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Lords Amendment

Crime and Policing Bill: Motion relating to Lords Reason 11B

Monday, 20 April 2026

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What was this vote about?

This was a lords amendment on the Crime and Policing Bill. The Crime and Policing Bill is a wide-ranging measure aimed at cracking down on anti-social behaviour, weapons, sexual offences and other crimes, while expanding police powers and border controls. It also introduces a significant online-safety regime, including a rapid-removal duty for intimate image content and strengthened age checks for online pornography, alongside provisions on fly-tipping, vehicle seizure and other enforcement; it interacts with international security rules and devolved‑authority checks. The bill is currently being debated in the Commons after Lords amendments, with intensive cross‑party negotiation ongoing to determine the final shape of many provisions.

  • •- Online safety overhaul: a regime to remove intimate image content within 48 hours after a report, with reporting and expedited complaints processes, extending to search results, plus a new intimate image content regime with potential fines and a register; powers to shape these rules via secondary legislation (Online Safety Act 2023).
  • •- Strengthened age verification for online porn and other online-content safeguards: delegated powers to tighten age/consent verification for pornographic content and related enforcement mechanisms.
  • •- Child protection and exploitation: amendments aimed at clarifying offences linked to child sexual exploitation, including protections that ensure certain offences are not shielded by existing defence provisions in other Acts; measures to address youth injunctions and housing injunctions in line with the Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014.
  • •- Policing and anti-social behaviour enforcement: provisions relating to neighbourhood policing, youth diversion, community safeguards, and penalties for persistent breaches; proposals on vehicle seizure in fly-tipping and related costs; adjustments to fixed-penalty notice regimes and related guidance for police and local authorities.

The result

Motion passed
Margin: 138
294
156
Aye (65%)No (35%)

450 of 650 eligible MPs voted (69% turnout)

How each party voted

Labour (Co-op)
Voted for
291 aye0 no110 absent
Independent
Voted against
1 aye4 no8 absent
Conservative
Voted against
0 aye87 no27 absent
Liberal Democrat
Voted against
0 aye54 no18 absent
Democratic Unionist Party
Voted against
0 aye4 no1 absent
Green Party
Voted against
0 aye4 no1 absent

Who rebelled?(1 MP)

1 MP voted against their party whip.

Independent(1 rebel — party voted no)
Dan Norris(North East Somerset and Hanham)
aye

Why it matters

MPs backed a government motion to respond to Lords Reason 11B on amendments to the Crime and Policing Bill, voting 294 to 156, with one MP rebelling against their party whip. The motion relates to protest rights within the bill and to online-safety provisions now debated in the Commons. Baroness Owen of Alderley Edge has proposed amendments aimed at transparency around takedown times for non-consensual intimate images, clearer reporting notices, and faster penalties for non-compliance.

MPs approve government response to Lords amendments on the billOne MP rebelled against their party whipAmendments seek greater transparency on image-removal and noticesDebate touches on protest rights and policing powers

AI-generated context — may contain errors.

Turnout by party

69%
Traditional Unionist Voice
1/1 (100%)
Democratic Unionist Party
4/5 (80%)
Green Party
4/5 (80%)
Conservative
87/114 (76%)
Liberal Democrat
54/72 (75%)
Labour (Co-op)
291/401 (73%)
Independent
5/13 (38%)
Social Democratic & Labour Party
0/2 (0%)

What happens next?

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

Current stage: Consideration of Lords message