The Westminster lensMP · Labour Party · Sitting since 7 May 2015

Dawn Butler.

Labour Party MP for Brent East.

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Commons votes
385/537
72% attendance · top 53% of MPs
Party alignment
96%
votes with party majority
Speeches
217
across 110 debates · 30,489 words
Written Qs
9
9 answered · 0 pending
Dispatch
16 May 2026

Aligned with their council.

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.

Background

Dawn Butler is the Labour MP for Brent East, and has been an MP continually since 7 May 2015.

§ 01Voting record.385 divisions · most recent 23 Mar 2026

By issue — what do they vote on most?

Top eight by total divisions voted, this parliament. Volume measures engagement, not direction — see Notable Votes for free-vote moments and rebellions.

Taxation81
Economy75
Employment38
Education36
Crime & Policing34
Constitution and Democracy26
Pensions21
Housing21

Source · The Public Whip · Hansard

Notable votes — free votes & rebellions.

Moments where the whip was free, or where Butler broke ranks. Free votes are the truer signal of personal stance.

DateBill / motionVoteWhip
9 Jul 2025Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill Committee: Amendment 38Yes
vs party
9 Jul 2025Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill: Third ReadingNo
vs party
13 Nov 2024Draft Windsor Framework (Non-Commercial Movement of Pet Animals) Regulations 2024No
vs party
§ 02Speeches.217 contributions · 110 debates · 30,489 words

Words spoken, by topic.

Culture Community12,079
Crime11,367
Health9,736
Economy & Jobs7,113
Local Government6,131
Social Care5,706
Labour Market4,903
Lab avg / MP All-MP avgper topic, words per MP

Source · Hansard

Recent contributions.

11 Jun 2026

Grenfell Tower Fire: Ninth Anniversary

Supports fast-tracking of criminal cases to ensure justice is seen to be done swiftly.

45 words·Read
16 Apr 2026

NHS Federated Data Platform

The Government has inherited a Palantir mess from the previous administration; the contract lacks ethical foundations and AI data sovereignty; UK alternatives like OpenSAFELY alrea

344 words·Read
12 Mar 2026

Defending Democracy Taskforce

Corrected record that far-right extremism poses greater threat than Islam; called for guardrails around human rights and protection of personal data rather than focusing on AI regu

208 words·Read
25 Feb 2026

Grenfell Tower Annual Report

Expresses emotional frustration at slow justice: after nine years, nobody arrested; pushes Minister to press Met Police to move faster on criminal prosecutions while acknowledging

116 words·Read
Showing 4 of 217·All 217 speeches
§ 03Committees & roles.Select & joint committees
None recorded

Butler holds no select-committee seat this session. New 2024-intake MPs typically wait one term before being appointed.

§ 04Written questions.9 tabled · 9 answered · 22 Jan 2025 → 23 Feb 2026

Top departments asked.

DepartmentQsShare
Department of Health and Social Care333.3%
Home Office333.3%
Department for Science, Innovation and Technology222.2%
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government111.1%

Most recent.

23 Feb 2026·Home Office·Answered

Whether her Department provides funding for (a) police protection and (b) transport for Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.

It is our long-standing policy not to provide detailed information on protective security arrangements, including funding, as doing so could compromise their integrity and individuals' security.

9 Dec 2025·Department for Science, Innovation and Technology·Answered

Innovation and Technology, pursuant to the answer of 9 December to Question 96093, what steps the Government is taking to safeguard individuals from non-sexually explicit deepfakes, digital impersonation, and the misuse of personal identity.

Solutions that help to determine what media is real and what is AI-generated are key to tackling a range of AI risks. The government is undertaking work to explore the potential methods for detecting AI-generated content.The UK’s Online Saf…read full →

2 Dec 2025·Department for Science, Innovation and Technology·Answered

Innovation and Technology, what steps the Government is taking to safeguard individuals in response to rapid developments in artificial intelligence, including protecting 1) the general public and 2) Members of Parliament from deepfakes, digital impersonation, and the misuse of personal identity.

The Government takes the threat posed by harmful deepfakes, including to MPs, very seriously. Deepfakes are captured by the Online Safety Act where they are shared on an in-scope service and constitute illegal content or content harmful to …read full →

18 Nov 2025·Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government·Answered

Communities and Local Government, what discussions he has had with Cabinet colleagues on the potential merits of devolving powers to Established Mayoral Strategic Authorities to allow them to introduce overnight accommodation levies.

Tax policy is a matter for fiscal events.The Government keeps all tax policy under review.

Showing 4 of 9·All 9 written questions
§ 05Register & expenses.7 declared interests · £288k claimed FY 24_25

Register of interests.

Payment: £2,500 Speaking engagement at a Black History Month Event
Payment: £2,500 Speaking engagement at a Black History Month Event Received on: 10 November 2025. Hours: 4 hrs. Donated to: Jamaica Hurric…
Role, work or services: Speaking engagement
Role, work or services: Speaking engagement Payer: Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP (Law Firm), Telephone House, 2-4 Temple Avenue, London EC4Y …
Heward Mills Ltd
Name of donor: Heward Mills Ltd Address of donor: 77 Farringdon Road, London EC1M 3JU Estimate of the probable value (or amount of any don…
Type of land/property: Residential property (house)
Type of land/property: Residential property (house) Number of properties: 1 Location: London (Registered 8 June 2015; updated 3 September…
Name of donor: British Group Inter-Parliamentary Union
Name of donor: British Group Inter-Parliamentary Union Executive Committee Member of the British Group Inter-Parliamentary Union. This is a…
Showing 5 of 7·All 7 register entries

Source · Members API · Last amended 16 Dec 2025

IPSA expenses.

Category£Share
Staffing266,31292.6%
Office Costs21,3617.4%
MP Travel130.0%
Total · 36 claims287,686100%
Showing 3 of 36·All 36 IPSA claims

Source · IPSA · FY 24_25

§ 06This week in Westminster.Order paper · refreshed daily

Nothing tabled for Butler on the published Order Paper this week.

§ 07Electoral history.5 contests · 2010, 2024
YearConstituencyVotesShareResult
2024Brent East19,37051.2%Won
2019Brent Central31,77964.7%Won
2017Brent Central38,20873.1%Won
2015Brent Central29,21662.1%Won
2010Brent Central18,68141.2%Lost

2024 — full result, Brent East.

CandidateVotes%
Dawn ButlerWONLab19,37051.2

Showing the MP’s own row only. Full result table: see Brent East

Sources, methods & last update
Method The dispatch paragraphs are AI-generated from the public sources listed below. Every figure links to its source. If we’re wrong, please tell us — corrections within 48 hours.
DivisionsHansard
The Public Whip
Updated 13 Jun 2026
SpeechesHansard · 30,489 words
22 Jul 2024 → 11 Jun 2026
Written QsMembers API
9 tabled · 9 answered
CommitteesCommittees API
None recorded
RegisterMembers API
7 entries
ExpensesIPSA
£287,686 · FY 24_25
Order paperUK Parliament
Refreshed daily
ElectionsElectoral Commission
DCLEAPIL