This was a lords amendment on the Victims and Courts Bill. The Victims and Courts Bill aims to put victims at the heart of the criminal justice system, spelling out how victims should be treated and how the Victims’ Commissioner should work. Lords amendments proposed wide-ranging rights for victims (like free court transcripts, dedicated victim navigators, and a stronger Victim Contact Scheme) and extra duties on authorities, but the Commons has repeatedly disagreed with these changes, arguing they would be costly and burdensome. The bill is currently in the Lords, considering the Commons’ amendments and reasons.
•- Lords amendments sought major expansions of victims’ rights: free access to court transcripts within 14 days, regardless of evidence given; independent victim navigators for England and Wales (especially for victims of slavery or human trafficking); and a strengthened Victim Contact Scheme with funding duties for authorities.
•- Other Lords proposals included extending protections and information-sharing under the Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act 2004, publishing sentencing remarks online with anonymity protections, and measures to support victims of fraud, economic crime and online abuse, plus new victim-facing duties on services and restoration of rights.
•- The Commons consistently voted to disagree with Lords amendments, citing cost, practicality and potential overlap with existing protections; several amendments were defeated at Report Stage or in the Lords’ later amendments, and only a limited number of technical corrections were agreed.
•- There were significant technical amendments (notably to Clause 9) to keep the text aligned with the Prosecution of Offences Act 1985, and some changes were withdrawn or amended through Committee and Third Reading stages.
The result
Motion passed
Margin: 133
291
158
Aye (65%)No (35%)
449 of 650 eligible MPs voted (69% turnout)
How each party voted
Labour (Co-op)
Voted for
288 aye0 no113 absent
Independent
Split
3 aye3 no7 absent
Conservative
Voted against
0 aye82 no32 absent
Liberal Democrat
Voted against
0 aye57 no15 absent
Reform UK
Voted against
0 aye4 no4 absent
Green Party
Voted against
0 aye4 no1 absent
Who rebelled?
No MPs voted against their party on this division.
Why it matters
MPs voted to disagree with Lords Amendment 1 to the Victims and Courts Bill, which had broadened victims' rights. The result was 291 in favour to 158 against, with two MPs voting against their party whip. With the Lords amendment rejected, the bill returns to the Lords for further consideration as negotiations continue.
Two MPs voted against their party whipLords' amendment to widen victims' rights rejectedBill returns to the Lords for further negotiation
AI-generated context — may contain errors.
Turnout by party
69%
Your Party
1/1 (100%)
Green Party
4/5 (80%)
Liberal Democrat
57/72 (79%)
Plaid Cymru
3/4 (75%)
Conservative
82/114 (72%)
Labour (Co-op)
288/401 (72%)
Reform UK
4/8 (50%)
Independent
6/13 (46%)
What happens next?
The Lords amendment result is sent back to the other House for consideration.
Current stage: Consideration of Commons amendments and / or reasons