East Midlands · England · 79,783Boundary · 2023

Newark

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Dispatch
Apr 2026

Represented by Con since 2024. Covers Newark-on-Trent, Balderton and Bingham. Population 99,308, notably older (median age 46 vs 41 nationally).

Robert Jenrick's defining act since July 2024 is his defection from the Conservatives to Reform UK in January 2026 -- a move that dominated local and national headlines and generated significant backlash from Newark's Conservative Association, whose members described feeling "absolutely betrayed." Local party figures accused him of secretly planning the switch since September 2025 while continuing to campaign alongside them, and of prioritising personal ambition over constituent loyalty. The Guardian reported constituents criticising his absence from the area and limited engagement with local issues. He was sacked from the Conservative shadow cabinet and had his party membership suspended before the formal defection was announced.

Since joining Reform UK, Jenrick votes with his new party 99.6% of the time, though his participation rate of 48% -- well below the Commons average -- means he misses roughly half of all votes. His speeches are heavily concentrated on crime (48 contributions), where he sits notably to the right of even his Reform colleagues, scoring 0% on criminal justice reform versus the party's 29%. He opposed the Courts and Tribunals Bill and backed amendments protecting jury trial rights. On welfare, he voted against removing the two-child limit at Third Reading, after an earlier rebel vote in favour at Second Reading -- an unusual reversal. He has consistently opposed Labour's tax and spending measures, including the agricultural inheritance tax changes.

233
Commons votes
This parliament
£27k
Median income
HMRC · 2024
79.8k
Electorate
2024 GE

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§ 06This week in Westminster.Live · today’s sittingOrder Paper · refreshed daily

Jenrick’s scheduled Commons activity this week — whipped divisions, oral questions, debates — drawn from the House of Commons Order Paper.

§ 07The record, at a glance.233 divisions voted

Two readings of the same data. Issue volume shows where Jenrick has cast the most ballots — a proxy for engagement, not direction. Notable votes are the moments where the whip was free or where they broke ranks.

Issue volume
Top issues by total divisions voted · cumulative this Parliament
Taxation
63
Economy
50
Crime & Policing
31
Employment
22
Welfare and Benefits
18
Defence and Foreign Affairs
16
Notable votes
Free votes and rebellions — moments the MP’s own judgment matters more than the whip
Universal Credit (Removal of Two Child Limit) Bill: Second Reading03 Feb 2026 · free vote
Aye
§ 08The local picture.21 wards

Constituencies are not uniform. Below — the local council make-up, key facts worth knowing, and the neighbouring seats on either side.

WardCouncillorVotesParty
Balderton North CoddingtonEmma Louise Oldham792Independ
Balderton North CoddingtonJohno Lee809Conserva
Balderton SouthJean Hall628Independ
Balderton SouthSimon Nicholas Forde658Independ
BeaconDavid Michael Moore906Independ
BeaconRowan Sally Cozens1,180Independ
BeaconSusan Crosby1,213Independ
Bingham NorthGareth Tyson Alan Williams587Conserva
Bingham NorthNigel Kenneth Regan593Conserva
Bingham SouthElena Georgiou525Independ
Bingham SouthRowan Bird768Independ
BridgeDebbie Darby500Independ
Population (2021 Census)
99,308
Electorate 79,783 · 2024 register
Median income
£27,400
HMRC SPI 2024
Households renting privately
16.6%
England average 20.0%
Schools
57
46 primary · 6 secondary
Next · dig deeperEvery division, question, speech and committee record

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More constituency data is being added, including local issue analysis and historical trends. Learn about our methodology. View data sources & attribution.