§ 00 Issue3 named divisions2 bills
EU Relations
UK-EU relationship post-Brexit
Government alignment shows how often each party voted with the government's stated position. Issue-aligned direction shows agreement with the AI-identified supportive stance.
Voted with government positionVoted in issue-aligned direction
13 May 2025Opposition Day: UK-EU Summit: Government amendmentAye = Support the Labour government's framing of UK-EU relations and its approach to the summit, backing closer engagement with the EU on the government's terms · No = Reject the government's amendment, preferring the original opposition motion — likely reflecting concerns about the terms of UK-EU rapprochement or a more sceptical stance on closer EU ties321 · 104Passed13 May 2025Opposition Day: UK-EU SummitAye = Support the opposition's motion on the UK-EU Summit, signalling concern about the government's approach to post-Brexit EU relations and demanding greater transparency or accountability · No = Back the government's handling of the UK-EU Summit and reject the opposition's attempt to constrain or criticise its negotiating strategy with the EU106 · 402Defeated
How is this calculated?
Government alignment shows how often a party's MPs voted with the government's stated position on this issue. This is the most comparable metric across parties, as it measures the same reference point for everyone.
Issue-aligned direction shows how often MPs voted in the direction tagged as supportive of this issue by AI analysis. For example, if a vote is tagged “pro-environment”, an Aye vote counts as aligned.