservative
Voted against
0 aye98 no16 absent
Reform UK
Voted against
0 aye5 no3 absent
Democratic Unionist Party
Voted against
0 aye5 no
Plaid Cymru
Voted against
0 aye4 no

Who rebelled?(3 MPs)

3 MPs voted against their party whip.

Independent(3 rebels — party voted no)
Dan Norris(North East Somerset and Hanham)
aye
Ms Diane Abbott(Hackney North and Stoke Newington)
aye
Joani Reid(East Kilbride and Strathaven)
aye

Turnout by party

69%
Ulster Unionist Party
1/1 (100%)
Plaid Cymru
4/4 (100%)
Democratic Unionist Party
5/5 (100%)
Green Party
4/4 (100%)
Traditional Unionist Voice
1/1 (100%)
Your Party
1/1 (100%)
Conservative
98/114 (86%)
Labour (Co-op)
313/401 (78%)

What happens next?

The Lords amendment result is sent back to the other House for consideration.

Current stage: Programme motion