Representation of the People Bill
Parliamentary timeline for Representation of the People Bill, session 39 session. Bill type: Government Bill. Current stage: Report stage.
2026
Notices of Amendments as at 29 April 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 28 April 2026
Bill 418 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - HTML
Bill 418 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - xml
Bill 418 2024-26 (as amended in Committee)
Notices of Amendments as at 27 April 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 24 April 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 23 April 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 22 April 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 21 April 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 20 April 2026
Written evidence submitted by the Fairness Foundation (RPB54)
Written evidence submitted by the Association of Colleges (RPB53)
Further written evidence submitted by Open Britain (RPB52)
Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 16 April 2026
Bill proceedings: Commons: Public Bill Committee Proceedings as at 16 April 2026
Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee - 16 April 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 15 April 2026
Written evidence submitted by Dr Sofia Collignon, Director of the Mile End Institute and Reader in Comparative Politics at Queen Mary University of London (RPB51)
Further written evidence submitted by the Children's Commissioner (RPB50)
Written evidence submitted by Professor Justin Fisher (RPB49)
Written evidence submitted by Shout Out UK (RPB48)
Supplementary written evidence submitted by Liberal Democrats Abroad (RPB47)
Written evidence submitted by Alistair Ross, Senior Professor, et al (RPB46)
Written evidence submitted by the National Youth Agency (NYA) (RPB45)
Written evidence submitted by Democracy Club (RPB44)
Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 14 April 2026
Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee - 14 April 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 10 April 2026
We are concerned about the UK’s legislative ability to withstand the kinds of threats reported during elections in other countries. We therefore welcome the Government’s intention to legislate to protect the integrity of the UK’s democratic processes and institutions through the Representation of the People Bill, but it does not go far enough to safeguard future elections. (Conclusion, Paragraph 238)
Why linked: Committee text on foreign interference framing welcoming the Bill — provides scrutiny anchor for the donations and Rycroft-related provisions.
We are concerned about the UK’s legislative ability to withstand the kinds of threats reported during elections in other countries. We therefore welcome the Government’s intention to legislate to protect the integrity of the UK’s democratic processes and institutions through …
The Government should include provisions in the Representation of the People Bill that tackle AI-generated content, the creation and dissemination of disinformation, limits on the potential abuse of social media algorithmic biasing for political advantage, and a ban on cryptoasset donations to political parties. (Recommendation, Paragraph 239) 94
Why linked: Joint Committee recommendation that the Bill be amended on AI-generated content and disinformation — directly addresses the Bill's digital imprint and intimidation clauses.
The Government should include provisions in the Representation of the People Bill that tackle AI-generated content, the creation and dissemination of disinformation, limits on the potential abuse of social media algorithmic biasing for political advantage, and a ban on cryptoasset …
Notices of Amendments as at 27 March 2026
Written evidence submitted by Nicola Williamson (RPB43)
Supplementary written evidence submitted by the Local Government Association (LGA) (RPB42)
Written evidence submitted by Black Equity Organisation (BEO) (RPB41)
Supplementary written evidence submitted by the Association of Electoral Administrators (AEA) (RPB40)
Supplementary written evidence submitted by Karen Jones FCIPD, DL, Chair, Electoral Management Board for Wales (RPB39)
Supplementary written evidence submitted by The Politics Project (RPB38)
Written evidence submitted by the UK Democracy Fund (RPB37)
Supplementary written evidence submitted by the Electoral Management Board for Scotland (EMB) (RPB36)
Supplementary written evidence submitted by Conservatives Abroad (RPB35)
Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 26 March 2026
Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee
Notices of Amendments as at 25 March 2026
Written evidence submitted by the Children's Commissioner (RPB34)
Written evidence submitted by Edward Jackson (RPB33)
Supplementary written evidence submitted by the Scottish Assessors' Association (RPB32)
Supplementary written evidence submitted by Transparency International UK (RPB31)
Written evidence submitted by Belfast City Youth Council (RPB30)
Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 24 March 2026
Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee
Notices of Amendments as at 20 March 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 19 March 2026
Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee
Committee stage
A Bill to make provision extending the right to vote to 16 and 17 year olds; to make provision about the registration of voters; to make provision about the administration and conduct of elections, re
Written evidence submitted by Labour International CLP (RPB29)
Written evidence submitted by Generation Rent (RPB28)
Written evidence submitted by Internet Matters (RPB27)
Written evidence submitted by the Electoral Management Board for Scotland (EMB) (RPB26)
Further written evidence submitted by Elect Her (RPB25)
Written evidence submitted by the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) (RPB24)
Written evidence submitted by Alan Renwick (RPB23)
Written evidence submitted by Reform Political Advertising (RPB22)
Written evidence submitted by the Association for Citizenship Teaching (ACT) (RPB21)
Written evidence submitted by Unlock Democracy (RPB20)
Written evidence submitted by the Electoral Psychology Observatory (EPO), at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) (RPB19)
Written evidence submitted by Full Fact (RPB18)
Written evidence submitted by Spotlight on Corruption (RPB17)
Written evidence submitted by a coalition of civil society organisations (joint submission) (RPB16)
Written evidence submitted by the Centre for Finance and Security at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) (RPB15)
Written evidence submitted by 50:50 Parliament and Centenary Action (joint submission) (RPB14)
Written evidence submitted by Professor Toby S. James, University of East Anglia and Electoral Integrity Project (RPB13)
Written evidence submitted by the Electoral Reform Society (RPB12)
Written evidence submitted by Politics in Action (RPB11)
Written evidence submitted by Open Britain (RPB10)
Written evidence submitted by Campaign for Compulsory Voting (RPB09)
Written evidence submitted by Dr Sam Power, University of Bristol (RPB08)
Written evidence submitted by Marie Bosnjak (RPB07)
Written evidence submitted by The Jo Cox Foundation (RPB06)
Written evidence submitted by Migrant Democracy Project (MDP) (RPB05)
Written evidence submitted by Elect Her (RPB04)
Written evidence submitted by Dr Ben Stanford (RPB03)
Written evidence submitted by Marcus J Ball, Private Prosecutor & Legal Reform Campaigner, ExecProsec (RPB02)
Written evidence submitted by Online Safety Act Network (RPB01)
Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 18 March 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 17 March 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 16 March 2026
The Representation of the People Act 1983 (Security Expenses Exclusion) (Amendment) (Wales) Order 2026
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Representation of the People Act 1983
Notices of Amendments as at 13 March 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 12 March 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 11 March 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 10 March 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 9 March 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 6 March 2026
Notices of Amendments as at 5 March 2026
Representation of the People Bill 2024-26
Why linked: Commons Library briefing CBP-10506 specifically on this Bill; the standard parliamentary scrutiny reference.
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-10506) The bill’s proposals include lowering the voting age to 16 for all elections, allowing for automated electoral registration and making changes to political donations rules.
Notices of Amendments as at 4 March 2026
call for evidence
Notices of Amendments as at 3 March 2026
Representation of the People Bill
Why linked: Cited by workspace synthesis
Second Reading Madam Deputy Speaker (Caroline Nokes): The reasoned amendment in the name of the official Opposition has been selected. 17:51:00 The Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government (Steve Reed): I beg to move, That the Bill …
Policy summaries
Why linked: MHCLG's published policy summaries for the Bill — directly operationalising and essential reading.
These policy summaries provide more information about the Representation of the People Bill, which was introduced in the House of Commons on 12 February 2026.
Votes at 16
Why linked: Filled the "Government consultation responses on lowering the voting age or electoral reform" gap via web research
In response to: Representation of the People Bill: Policy summaries
Representation of the People Bill
Second Reading Madam Deputy Speaker (Caroline Nokes): The reasoned amendment in the name of the official Opposition has been selected. 17:51:00 The Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government (Steve Reed): I beg to move, That the Bill …
Second reading
A Bill to make provision extending the right to vote to 16 and 17 year olds; to make provision about the registration of voters; to make provision about the administration and conduct of elections, re
First reading
A Bill to make provision extending the right to vote to 16 and 17 year olds; to make provision about the registration of voters; to make provision about the administration and conduct of elections, re
ECHR Memorandum for the Representation of the People Bill
Impact assessment from the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government
Delegated Powers Memorandum from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
Explanatory Notes: Bill 384 EN 2024-26
Bill 384 2024-26 (as introduced)
2025
Changes to local government elections rules in Wales
Why linked: Welsh Government consultation on the parallel 1983 Act security expenses Order — adjacent context on candidate-protection statutory machinery.
We want your views on the draft Local Elections (Wales) (Amendment) Rules 2026 and the draft Representation of the People Act 1983 (Security Expenses Exclusion) (Amendment) (Wales) Order 2026.
Restoring trust in our democracy: Our strategy for modern and secure elections
Why linked: Filled the "Government consultation responses on lowering the voting age or electoral reform" gap via web research
In response to: Restoring trust in our democracy: Our strategy for modern and secure elections
2024
Electoral Commission strategy and policy statement
Why linked: Filled the "Electoral Commission guidance and codes of practice on campaign finance and conduct" gap via web research
In response to: Electoral Commission strategy and policy statement
2023
The Elections Act 2022 (Commencement No. 11, Transitional Provisions and Specified Day) and Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023 (Commencement No. 1) Regulations 2023
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Elections Act 2022
These Regulations are the eleventh commencement regulations made under the Elections Act 2022 (c. 37) (“the 2022 Act”), and the first commencement regulations made under the Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023 (c. 55) (“the 2023 Act”).
Non-party campaigner: draft code of practice
Why linked: Filled the "Electoral Commission guidance and codes of practice on campaign finance and conduct" gap via web research
In response to: Non-party campaigner: draft code of practice
2022
We welcome the recent changes to Standing Orders that are intended to allow the triggering of recall petitions in relation to MPs sanctioned by the Independent Expert Panel to suspensions from the House for the minimum duration set out in the Recall of MPs Act 2015. While the delay in bringing forward the necessary motion was regrettable, the application of amended Standing Orders to be read alongside the Act should now correct the error. This must now be seen to be effective in applicable ca...
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Recall of MPs Act 2015
We welcome the recent changes to Standing Orders that are intended to allow the triggering of recall petitions in relation to MPs sanctioned by the Independent Expert Panel to suspensions from the House for the minimum duration set out in …
2015
Electoral Registration and Administration Act 2013 (Transitional Provisions) Order 2015
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000
Motion to Annul 15:21:00 Moved by Lord Tyler: That a Humble Address be presented to Her Majesty praying that the Order, laid before the House on 16 July, be annulled (SI 2015/1520). Lord Tyler (LD): My Lords, in moving this …
2013
Regulation of Referendums
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000
Type: Standard Note (SN05142) This Note sets out the mechanics for holding referendums. It summarises the applicable provisions of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 (PPERA) which regulate publicity and campaigning.