John Healey MP
High confidence
Supports the Bill as fulfilment of the Labour 2024 manifesto pledge to put the Covenant fully into law and renew the nation's contract with those who serve. Frames the Bill as operationalising the SDR's readiness agenda — Defence Housing Service, reserves recall to age 65, counter-drone powers and tri-service complaints reform — and underlines cross-party support for the Bill's renewal core.Jan 2026
Tension with James Cartlidge MP, Mark Francois MP, Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi MP, Sir Julian Lewis MP
James Cartlidge MP
High confidence
Does not oppose the Bill (Opposition committed not to divide at Second Reading) and supports the underlying provisions — Covenant strengthening, service justice reform, reserves modernisation, Defence Housing Service. However presses that the funding envelope is materially insufficient: identifies a £28bn equipment-plan gap and £2.6bn in-year savings, calls for 3% by end of this Parliament rather than 3% in the next Parliament, and demands the Defence Investment Plan be published.Jan 2026
Tension with John Healey MP, Mr Calvin Bailey MP
Mark Francois MP
High confidence
Will not oppose the Bill but is in fundamental tension with the Government over Northern Ireland veterans, opposing the proposed repeal of the Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Act 2023 — framed as a parallel-track risk that undermines the Bill's stated protection of those who serve.Jan 2026
Tension with John Healey MP
Select Committee on the Armed Forces Bill 2026
High confidence
Used its Special Report (28 April 2026) to focus scrutiny on the Clause 2 Covenant duty extension to Whitehall departments and additional policy areas, signalling that implementation design and resourcing for those subject to the duty are central concerns.Apr 2026
Defence Committee
High confidence
Recommended in its 4th Report (HC 572) that the Covenant duty be extended to all Whitehall departments and devolved administrations and to additional policy areas (social care, employment), while warning that adherence to the existing duty is 'patchy' and that those expected to deliver any extended duty must be involved in co-design and properly resourced.Jun 2025
Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi MP
High confidence
Welcomes the strengthening of the Covenant in Clause 2 but presses three points on behalf of the Defence Committee: that adherence to the existing duty is patchy and needs an implementation strategy; that bodies subject to the duty must be appropriately resourced; and that the Government should not stop short of the predecessor Committee's recommendation that rape and sexual assault cases be automatically heard in civilian courts (Lyons review).Jan 2026
Tension with John Healey MP
Helen Maguire MP
High confidence
Supports the violence-against-women-and-girls package in the Bill but identifies a specific gap: Royal Navy summary-hearing arrangements on ships at sea allow commanding officers to investigate serious sexual assault allegations without a warrant-card-holding investigator, calling for investigation-trained military police on long-deployment vessels.Jan 2026
Liz Saville Roberts MP
High confidence
Welcomes the Covenant duty's extension to devolved nations but raises whether additional funding will flow to Wales — particularly NHS Wales — to support the resulting obligations, given Wales contributes a disproportionate share of Army recruitment.Jan 2026
Jim Allister MP
High confidence
Objects to the exclusion of Northern Ireland local authorities from the Covenant legal duty's extension to local government and presses for parity with councils elsewhere in the UK.Jan 2026
Robin Swann MP
High confidence
Raises that Northern Ireland-resident veterans do not have parity of access to physical and mental-health services (e.g. Operation Restore) available elsewhere in the UK, and asks whether the Bill will deliver that parity.Jan 2026
Helen Morgan MP
High confidence
Welcomes the service family accommodation decent-homes standard but presses that single living accommodation remains substandard (rat infestations, noise) and must be addressed alongside the Defence Housing Service work.Jan 2026
Sir Julian Lewis MP
High confidence
Critical of the Government's handling of Northern Ireland veterans legacy legislation, and uses the Second Reading debate to contrast the Government's 3% spending trajectory with cold-war-era 4.5–5% of GDP — supporting more rapid spending growth than the current envelope provides.Jan 2026
Tension with John Healey MP
Dr Andrew Murrison MP
High confidence
Supports the Bill's provenance of the Annington reversal (initiated under the previous Government) and asks pointed implementation questions on whether service housing allocation will be on rank or need — a question that bears directly on the Defence Housing Service's eventual operational charter.Jan 2026
Mr Calvin Bailey MP
High confidence
Backs the Government on defence funding (cites £7bn–£29bn MoD-assessed equipment plan gap, £16bn NAO figure) and presses that delivery of the extended Covenant duty requires other Secretaries of State to engage their departments.Jan 2026
Tension with James Cartlidge MP