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Opposition Day MotionA debate on a topic chosen by the opposition parties, not the government. These votes are not binding.

Opposition Day Motion - Schools White Paper: Prime Ministers Amendment

Wednesday, 13 April 2016

What was this vote about?

This was an opposition day motion — a debate topic chosen by an opposition party. These motions are not binding on the government, but they signal political positions and can put pressure on ministers.

The result

Motion passed
Margin: 98
302
204
Aye (60%)No (40%)

506 of 650 eligible MPs voted (78% turnout)

How each party voted

Conservative
Voted for
54 aye0 no6 absent
Reform UK
Voted for
3 aye0 no
Labour (Co-op)
Voted against
0 aye89 no16 absent
Independent
Voted against
0 aye2 no1 absent
Plaid Cymru
Voted against
0 aye1 no
Liberal Democrat
Voted against
0 aye1 no1 absent

Who rebelled?

No MPs voted against their party on this division.

Turnout by party

78%
Reform UK
3/3 (100%)
Plaid Cymru
1/1 (100%)
Conservative
54/60 (90%)
Labour (Co-op)
89/105 (85%)
Independent
2/3 (67%)
Liberal Democrat
1/2 (50%)
Scottish National Party
0/5 (0%)
Democratic Unionist Party
0/4 (0%)

What happens next?

Opposition day motions are non-binding. Even if passed, the government is not legally required to act on them — but a defeat is politically significant.