Dawn Butler's most significant recent act was defying Labour's whip on welfare. In July 2025 she voted against the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill at Third Reading and backed an amendment to protect disabled people with fluctuating conditions — placing her among the Labour rebels who pushed back hardest on the government's benefit changes. Her rebel votes also extended to the assisted dying bill, where she backed several amendments at Report Stage, including one that would have prevented people who voluntarily stop eating and drinking from qualifying as terminally ill. On the positive side for local constituents, she secured a £20m investment for a Brent East housing estate through the Pride in Place scheme in April 2026, and has run a sustained campaign against betting shop proliferation in the borough, surveying 7,000 households and mobilising 40 councils nationally.
At 72% voting participation — below the Commons average — and 96% party alignment overall, Butler is broadly loyal but selectively rebellious on welfare and immigration, where she sits 54 and 23 percentage points below her party's average respectively. She is an active speaker, contributing to 101 debates across economy and jobs, social care, health, and local government. She has also raised issues of racial equality publicly, establishing the Bernie Grant Leadership Programme and Parliamentary Black Caucus, and leading a complaint to the Standards Commissioner over racist remarks by another MP.
Butler holds no current committee seat, so her influence runs mainly through chamber speeches and public campaigning. Recent news coverage spans crime, cost-of-living, and housing, with sentiment broadly neutral. Her voting deviations on welfare and immigration — and her rebel votes in July 2025 — are the clearest signals of where her priorities diverge from the Labour leadership.