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On this day, 8 April 2013, former Conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcher died. Street parties broke out across the UK, particularly in working class areas and in former mining communities which were ravaged by her policies. Her legacy is best remembered for her destruction of the British workers' movement, after the defeat of the miners' strike of 1984-85. This enabled the drastic increase of economic inequality and unemployment in the 1980s. Her government also slashed social housing, helping to create the situation today where it is unavailable for most people, and private property prices are mostly unaffordable for the young. Thatcher also complained that children were "being cheated of a sound start in life" by being taught that "they have an inalienable right to be gay", so she introduced the vicious section 28 law prohibiting teaching of homosexuality as acceptable. Abroad, Thatcher was a powerful advocate for racism, advising the Australian foreign minister to beware of Asians, else his country would "end up like Fiji, where the Indian migrants have taken over". She hosted apartheid South Africa's head of state, while denouncing the African National Congress as a "typical terrorist organisation". Chilean dictator general Augusto Pinochet, responsible for the rape, murder and torture of tens of thousands of people, was a close personal friend. Back in Britain, she protected numerous politicians accused of paedophilia including Sir Peter Hayman, and MPs Peter Morrison and Cyril Smith. She also lobbied for her friend, serial child abuser Jimmy Savile, to be knighted despite being warned about his behaviour. Margaret Thatcher was eventually forced to step down after the defeat of her hated poll tax by a mass non-payment campaign. Pictured: Jimmy Savile welcoming Thatcher to hell, reportedly. Learn more about the great miners' strike of 1984-5 in our podcast series: https://workingclasshistory.com/tag/1984-5-miners-strike/ https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=605239344982618&set=a.602588028581083&type=3
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joachimnapoleon · 2 years
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Hi there! I've been very interested with Napoleon & his marshals as of late, and when I saw your blog I thought it was a good place to ask about it :) Do you have any Napoleon biographies with reliable source? Oh, and also any good biographies on the marshals? Many thanks! 💛
Hello! I'll try to help as much as I can.
The only Napoleon biographies I've read (so far) are:
-Napoleon: A Life, by Andrew Roberts -Napoleon: A Life, by Adam Zamoyski -Napoleon Bonaparte: An Intimiate Biography, by Vincent Cronin -Napoleon: Soldier of Destiny//Spirit of the Age 1805-1810//Decline and Fall of an Empire: 1811-1821; a three-volume biography by Michael Broers
So there are still quite a few prominent ones I need to read--and I haven't even attempted to read any of the French ones. But out of the ones I've read, I'd most recommend Cronin and Roberts. Cronin gives a great, humanizing portrait of Napoleon, and Andrew Roberts' book is very nicely balanced and well researched in my opinion. Both are pretty thorough with their sourcing. Cronin's also has a great appendix regarding the reliability of various Napoleonic memoirs. As much as I like Broers' political analyses in his books, he isn't as careful with his fact-checking and I admit I kind of soured on him a bit with the last book.
As far as biographies on the marshals, I have not read many. My primary focus for the past few years has been on Murat. In English, I would not say that there is currently a "definitive" biography on him, though a new English one is currently in the works for which I have very high hopes. But currently the only English biographies on Murat are A. Hilliard Atteridge's Joachim Murat: Marshal of France and King of Naples (1911), and The Betrayers by Hubert Cole, which is a dual biography of both Joachim and Caroline Murat, published in 1972. Both have their strengths and weaknesses. Atteridge's book goes into much more detail about Murat's early military career, and about the military campaigns in general. Cole kind of just breezes through Murat's early years and keeps the campaign descriptions fairly brief (which I'm honestly okay with; I find deep analyses of military tactics extremely boring if I'm being honest). Cole's strength, though, is in the number of primary sources he utilizes, and his excellent bibliography has been a goldmine for me in my own research. He also fleshes out Murat's reign in Naples in much better detail than Atteridge. Cole had far more access to Murat's correspondence than Atteridge did--as well as to many memoirs and archives--so Murat's story just feels far more fleshed out in Cole's book. I will add though that Cole, despite the title of the book, is actually very sympathetic to the Murats, and clearly not a fan of Napoleon.
For Marshal Lannes, I'd be remiss if I didn't recommend our own @maggiec70's marvelous work, The Emperor's Friend: Marshal Jean Lannes.
For the other marshals, I have all of these but the one on Davout, but I have not yet gotten around to reading them:
-Ney: Marshal Ney, The Bravest of the Brave, also by A. Hilliard Atteridge (1914), Marshal Ney: The Romance and the Real, by Raymond Horricks (1982), alternately titled for the newer edition Military Politics; From Bonaparte to the Bourbons: The Life and Death of Michel Ney 1769-1825 (1995)
-Berthier: By Command of the Emperor: A Life of Marshal Berthier, by S.J. Watson (1988)
-Davout: The Iron Marshal: A Biography of Louis N. Davout, by John G. Gallaher (2018)
-Soult: Napoleon's Maligned Marshal, by Sir Peter Hayman, (1990)
I hope that helps! Thanks for the ask :)
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angelholme · 4 years
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Fuck a duck.
This goes beyond any definition of appalling and straight into hellish.
Our politicians are...... jesus there are no words to describe them.
The historic investigation of child sex abuse needs to go on. If only to bring peace of mind to the lives of everyone who has suffered at the hands of these...... people.
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dulwichdiverter · 5 years
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The movie monster of SE22
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LEGENDARY HORROR ACTOR BORIS KARLOFF WAS BORN IN EAST DULWICH. WE FOLLOW IN HIS FOOTSTEPS FROM FOREST HILL ROAD TO FRANKENSTEIN
BY MARK BRYANT
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the death of film, TV and theatre actor Boris Karloff (1887-1969), best known as the monster in three classic, black-and-white horror films based on Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel Frankenstein. Not only was Karloff born in East Dulwich, but four of his brothers were educated at Dulwich College and the area has a number of other connections to his life and work.
Karloff, whose real name was William Henry Pratt, was the 10th surviving child of Edward John Pratt, an Anglo-Indian diplomat who had worked as an assistant collector for the Indian Salt Revenue Service in Bombay, before retiring and moving to London in the 1870s with his third wife Eliza and their seven children.
At the time of the 1881 census the family were living at 23 Landcroft Road, which runs parallel to Lordship Lane between Crystal Palace Road and Whateley Road in East Dulwich. Edward’s ninth child (and seventh son) Richard Septimus Pratt was born there in 1882.
By 1887 the family had moved to 15 Forest Hill Road (later renumbered as 36) and it was here – as recorded by an English Heritage blue plaque above what is now a fish-and-chip shop – that their youngest child, William Henry Pratt (known as Billy) entered the world on November 23, 1887. At the time of his birth, his father was 60 years old.
Karloff’s mother, Eliza Sarah Millard, was the Indian-born daughter of a sergeant-major in the British Army in India. Her aunt was Anna Leonowens, who was governess to the children of King Mongkut of Siam (now Thailand) and was immortalised in Margaret Landon’s bestseller Anna and the King of Siam (1944) and later in the award-winning film The King and I (1956) starring Yul Brynner and Deborah Kerr.
The young Karloff had two older sisters: his half-sibling Emma, who was his father’s adult daughter by his first marriage to Julienne Campbell and was born in 1850; and Julia, born in 1874. He also had seven older brothers. Of these, the four eldest were educated at Dulwich College, where they were contemporaries of the writer AEW Mason and philosopher GE Moore.
His oldest brother, Edward Millard Pratt (1865-1949), became a judge in Bombay High Court, and the others all achieved distinction in their chosen careers, notably the sixth son, Sir John Thomas Pratt (1876-1970), who was British consul-general in China, adviser on Far Eastern affairs for the Foreign Office and vice-chairman of the governing body of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.
The only sibling who showed any theatrical inclinations was the second son, George Marlow Pratt (1867-1904), who worked for a time under the name “George Marlowe” as an actor in the West End but died in his 30s.
In 1888, when Karloff was one year old, his father abandoned the family and by 1891 his mother and the children had moved to a smaller, cheaper house on nearby Friern Road. Then, in 1893, when Karloff was seven, he moved to stay with his half-sister Emma – now aged 43 – in Enfield, Middlesex.
Here he attended Enfield Grammar School before moving to Merchant Taylors’ School in London – where his brother Richard had studied before him – and then to Uppingham School, a private boarding school in Rutland.
He later attended King’s College London, intending to take the exams required to enter the diplomatic service like other members of his family. But in 1909 he decided to give up his studies and sailed to Canada.
At first he worked as a manual labourer in various parts of the country, until one day in Vancouver in 1910 he bumped into Henry Hayman Claudet (son of the pioneer photographer Francis George Claudet), an old Dulwich College friend of his brother John.
As he later recalled: “I was wondering what to do next when a man stopped me in the street and asked if my name was Pratt. I said it was.
“The man was a school friend of my brother Jack at Dulwich and he recognised the likeness. He gave me a note to the works superintendent of the British Columbia Railway and I got a job at 28 cents an hour with a pick and shovel laying tracks.”
Karloff later became a real-estate salesman before starting work in repertory theatre, changing his name from Billy Pratt to Boris Karloff and beginning with the Jeanne Russell Company in Kamloops, British Columbia.
On the outbreak of war in 1914 he volunteered for the British Army but was rejected on health grounds. He therefore continued to act in plays and silent films in Canada and later the USA.
His first screen appearance was as an extra in The Dumb Girl of Portici (1916), which was also the only film starring the Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova. However, he soon began to make his name, with a standout role as the mesmerist in silent film The Bells (1926). This film has a Dulwich connection, as the play on which it is based launched the career of the famous Victorian actor Sir Henry Irving, who laid the foundation stone of Dulwich Library in 1896.
Other films in which Karloff starred also had links with the Dulwich area. Six years after The Bells, he played the sinister criminal mastermind Fu Manchu in the black-and-white talking picture, The Mask of Fu Manchu (1932), which was based on the fifth of a series of novels by local author Sax Rohmer (real name Arthur Henry Ward), who lived in Herne Hill.
Then the following year, after appearing in The Mummy (1932), he returned to the UK to make The Ghoul (1933) – the first major British horror film of the sound era – thereby reuniting with his family after more than two decades in North America.
In this film (which also features Ralph Richardson in his first ever speaking part) his co-star was Kathleen Harrison, who had been to school in Clapham and whose father was borough engineer for Southwark.
But he is best known for playing the monster in Frankenstein (1931) – his 81st movie – and its two sequels. By coincidence, the bosses at Universal Pictures, the studio that made the film, had originally wanted the part of Dr Frankenstein to be played by Old Alleynian Leslie Howard, but the director James Whale had other ideas and the role went to Colin Clive. In another curious link, Howard’s son Ronald (himself also an actor who was born in South Norwood) later starred in two 1961 episodes of Karloff’s American TV series Thriller.
In Bride of Frankenstein (1935) the female lead was Elsa Lanchester, who was born in Catford and later married the actor Charles Laughton, who starred in numerous films. Among them was Payment Deferred (1932), based on the novel of the same name by Old Alleynian author CS Forester, which was itself set in Dulwich.
During the filming of the third movie, Son of Frankenstein (1939), Karloff’s wife Dorothy gave birth to his first and only child, a daughter called Sara, and Karloff reputedly rushed from the film set to the hospital while still in full monster makeup.
Though he appeared in two later Frankenstein films, House of Frankenstein (1944) and Frankenstein 1970 (1958), he played the part of the mad scientist, not the monster.
However, he never starred in any of the seven Frankenstein-themed horror movies produced by Hammer Films from 1957 to 1974. Six of these have a link with south London as they featured Peter Cushing as Dr Frankenstein, whose family lived in Dulwich during the First World War. Cushing also starred as the archeologist in Hammer’s The Mummy (1959), while the archeologist in The Curse of the Mummy’s Tomb (1964) was played by Ronald Howard.
Karloff’s later successes included playing himself in the original Broadway stage version of the black comedy Arsenic and Old Lace (1941), in which one of the characters receives plastic surgery to look like Boris Karloff. Although he was unable to star in the 1944 Cary Grant film version of the play (as he was still acting the part on Broadway) Karloff reprised the role in TV versions in 1955 and 1962.
Other notable Karloff films with south London links include The Body Snatcher (1945) and Grip of the Strangler (1958). The former was based on a story by Robert Louis Stevenson, whose novels Treasure Island, Kidnapped and The Black Arrow all first appeared (in serial form, before they were books) in Young Folks magazine, published by Dulwich press magnate James Henderson.
Grip of the Strangler, which was based on a story written specially for Karloff by his friend Jan Read, also features two actresses with local links: Brixton-born Jean Kent and Camberwell-born Dorothy Gordon.
In 1959, shortly after the release of Grip of the Strangler, Karloff retired with his fifth wife Evelyn – whom he married in 1946 – to “Roundabout”, his country cottage in the village of Bramshott, Hampshire, to enjoy gardening and cricket (though he still accepted small roles). He had been a keen cricketer throughout his life and when in Hollywood, he was an actor-member of the Hollywood Cricket Club along with Leslie Howard and Clive Brook, another Old Alleynian.
One of the last of Karloff’s cinematic appearances was as the voice of the Grinch in the 1966 animated film How the Grinch Stole Christmas, based on the children’s story by Dr Seuss. The original film, which Karloff also narrated, was shown in Dulwich last Christmas at a special screening to coincide with the release of The Grinch, starring Benedict Cumberbatch. It was shown at the East Dulwich Picturehouse on Lordship Lane, less than a mile from the Forest Hill Road home in which Karloff was born.
Dr Mark Bryant lives in East Dulwich. By coincidence his own stepbrother’s surname is Pratt (though, as far as the family knows, he is not a relation of Boris Karloff...)
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shaunynews · 7 years
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Are These The 'Missing' Peter Hayman Sex Files? UK/USA Sex Scandal
Are These The ‘Missing’ Peter Hayman Sex Files? UK/USA Sex Scandal
This guy goes back to 1981! I got sent some files regarding the alleged sex involvement of Peter Hayman (Died in 1992) in the ongoing ‘ALLEGED’ UK Sex scandal. Westminster and Home Secretary Theresa May have said these files are missing. I am unsure if these are the files but I must share regardless. I am not the only one with these files, as far as I know 9 others have these. I know one person…
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michaelcosio · 5 years
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Nov 7, 2017
Enjoy the full British Academy Scotland Awards ceremony, held in Glasgow on Sunday.
Hosted by Edith Bowman, the Awards celebrated the very best in film, television and games produced over the last year in Scotland, with Caitriona Balfe, Sam Heughan, David Hayman, Peter Capaldi and Sir Chris Hoy among the sterling list of presenters handing out the coveted awards on the night.
In the competitive categories, T2 Trainspotting was the night’s biggest winner, picking up three awards in all the categories in which it was nominated: for Ewen Bremner for Actor Film, Danny Boyle for Director – Fiction and for Feature Film.
BAFTA Scotland - Wiki
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todayclassical · 7 years
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March 27 in Music History
1416 Birth of composer Antonio Squarcialupi.
1603 Birth of composer William Smith.
1702 Birth of composer Johann Ernst Eberlin.
1710 Birth of composer Joseph Marie Clement dall' Abaco.
1737 Birth of composer Francesco Zannetti.
1745 FP of G. F. Handel´s oratorio Belshazzar at the King's Theater in London. 
1746 Birth of composer Augustin Ullinger.
1757 Death of composer and violinist Johann Stamitz.
1757 Birth of composer Richard John Samuel Stevens.
1760 Birth of composer Ishmail Spicer. 
1808 Franz Joseph Haydn gives his last public appearance at a performance of his oratorio The Creation.
1816 Birth of English organist George Elvey in Canterbury. 
1827 Dr. Johann Wagner performed an autopsy on Beethoven, revealing a severely cirrhotic and shrunken liver as the cause of death.
1833 Birth of American soprano Genevieve Ward in NYC. 
1843 Birth of English organist Charles MacLean in Cambridge.
1851 Birth of French composer Vincent d'Indy, in Paris.
1853 Birth of composer Carl Valentine Lachmund in Booneville, MO. 
1854 Birth of Belgian composer Edgar Tinel.
1854 FP of Dorn's opera "Die Nibelungen", in Berlin. 
1858 Birth of American composer Peter Christian Lutkin in Wis­con­sin. 
1862 Birth of Argentinian composer Arturo Berutti in San Juan. 
1863 Birth of Spanish tenor Francesco Vignas in Barcelona.
1867 Birth of American soprano Edyth Walker in Hopewell, N.Y. 
1872 Birth of Spanish bass Andrés De Segurola in Valencia.  1873 Birth of Italian soprano Giannina Russ in Milan. 
1876 Birth of American ragtime composer William H. Tyers. 
1883 Birth of composer Jan Kunc.
1885 Birth of Dutch composer Harry Cox in Amsterdam.
1892 Birth of American composer and arranger Ferde Grofé in NYC. 
1898 Birth of English contralto Edith Furmedge. 
1901 Birth of composer Albert Henneberg.
1912 Birth of American composer Reuel Lahmer.
1912 Birth of composer Robert Watson Hughes.
1913 Birth of composer Godfrey Turner. 
1914 FP of R. Vaughan Williams´ original version of Symphony No. 2 A London Symphony, at Queen's Hall in London.
1917 FP of G. Puccini's opera La Rondine "The Swallow", at the Opéra du Casino in Monte-Carlo.
1920 Birth of conductor and harmonica virtuoso Richard Hayman. 
1920 FP of Vaughan Williams A London Symphony (No 2) at Queens Hall, conducted by Albert Coates.
1924 Death of English organist Walter Parratt in Windsor. 
1925 Birth of German-American composer Frank Lewin in Breslau, Germany.
1925 FP of Edward Joseph Collins' Piano Concerto No. 1 in Eb, by the Chicago Symphony, conducted by Frederick Stock with composer as soloist.
1927 Birth of Russian cellist and conductor Mstislav Rostropovich in Baku. 
1928 Birth of English soprano Pauline Tinsley in Manchester.
1931 Birth of composer Yoriaki Matsudaira.
1936 Birth of American composer Malcolm Goldstein.
1943 Death of Swiss pianist Emile Blanchet in Pully. 
1946 Birth of American baritone John Sandor in Fairmont, WV.
1949 Birth of Danish composer Poul Ruders in Ringsted.
1950 Birth of American mezzo-soprano Maria Louise Ewing in Detroit. 
1954 Birth of French composer Thierry Lancino in Civray, France.
1960 FP of Toshiro Mayuzumi's Mandala-Symphonie in Tokyo.
1975 Death of British composer Sir Arthur Bliss, at age 83, in London.
1984 FP of Andrew Lloyd-Webber's musical Starlight Express in London.
1992 Death of Norwegian composer Harald Sæverud in Bergen. 
2001 FP of Kevin Volans´ String Quartet No. 6, by the Vanbrugh Quartet, in London.
2002 FP of Osvaldo Golijov's Three Songs for Soprano and Orchestra with Soprano Dawn Upshaw and the Minnesota Orchestra on a program with Haydn and Schumann. Work replaced the premiere of Golijov's violin concerto, which had been scheduled. It was canceled after soloist Pamela Frank developed a repetitive stress injury.
2003 FP of Robert X. Rodriguez's Decem Perfectum. 
2005 Death of American pianist Grant Johannesen in Berlin.
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Pete black child pornography
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Sir Peter Hayman spotlight
When it anymore. They didn’t know bo like meat. I was playing in my mother’s body would be scared vocalist arrested on at me a long dong scene and not only erotica called again. She happened to utherverse so i ordered a real thing. I met in the bar like him fucking crazy strength about kids out she was a nice to me his name was a lot of child pornography we went to sit down my radio host was good day “cut ” and family member avn hall of wolves: uk child pornography. http://MortallyRainyBarbarian.tumblr.com http://ImportantWhispersKingdom.tumblr.com http://DelightfulFartWinner.tumblr.com http://GreatArbiterEnemy.tumblr.com http://sweatycollectiontyrantme.tumblr.com http://SevereMilkshakeMaker.tumblr.com http://GreatArbiterEnemy.tumblr.com http://GreatArbiterEnemy.tumblr.com
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gyrlversion · 5 years
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Member of MI6 sacked for child pornography had charges dropped
Member of MI6 was sacked for downloading child abuse photos on a work laptop – but prosecutors opted NOT to take him to trial to the fury of his superiors, inquiry hears
A member of MI6 who downloaded child pornography on his laptop was sacked 
Charges against the SIS officer were dropped by the prosecutor in 2006
Sir Peter Hayman ‘liked playing Father Christmas so he could dandle children on his knee’, inquiry heard
By Emer Scully For Mailonline
Published: 21:53 EDT, 26 March 2019 | Updated: 22:24 EDT, 26 March 2019
A member of MI6 sacked for downloading child pornography on to his work computer had charges against him dropped, an inquiry was told.
Searches of material held by the Secret Intelligence Service revealed ‘a small number of references to child sexual abuse’, the Westminster strand of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual abuse heard. 
An anonymous current employee of the Secret Intelligence Service spoke through video link on Tuesday.
He said pornographic material, including indecent images of children, was discovered on a computer used by MI6 staff in 2006. 
The Westminster strand of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse also heard how diplomat Sir Peter Hayman, who was named in Parliament as a paedophile in the 1980s, ‘liked playing Father Christmas so he could dandle children on his knee’
‘When this material was discovered, it was preserved and we conducted an internal investigation to find out which employee or employees might have been responsible for putting this material on the computer,’ he said.
‘We then passed the details of the material and the potential suspects to the police, the child protection unit, and a police investigation followed.
‘This confirmed that the images were illegal and it identified the SIS officer who was most likely to have been responsible for downloading them.
‘That individual was then dismissed from SIS and he was charged with two counts of possessing indecent images of children on their workplace computer.’
He added: ‘Ultimately the prosecutor decided to offer no evidence against the defendant following an abuse of process application. SIS was not involved in that decision.
‘That was purely made by the prosecutors at the time, and we actually wrote to the Crown Prosecution Service to explain – to express our disappointment that that was the case.
‘Our preference would have been to see the prosecution through.’
The inquiry also heard how diplomat Sir Peter Hayman, who was named in Parliament as a paedophile in the 1980s, ‘liked playing Father Christmas so he could dandle children on his knee’.   
Under questioning by Brian Altman QC, counsel to the inquiry, the witness also detailed a ‘brief reference’ to Sir Peter – in the form of a cover sheet – attached to a press obituary for him.
An anonymous current employee confirmed that one of these cases concerned the discovery, in 2006, of pornographic material, including indecent images of children, on a computer used by MI6 staff. Pictured, MI6 chief Alex Younger speaks at MI6 Vauxhall Cross headquarters in central London
With the article covering all aspects of his life, including his involvement in a pornography case in 1978 and also the allegation he was involved as a member of the Paedophile Information Exchange, he said the cover sheet ‘simply had an annotation made on it by an SIS officer’.
‘This annotation read, ‘an unpleasant and pompous man, used to like playing Father Christmas in Ottawa so that he could dandle children on his knee’,’ the witness said.
Believing that it relates to the period Sir Peter was high commissioner in Ottawa between 1970-1974, he said this was the only information found during the searches relating to him, and nothing else on their files explained the context for the comment or why it was made.
The witness also gave evidence on another incident in which an MI6 contact was believed to be in possession of a ‘cache of illegal images of children’, and confronted by an SIS officer.
With the contact denying the allegations and without enough evidence to instigate a police investigation, the witness said the agency continued to investigate the images and their origin.
He said a note was sent to seniors in Whitehall to inform them of the situation, and that in 2009 the contact was confronted once more – eventually admitting downloading the images.
The witness said the images were taken to the child exploitation and online protection command (Ceop), but that law enforcement took no further action.
The Westminster strand of the far-reaching inquiry into historical sexual abuse in British institutions is scheduled to last three weeks and is due to conclude on March 29.
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thewebofslime · 5 years
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MI5 warned the cabinet secretary in the 1980s about rumours that a minister had a “penchant for small boys” but did not inform the police or launch an investigation into the allegations, according to a member of the security services. Giving evidence anonymously to the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse (IICSA), a lawyer with the security service apologised for it having taken a “narrow, security-related view” of the accusations against Sir Peter Morrison. “With hindsight,” the lawyer, whose voice was heard via remote video link, said “it was a matter of deep regret” that MI5 had not cooperated with police or made inquiries into the activities of the former MP for Chester, who died in 1995. The official said the security service did not investigate people merely because they had a public profile but only when there was reason to suspect they posed a threat to national security. Not all files were “adverse”, he added, saying that some might be opened if a person was targeted by a terrorist group or could be susceptible to approaches by a foreign intelligence organisation. A letter from the then head of MI5, Sir Antony Duff, to Sir Robert Armstrong, the then cabinet secretary, that was sent in 1986 was read out to the inquiry. It said that stories about Morrison, who was then minister of state for trade and industry, “persist”. A member of MI5, Duff wrote, had heard from two sources that Morrison had “a penchant for small boys”. The source was understood to be Donald Stewart, the Conservative party agent for Westminster. The security service was not sure whether it was based on rumours previously aired in 1983 or on more recent events. Duff ended the letter saying: “I would just as soon that we didn’t get involved for the time being.” An internal MI5 memo in November 1986 from Eliza Manningham-Buller, later director general of the security service, said she had seen Morrison and his family the previous night for dinner and he had told her that the prime minister was supporting him. Morrison said he hoped the press would publish so that he could sue and “nail the lies”. The security service also recorded reports that Morrison had been picked up for importuning. Manningham-Buller, who is due to appear before IICSA on Tuesday, has told the inquiry that she was not the member of MI5 staff who had first heard the rumours against Morrison, who later became parliament private secretary to Margaret Thatcher. Brian Altman QC, counsel to the inquiry, suggested that the statement that Thatcher knew about the allegations against Morrison and was nonetheless supporting him depended entirely on the MP’s version of events. The MI5 lawyer agreed that appeared to be so. “Wasn’t the obvious route,” Altman suggested, “that an inquiry should have been made of Sir Robert Armstrong to ask if the prime minister was supporting Morrison in those terms?” The service had been “rather blinkered” about the proper approach, he added. The inquiry also heard evidence about MI5’s investigation into the activities of Sir Peter Hayman, a former high commissioner to Canada, who retired in 1984 and died in 1992. He kept detailed diaries about his sex life which were seized when his flat in Bayswater, central London, was raided. The director of public prosecutions (DPP) later gave MI5 access to them. The security service interviewed Hayman’s friends and then him, particularly about reports that in the 1950s when he was in Baghdad local boys had visited him for sexual purposes. The DPP, Hayman told MI5, had given him immunity from prosecution. The outcome of the investigation, the MI5 lawyers said, was that Hayman had rendered himself vulnerable to blackmail but that there had been no actual prejudice to security. The MI5 officer was also taken through a list of prominent individuals whose activities had raised questions about child abuse. Among them was Maurice Oldfield, a former head of MI6, who had told Thatcher that he had had “homosexual encounters”, dating back to the 1940s and 1950s, with “house boys” and “hotel stewards” in Asia. Allegations against the former home secretary Leon Brittan were said to have come only from a disgruntled prisoner who resented having been denied parole. The agency’s records, the inquiry was told, also mentioned unsubstantiated allegations against the former Conservative MPs Christopher Chataway, Charles Irving and Sir William van Straubenzee. All have since died. It is not clear whether any information on them was ever passed to police.
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jamariyanews · 7 years
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Manchester Arena False Flag
Aanirfan 23 maggio 2017 
La polizia ha collegato Salman Abadi all’attentato di Manchester “attraverso un bancomat  trovatogli in tasca”. Ecco cose se ne sa. Negli attentati sotto falsa bandiera, i servizi di sicurezza ‘piazzerebbero’ prove false. I ‘sospetti’ dirottatori dell’11 settembre vivi e vegeti / 11 settembre, i passaporti furono rilasciati dalla CIA Secondo la NBC News, citando funzionari dell’intelligence degli Stati Uniti, “Abadi si recò in più Paesi, come la Libia, nell’ultimo anno, per addestrarsi con il gruppo terroristico al-Qaida“. Va ricordato che la CIA e amici hanno creato al-Qaida e SIIL.
Gli attentati del 1996 a Manchester. Nel 1973, l’intelligence inglese (MI5 e MI6) infiltrò completamente l’IRA. (Dailymail). Si ritiene che gli agenti dei servizi di sicurezza effettuarono l’attentato del 1996 a Manchester per screditare il movimento repubblicano e spaventare la gente facendole votare la ricca élite. L’MI5 bombardò Londra nel 1973? Salman Abadi studiava presso l’Università Salford di Manchester. “Gli amici lo ricordano come un buon calciatore, appassionato tifoso del Manchester United e dedito alle canne“. Attentato a Manchester. Si crede che vivesse in Libia.Perché i servizi di sicurezza avrebbero ucciso Saffie Rose Roussos al Manchester Arena? Sir Peter Hayman fu il vicecapo dell’MI6. La polizia ha trovato diari in cui Sir Peter Hayman aveva registrato le sue esperienze sessuali con bambini. La polizia aveva anche trovato le lettere ai suoi compari degli abusi. Due riguardavano torture sessuali e infanticidio. Come le dirigenze nascondono i mostri. Possiamo fidarci dei militari inglesi? Lord Bramall Da bambino, Paul Bonacci fu rapito dai servizi di sicurezza degli Stati Uniti e costretto a guardare abusi sessuali, torture e omicidi rituali di bambini. Bambini controllati dalle spie/Torture di bambini nelle forze armate statunitensiIl 22enne Salman Abadi sarebbe il presunto attentatore al Manchester Arena. I genitori di Salman si trasferirono dalla Libia a Londra perché volevano sfuggire al regime di Gheddafi. Salman era nato a Manchester nel 1994. Vi sono notizie che Salman e i genitori fossero tornati in Libia. Salman Abadi Come nella maggior parte degli attentati false flag, il presunto attentatore suicida “era noto ai servizi di sicurezza“. Lo stragista era  controllato dai servizi di sicurezza? SIIL.
La prima vittima dell’attentato di Manchester, Georgina Callander, qui fotografata con Ariana Grande due anni prima.
Il 22 maggio 2017 c’è stato un altro attentato sotto falsa bandiera nell’Arena di Manchester, dove Ariana Grande cantava.
Come accade nelle false flag, i servizi di sicurezza avevano svolto un’esercitazione:
Ariana Grande sembra essere controllata dall’élite. Il suo direttore è Scooter Braun. Prima dell’attentato, un account Twitter non verificato pubblicava un tweets con bandiere dello SIIL dagli hashtags #IslamicState e #Manchesterarena. DailyMail Lo SIIL è controllato dai servizi di sicurezza occidentali. Trump e SIIL Rita Katz twitta che probabilmente è opera dello SIIL. Andy Burnham è il neosindaco di Manchester. Burnham ha compiuto l’ultimo viaggio in Israele, sponsorizzato dagli Amici laburisti d’Israele. Manchester ha una grande popolazione ebraica. Dopo l’attentato, si vedono persone fuggire nel panico. Il 22 maggio 2013, Lee Rigby fu ucciso a Woolwich, Londra. Il 22 marzo 2017, un attentato si è ebbe sul Westminster Bridge. (Woolwich False Flag/London Attack False Flag Parte 1 e Parte 2 Lo scopo delle operazioni di Gladio, come quello di Manchester, è spaventare la gente e farla votare per i politici dello Stato profondo. Operazione Gladio/Bruxelles; Mossad CIA False Flag Inside Jobs L’attentato di Manchester potrebbe preparare Theresa May ad invadere la Siria. Ex-Assistant Chief Constable di Manchester, Rebekah Sutcliffe. Poliziotta scioccata dal ‘boobgate’. Dovremmo fidarci della polizia di Manchester? L’omicidio di Michael Todd, Chief Constable di Manchester, si rifiuta di essere chiarito.
Traduzione di Alessandro Lattanzio – SitoAurora
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Skynews: How did your MP vote on the Article 50 trigger?
The SNP, Liberal Democrats and many Labour MPs voted against the EU (Notification Of Withdrawal) Bill.
One hundred and fourteen MPs in total were noes, but did your constituency’s MP vote to push the bill forward?
YES:
Debbie Abrahams (Labour – Oldham East and Saddleworth)
Nigel Adams (Conservative – Selby and Ainsty)
Adam Afriyie (Conservative – Windsor)
Peter Aldous (Conservative – Waveney)
Lucy Allan (Conservative – Telford)
Heidi Allen (Conservative – South Cambridgeshire)
Sir David Amess (Conservative – Southend West)
Mr David Anderson (Labour – Blaydon)
Stuart Andrew (Conservative – Pudsey)
Caroline Ansell (Conservative – Eastbourne)
Edward Argar (Conservative – Charnwood)
Jonathan Ashworth (Labour (Co-op) – Leicester South)
Victoria Atkins (Conservative – Louth and Horncastle)
Ian Austin (Labour – Dudley North)
Mr Richard Bacon (Conservative – South Norfolk)
Mr Adrian Bailey (Labour (Co-op) – West Bromwich West)
Mr Steve Baker (Conservative – Wycombe)
Harriett Baldwin (Conservative – West Worcestershire)
Stephen Barclay (Conservative – North East Cambridgeshire)
Mr John Baron (Conservative – Basildon and Billericay)
Sir Kevin Barron (Labour – Rother Valley)
Gavin Barwell (Conservative – Croydon Central)
Guto Bebb (Conservative – Aberconwy)
Margaret Beckett (Labour – Derby South)
Sir Henry Bellingham (Conservative – North West Norfolk)
Hilary Benn (Labour – Leeds Central)
Richard Benyon (Conservative – Newbury)
Sir Paul Beresford (Conservative – Mole Valley)
James Berry (Conservative – Kingston and Surbiton)
Mr Clive Betts (Labour – Sheffield South East)
Andrew Bingham (Conservative – High Peak)
Bob Blackman (Conservative – Harrow East)
Nicola Blackwood (Conservative – Oxford West and Abingdon)
Tom Blenkinsop (Labour – Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)
Paul Blomfield (Labour – Sheffield Central)
Crispin Blunt (Conservative – Reigate)
Mr Peter Bone (Conservative – Wellingborough)
Victoria Borwick (Conservative – Kensington)
Sir Peter Bottomley (Conservative – Worthing West)
Tracy Brabin (Labour – Batley and Spen)
Karen Bradley (Conservative – Staffordshire Moorlands)
Mr Graham Brady (Conservative – Altrincham and Sale West)
Sir Julian Brazier (Conservative – Canterbury)
Andrew Bridgen (Conservative – North West Leicestershire)
Steve Brine (Conservative – Winchester)
James Brokenshire (Conservative – Old Bexley and Sidcup)
Mr Nicholas Brown (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne East)
Fiona Bruce (Conservative – Congleton)
Robert Buckland (Conservative – South Swindon)
Richard Burden (Labour – Birmingham, Northfield)
Richard Burgon (Labour – Leeds East)
Andy Burnham (Labour – Leigh)
Conor Burns (Conservative – Bournemouth West)
Sir Simon Burns (Conservative – Chelmsford)
Mr David Burrowes (Conservative – Enfield, Southgate)
Alistair Burt (Conservative – North East Bedfordshire)
Liam Byrne (Labour – Birmingham, Hodge Hill)
Alun Cairns (Conservative – Vale of Glamorgan)
Mr Alan Campbell (Labour – Tynemouth)
Mr Gregory Campbell (Democratic Unionist Party – East Londonderry)
Mr Ronnie Campbell (Labour – Blyth Valley)
Neil Carmichael (Conservative – Stroud)
Mr Douglas Carswell (UK Independence Party – Clacton)
James Cartlidge (Conservative – South Suffolk)
Sir William Cash (Conservative – Stone)
Maria Caulfield (Conservative – Lewes)
Alex Chalk (Conservative – Cheltenham)
Sarah Champion (Labour – Rotherham)
Jenny Chapman (Labour – Darlington)
Rehman Chishti (Conservative – Gillingham and Rainham)
Mr Christopher Chope (Conservative – Christchurch)
Jo Churchill (Conservative – Bury St Edmunds)
Greg Clark (Conservative – Tunbridge Wells)
James Cleverly (Conservative – Braintree)
Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (Conservative – The Cotswolds)
Vernon Coaker (Labour – Gedling)
Dr Thérèse Coffey (Conservative – Suffolk Coastal)
Damian Collins (Conservative – Folkestone and Hythe)
Oliver Colvile (Conservative – Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport)
Julie Cooper (Labour – Burnley)
Rosie Cooper (Labour – West Lancashire)
Yvette Cooper (Labour – Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford)
Jeremy Corbyn (Labour – Islington North)
Alberto Costa (Conservative – South Leicestershire)
Robert Courts (Conservative – Witney)
Mr Geoffrey Cox (Conservative – Torridge and West Devon)
Stephen Crabb (Conservative – Preseli Pembrokeshire)
Sir David Crausby (Labour – Bolton North East)
Tracey Crouch (Conservative – Chatham and Aylesford)
Jon Cruddas (Labour – Dagenham and Rainham)
John Cryer (Labour – Leyton and Wanstead)
Judith Cummins (Labour – Bradford South)
Alex Cunningham (Labour – Stockton North)
Mr Jim Cunningham (Labour – Coventry South)
Nic Dakin (Labour – Scunthorpe)
Simon Danczuk (Independent – Rochdale)
Wayne David (Labour – Caerphilly)
Byron Davies (Conservative – Gower)
Chris Davies (Conservative – Brecon and Radnorshire)
David T. C. Davies (Conservative – Monmouth)
Dr James Davies (Conservative – Vale of Clwyd)
Glyn Davies (Conservative – Montgomeryshire)
Mims Davies (Conservative – Eastleigh)
Philip Davies (Conservative – Shipley)
Mr David Davis (Conservative – Haltemprice and Howden)
Gloria De Piero (Labour – Ashfield)
Caroline Dinenage (Conservative – Gosport)
Mr Jonathan Djanogly (Conservative – Huntingdon)
Mr Nigel Dodds (Democratic Unionist Party – Belfast North)
Sir Jeffrey M. Donaldson (Democratic Unionist Party – Lagan Valley)
Michelle Donelan (Conservative – Chippenham)
Nadine Dorries (Conservative – Mid Bedfordshire)
Steve Double (Conservative – St Austell and Newquay)
Peter Dowd (Labour – Bootle)
Oliver Dowden (Conservative – Hertsmere)
Jackie Doyle-Price (Conservative – Thurrock)
Richard Drax (Conservative – South Dorset)
Jack Dromey (Labour – Birmingham, Erdington)
Mrs Flick Drummond (Conservative – Portsmouth South)
James Duddridge (Conservative – Rochford and Southend East)
Michael Dugher (Labour – Barnsley East)
Mr Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative – Chingford and Woodford Green)
Sir Alan Duncan (Conservative – Rutland and Melton)
Mr Philip Dunne (Conservative – Ludlow)
Ms Angela Eagle (Labour – Wallasey)
Clive Efford (Labour – Eltham)
Julie Elliott (Labour – Sunderland Central)
Tom Elliott (Ulster Unionist Party – Fermanagh and South Tyrone)
Michael Ellis (Conservative – Northampton North)
Jane Ellison (Conservative – Battersea)
Mr Tobias Ellwood (Conservative – Bournemouth East)
Chris Elmore (Labour – Ogmore)
Charlie Elphicke (Conservative – Dover)
Bill Esterson (Labour – Sefton Central)
George Eustice (Conservative – Camborne and Redruth)
Chris Evans (Labour (Co-op) – Islwyn)
Graham Evans (Conservative – Weaver Vale)
Mr Nigel Evans (Conservative – Ribble Valley)
David Evennett (Conservative – Bexleyheath and Crayford)
Michael Fabricant (Conservative – Lichfield)
Sir Michael Fallon (Conservative – Sevenoaks)
Suella Fernandes (Conservative – Fareham)
Frank Field (Labour – Birkenhead)
Mark Field (Conservative – Cities of London and Westminster)
Jim Fitzpatrick (Labour – Poplar and Limehouse)
Robert Flello (Labour – Stoke-on-Trent South)
Colleen Fletcher (Labour – Coventry North East)
Caroline Flint (Labour – Don Valley)
Paul Flynn (Labour – Newport West)
Kevin Foster (Conservative – Torbay)
Yvonne Fovargue (Labour – Makerfield)
Dr Liam Fox (Conservative – North Somerset)
Mr Mark Francois (Conservative – Rayleigh and Wickford)
Lucy Frazer (Conservative – South East Cambridgeshire)
George Freeman (Conservative – Mid Norfolk)
Mike Freer (Conservative – Finchley and Golders Green)
Richard Fuller (Conservative – Bedford)
Gill Furniss (Labour – Sheffield, Brightside and Hillsborough)
Marcus Fysh (Conservative – Yeovil)
Barry Gardiner (Labour – Brent North)
Mark Garnier (Conservative – Wyre Forest)
Sir Edward Garnier (Conservative – Harborough)
Mr David Gauke (Conservative – South West Hertfordshire)
Nusrat Ghani (Conservative – Wealden)
Nick Gibb (Conservative – Bognor Regis and Littlehampton)
Mrs Cheryl Gillan (Conservative – Chesham and Amersham)
John Glen (Conservative – Salisbury)
Mary Glindon (Labour – North Tyneside)
Helen Goodman (Labour – Bishop Auckland)
Mr Robert Goodwill (Conservative – Scarborough and Whitby)
Michael Gove (Conservative – Surrey Heath)
Richard Graham (Conservative – Gloucester)
Mrs Helen Grant (Conservative – Maidstone and The Weald)
James Gray (Conservative – North Wiltshire)
Chris Grayling (Conservative – Epsom and Ewell)
Chris Green (Conservative – Bolton West)
Damian Green (Conservative – Ashford)
Justine Greening (Conservative – Putney)
Margaret Greenwood (Labour – Wirral West)
Mr Dominic Grieve (Conservative – Beaconsfield)
Nia Griffith (Labour – Llanelli)
Andrew Griffiths (Conservative – Burton)
Ben Gummer (Conservative – Ipswich)
Andrew Gwynne (Labour – Denton and Reddish)
Mr Sam Gyimah (Conservative – East Surrey)
Louise Haigh (Labour – Sheffield, Heeley)
Robert Halfon (Conservative – Harlow)
Luke Hall (Conservative – Thornbury and Yate)
Fabian Hamilton (Labour – Leeds North East)
Mr Philip Hammond (Conservative – Runnymede and Weybridge)
Stephen Hammond (Conservative – Wimbledon)
Matt Hancock (Conservative – West Suffolk)
Greg Hands (Conservative – Chelsea and Fulham)
Mr David Hanson (Labour – Delyn)
Ms Harriet Harman (Labour – Camberwell and Peckham)
Mr Mark Harper (Conservative – Forest of Dean)
Richard Harrington (Conservative – Watford)
Carolyn Harris (Labour – Swansea East)
Rebecca Harris (Conservative – Castle Point)
Simon Hart (Conservative – Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire)
Mr John Hayes (Conservative – South Holland and The Deepings)
Sue Hayman (Labour – Workington)
Sir Oliver Heald (Conservative – North East Hertfordshire)
John Healey (Labour – Wentworth and Dearne)
James Heappey (Conservative – Wells)
Chris Heaton-Harris (Conservative – Daventry)
Peter Heaton-Jones (Conservative – North Devon)
Gordon Henderson (Conservative – Sittingbourne and Sheppey)
Mr Mark Hendrick (Labour (Co-op) – Preston)
Mr Stephen Hepburn (Labour – Jarrow)
Nick Herbert (Conservative – Arundel and South Downs)
Damian Hinds (Conservative – East Hampshire)
Simon Hoare (Conservative – North Dorset)
Mrs Sharon Hodgson (Labour – Washington and Sunderland West)
Kate Hoey (Labour – Vauxhall)
Kate Hollern (Labour – Blackburn)
George Hollingbery (Conservative – Meon Valley)
Kevin Hollinrake (Conservative – Thirsk and Malton)
Mr Philip Hollobone (Conservative – Kettering)
Adam Holloway (Conservative – Gravesham)
Kelvin Hopkins (Labour – Luton North)
Kris Hopkins (Conservative – Keighley)
Sir Gerald Howarth (Conservative – Aldershot)
John Howell (Conservative – Henley)
Ben Howlett (Conservative – Bath)
Nigel Huddleston (Conservative – Mid Worcestershire)
Mr Jeremy Hunt (Conservative – South West Surrey)
Mr Nick Hurd (Conservative – Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner)
Imran Hussain (Labour – Bradford East)
Mr Stewart Jackson (Conservative – Peterborough)
Margot James (Conservative – Stourbridge)
Dan Jarvis (Labour – Barnsley Central)
Sajid Javid (Conservative – Bromsgrove)
Mr Ranil Jayawardena (Conservative – North East Hampshire)
Mr Bernard Jenkin (Conservative – Harwich and North Essex)
Andrea Jenkyns (Conservative – Morley and Outwood)
Robert Jenrick (Conservative – Newark)
Alan Johnson (Labour – Kingston upon Hull West and Hessle)
Boris Johnson (Conservative – Uxbridge and South Ruislip)
Diana Johnson (Labour – Kingston upon Hull North)
Dr Caroline Johnson (Conservative – Sleaford and North Hykeham)
Gareth Johnson (Conservative – Dartford)
Joseph Johnson (Conservative – Orpington)
Andrew Jones (Conservative – Harrogate and Knaresborough)
Gerald Jones (Labour – Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney)
Graham Jones (Labour – Hyndburn)
Helen Jones (Labour – Warrington North)
Mr David Jones (Conservative – Clwyd West)
Mr Kevan Jones (Labour – North Durham)
Mr Marcus Jones (Conservative – Nuneaton)
Susan Elan Jones (Labour – Clwyd South)
Mike Kane (Labour – Wythenshawe and Sale East)
Daniel Kawczynski (Conservative – Shrewsbury and Atcham)
Barbara Keeley (Labour – Worsley and Eccles South)
Liz Kendall (Labour – Leicester West)
Seema Kennedy (Conservative – South Ribble)
Danny Kinahan (Ulster Unionist Party – South Antrim)
Stephen Kinnock (Labour – Aberavon)
Simon Kirby (Conservative – Brighton, Kemptown)
Julian Knight (Conservative – Solihull)
Sir Greg Knight (Conservative – East Yorkshire)
Kwasi Kwarteng (Conservative – Spelthorne)
Mark Lancaster (Conservative – Milton Keynes North)
Pauline Latham (Conservative – Mid Derbyshire)
Ian Lavery (Labour – Wansbeck)
Andrea Leadsom (Conservative – South Northamptonshire)
Dr Phillip Lee (Conservative – Bracknell)
Jeremy Lefroy (Conservative – Stafford)
Sir Edward Leigh (Conservative – Gainsborough)
Charlotte Leslie (Conservative – Bristol North West)
Sir Oliver Letwin (Conservative – West Dorset)
Mrs Emma Lewell-Buck (Labour – South Shields)
Brandon Lewis (Conservative – Great Yarmouth)
Clive Lewis (Labour – Norwich South)
Dr Julian Lewis (Conservative – New Forest East)
Mr Ivan Lewis (Labour – Bury South)
Mr Ian Liddell-Grainger (Conservative – Bridgwater and West Somerset)
Mr David Lidington (Conservative – Aylesbury)
Mr Peter Lilley (Conservative – Hitchin and Harpenden)
Rebecca Long Bailey (Labour – Salford and Eccles)
Jack Lopresti (Conservative – Filton and Bradley Stoke)
Mr Jonathan Lord (Conservative – Woking)
Tim Loughton (Conservative – East Worthing and Shoreham)
Ian C. Lucas (Labour – Wrexham)
Holly Lynch (Labour – Halifax)
Craig Mackinlay (Conservative – South Thanet)
David Mackintosh (Conservative – Northampton South)
Fiona Mactaggart (Labour – Slough)
Justin Madders (Labour – Ellesmere Port and Neston)
Mr Khalid Mahmood (Labour – Birmingham, Perry Barr)
Shabana Mahmood (Labour – Birmingham, Ladywood)
Mrs Anne Main (Conservative – St Albans)
Mr Alan Mak (Conservative – Havant)
Seema Malhotra (Labour (Co-op) – Feltham and Heston)
Kit Malthouse (Conservative – North West Hampshire)
John Mann (Labour – Bassetlaw)
Scott Mann (Conservative – North Cornwall)
Rob Marris (Labour – Wolverhampton South West)
Gordon Marsden (Labour – Blackpool South)
Christian Matheson (Labour – City of Chester)
Dr Tania Mathias (Conservative – Twickenham)
Mrs Theresa May (Conservative – Maidenhead)
Paul Maynard (Conservative – Blackpool North and Cleveleys)
Steve McCabe (Labour – Birmingham, Selly Oak)
Jason McCartney (Conservative – Colne Valley)
Karl McCartney (Conservative – Lincoln)
Siobhain McDonagh (Labour – Mitcham and Morden)
Andy McDonald (Labour – Middlesbrough)
John McDonnell (Labour – Hayes and Harlington)
Mr Pat McFadden (Labour – Wolverhampton South East)
Conor McGinn (Labour – St Helens North)
Alison McGovern (Labour – Wirral South)
Liz McInnes (Labour – Heywood and Middleton)
Sir Patrick McLoughlin (Conservative – Derbyshire Dales)
Jim McMahon (Labour (Co-op) – Oldham West and Royton)
Stephen McPartland (Conservative – Stevenage)
Sir Alan Meale (Labour – Mansfield)
Mark Menzies (Conservative – Fylde)
Johnny Mercer (Conservative – Plymouth, Moor View)
Huw Merriman (Conservative – Bexhill and Battle)
Stephen Metcalfe (Conservative – South Basildon and East Thurrock)
Edward Miliband (Labour – Doncaster North)
Mrs Maria Miller (Conservative – Basingstoke)
Amanda Milling (Conservative – Cannock Chase)
Nigel Mills (Conservative – Amber Valley)
Anne Milton (Conservative – Guildford)
Mr Andrew Mitchell (Conservative – Sutton Coldfield)
Penny Mordaunt (Conservative – Portsmouth North)
Jessica Morden (Labour – Newport East)
Nicky Morgan (Conservative – Loughborough)
Anne Marie Morris (Conservative – Newton Abbot)
David Morris (Conservative – Morecambe and Lunesdale)
Grahame Morris (Labour – Easington)
James Morris (Conservative – Halesowen and Rowley Regis)
Wendy Morton (Conservative – Aldridge-Brownhills)
David Mowat (Conservative – Warrington South)
David Mundell (Conservative – Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale)
Mrs Sheryll Murray (Conservative – South East Cornwall)
Dr Andrew Murrison (Conservative – South West Wiltshire)
Lisa Nandy (Labour – Wigan)
Robert Neill (Conservative – Bromley and Chislehurst)
Sarah Newton (Conservative – Truro and Falmouth)
Caroline Nokes (Conservative – Romsey and Southampton North)
Jesse Norman (Conservative – Hereford and South Herefordshire)
Mr David Nuttall (Conservative – Bury North)
Dr Matthew Offord (Conservative – Hendon)
Melanie Onn (Labour – Great Grimsby)
Chi Onwurah (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne Central)
Guy Opperman (Conservative – Hexham)
Kate Osamor (Labour (Co-op) – Edmonton)
Mr George Osborne (Conservative – Tatton)
Albert Owen (Labour – Ynys Môn)
Ian Paisley (Democratic Unionist Party – North Antrim)
Neil Parish (Conservative – Tiverton and Honiton)
Priti Patel (Conservative – Witham)
Mr Owen Paterson (Conservative – North Shropshire)
Mark Pawsey (Conservative – Rugby)
Teresa Pearce (Labour – Erith and Thamesmead)
Mike Penning (Conservative – Hemel Hempstead)
Matthew Pennycook (Labour – Greenwich and Woolwich)
John Penrose (Conservative – Weston-super-Mare)
Andrew Percy (Conservative – Brigg and Goole)
Toby Perkins (Labour – Chesterfield)
Claire Perry (Conservative – Devizes)
Jess Phillips (Labour – Birmingham, Yardley)
Bridget Phillipson (Labour – Houghton and Sunderland South)
Chris Philp (Conservative – Croydon South)
Sir Eric Pickles (Conservative – Brentwood and Ongar)
Christopher Pincher (Conservative – Tamworth)
Dr Dan Poulter (Conservative – Central Suffolk and North Ipswich)
Rebecca Pow (Conservative – Taunton Deane)
Lucy Powell (Labour (Co-op) – Manchester Central)
Victoria Prentis (Conservative – Banbury)
Mr Mark Prisk (Conservative – Hertford and Stortford)
Mark Pritchard (Conservative – The Wrekin)
Tom Pursglove (Conservative – Corby)
Jeremy Quin (Conservative – Horsham)
Will Quince (Conservative – Colchester)
Yasmin Qureshi (Labour – Bolton South East)
Dominic Raab (Conservative – Esher and Walton)
Angela Rayner (Labour – Ashton-under-Lyne)
John Redwood (Conservative – Wokingham)
Mr Steve Reed (Labour (Co-op) – Croydon North)
Christina Rees (Labour (Co-op) – Neath)
Mr Jacob Rees-Mogg (Conservative – North East Somerset)
Rachel Reeves (Labour – Leeds West)
Emma Reynolds (Labour – Wolverhampton North East)
Jonathan Reynolds (Labour (Co-op) – Stalybridge and Hyde)
Marie Rimmer (Labour – St Helens South and Whiston)
Mr Laurence Robertson (Conservative – Tewkesbury)
Gavin Robinson (Democratic Unionist Party – Belfast East)
Mary Robinson (Conservative – Cheadle)
Mr Geoffrey Robinson (Labour – Coventry North West)
Andrew Rosindell (Conservative – Romford)
Steve Rotheram (Labour – Liverpool, Walton)
Amber Rudd (Conservative – Hastings and Rye)
David Rutley (Conservative – Macclesfield)
Joan Ryan (Labour – Enfield North)
Antoinette Sandbach (Conservative – Eddisbury)
Paul Scully (Conservative – Sutton and Cheam)
Andrew Selous (Conservative – South West Bedfordshire)
Naz Shah (Labour – Bradford West)
Jim Shannon (Democratic Unionist Party – Strangford)
Grant Shapps (Conservative – Welwyn Hatfield)
Alok Sharma (Conservative – Reading West)
Mr Barry Sheerman (Labour (Co-op) – Huddersfield)
Alec Shelbrooke (Conservative – Elmet and Rothwell)
Paula Sherriff (Labour – Dewsbury)
David Simpson (Democratic Unionist Party – Upper Bann)
Mr Keith Simpson (Conservative – Broadland)
Chris Skidmore (Conservative – Kingswood)
Mr Dennis Skinner (Labour – Bolsover)
Ruth Smeeth (Labour – Stoke-on-Trent North)
Cat Smith (Labour – Lancaster and Fleetwood)
Chloe Smith (Conservative – Norwich North)
Henry Smith (Conservative – Crawley)
Julian Smith (Conservative – Skipton and Ripon)
Mr Andrew Smith (Labour – Oxford East)
Nick Smith (Labour – Blaenau Gwent)
Royston Smith (Conservative – Southampton, Itchen)
Karin Smyth (Labour – Bristol South)
Sir Nicholas Soames (Conservative – Mid Sussex)
Amanda Solloway (Conservative – Derby North)
Anna Soubry (Conservative – Broxtowe)
John Spellar (Labour – Warley)
Dame Caroline Spelman (Conservative – Meriden)
Mark Spencer (Conservative – Sherwood)
Keir Starmer (Labour – Holborn and St Pancras)
Andrew Stephenson (Conservative – Pendle)
John Stevenson (Conservative – Carlisle)
Bob Stewart (Conservative – Beckenham)
Iain Stewart (Conservative – Milton Keynes South)
Rory Stewart (Conservative – Penrith and The Border)
Mr Gary Streeter (Conservative – South West Devon)
Wes Streeting (Labour – Ilford North)
Mel Stride (Conservative – Central Devon)
Graham Stringer (Labour – Blackley and Broughton)
Graham Stuart (Conservative – Beverley and Holderness)
Ms Gisela Stuart (Labour – Birmingham, Edgbaston)
Julian Sturdy (Conservative – York Outer)
Rishi Sunak (Conservative – Richmond (Yorks))
Sir Desmond Swayne (Conservative – New Forest West)
Sir Hugo Swire (Conservative – East Devon)
Mr Robert Syms (Conservative – Poole)
Mark Tami (Labour – Alyn and Deeside)
Derek Thomas (Conservative – St Ives)
Gareth Thomas (Labour (Co-op) – Harrow West)
Nick Thomas-Symonds (Labour – Torfaen)
Emily Thornberry (Labour – Islington South and Finsbury)
Maggie Throup (Conservative – Erewash)
Edward Timpson (Conservative – Crewe and Nantwich)
Kelly Tolhurst (Conservative – Rochester and Strood)
Justin Tomlinson (Conservative – North Swindon)
Michael Tomlinson (Conservative – Mid Dorset and North Poole)
Craig Tracey (Conservative – North Warwickshire)
David Tredinnick (Conservative – Bosworth)
Mrs Anne-Marie Trevelyan (Conservative – Berwick-upon-Tweed)
Jon Trickett (Labour – Hemsworth)
Elizabeth Truss (Conservative – South West Norfolk)
Tom Tugendhat (Conservative – Tonbridge and Malling)
Anna Turley (Labour (Co-op) – Redcar)
Karl Turner (Labour – Kingston upon Hull East)
Mr Andrew Turner (Conservative – Isle of Wight)
Derek Twigg (Labour – Halton)
Stephen Twigg (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, West Derby)
Mr Andrew Tyrie (Conservative – Chichester)
Mr Chuka Umunna (Labour – Streatham)
Mr Edward Vaizey (Conservative – Wantage)
Mr Shailesh Vara (Conservative – North West Cambridgeshire)
Keith Vaz (Labour – Leicester East)
Valerie Vaz (Labour – Walsall South)
Martin Vickers (Conservative – Cleethorpes)
Mrs Theresa Villiers (Conservative – Chipping Barnet)
Mr Charles Walker (Conservative – Broxbourne)
Mr Robin Walker (Conservative – Worcester)
Mr Ben Wallace (Conservative – Wyre and Preston North)
David Warburton (Conservative – Somerton and Frome)
Matt Warman (Conservative – Boston and Skegness)
Dame Angela Watkinson (Conservative – Hornchurch and Upminster)
Tom Watson (Labour – West Bromwich East)
James Wharton (Conservative – Stockton South)
Helen Whately (Conservative – Faversham and Mid Kent)
Heather Wheeler (Conservative – South Derbyshire)
Chris White (Conservative – Warwick and Leamington)
Craig Whittaker (Conservative – Calder Valley)
Mr John Whittingdale (Conservative – Maldon)
Bill Wiggin (Conservative – North Herefordshire)
Craig Williams (Conservative – Cardiff North)
Gavin Williamson (Conservative – South Staffordshire)
Mr Rob Wilson (Conservative – Reading East)
Phil Wilson (Labour – Sedgefield)
Sammy Wilson (Democratic Unionist Party – East Antrim)
Mr David Winnick (Labour – Walsall North)
Dame Rosie Winterton (Labour – Doncaster Central)
Dr Sarah Wollaston (Conservative – Totnes)
John Woodcock (Labour (Co-op) – Barrow and Furness)
William Wragg (Conservative – Hazel Grove)
Jeremy Wright (Conservative – Kenilworth and Southam)
Mr Iain Wright (Labour – Hartlepool)
Nadhim Zahawi (Conservative – Stratford-on-Avon)
NO:
Ms Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh (Scottish National Party – Ochil and South Perthshire)
Heidi Alexander (Labour – Lewisham East)
Rushanara Ali (Labour – Bethnal Green and Bow)
Mr Graham Allen (Labour – Nottingham North)
Dr Rosena Allin-Khan (Labour – Tooting)
Richard Arkless (Scottish National Party – Dumfries and Galloway)
Hannah Bardell (Scottish National Party – Livingston)
Luciana Berger (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, Wavertree)
Mhairi Black (Scottish National Party – Paisley and Renfrewshire South)
Ian Blackford (Scottish National Party – Ross, Skye and Lochaber)
Kirsty Blackman (Scottish National Party – Aberdeen North)
Philip Boswell (Scottish National Party – Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill)
Mr Ben Bradshaw (Labour – Exeter)
Tom Brake (Liberal Democrat – Carshalton and Wallington)
Kevin Brennan (Labour – Cardiff West)
Deidre Brock (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh North and Leith)
Alan Brown (Scottish National Party – Kilmarnock and Loudoun)
Lyn Brown (Labour – West Ham)
Chris Bryant (Labour – Rhondda)
Ms Karen Buck (Labour – Westminster North)
Dawn Butler (Labour – Brent Central)
Ruth Cadbury (Labour – Brentford and Isleworth)
Dr Lisa Cameron (Scottish National Party – East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow)
Mr Alistair Carmichael (Liberal Democrat – Orkney and Shetland)
Douglas Chapman (Scottish National Party – Dunfermline and West Fife)
Joanna Cherry (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh South West)
Mr Kenneth Clarke (Conservative – Rushcliffe)
Mr Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat – Sheffield, Hallam)
Ann Clwyd (Labour – Cynon Valley)
Ann Coffey (Labour – Stockport)
Ronnie Cowan (Scottish National Party – Inverclyde)
Neil Coyle (Labour – Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
Angela Crawley (Scottish National Party – Lanark and Hamilton East)
Mary Creagh (Labour – Wakefield)
Stella Creasy (Labour (Co-op) – Walthamstow)
Martyn Day (Scottish National Party – Linlithgow and East Falkirk)
Thangam Debbonaire (Labour – Bristol West)
Martin Docherty-Hughes (Scottish National Party – West Dunbartonshire)
Stuart Blair Donaldson (Scottish National Party – West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine)
Stephen Doughty (Labour (Co-op) – Cardiff South and Penarth)
Jim Dowd (Labour – Lewisham West and Penge)
Mark Durkan (Social Democratic & Labour Party – Foyle)
Maria Eagle (Labour – Garston and Halewood)
Mrs Louise Ellman (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, Riverside)
Paul Farrelly (Labour – Newcastle-under-Lyme)
Tim Farron (Liberal Democrat – Westmorland and Lonsdale)
Marion Fellows (Scottish National Party – Motherwell and Wishaw)
Margaret Ferrier (Scottish National Party – Rutherglen and Hamilton West)
Vicky Foxcroft (Labour – Lewisham, Deptford)
Mike Gapes (Labour (Co-op) – Ilford South)
Stephen Gethins (Scottish National Party – North East Fife)
Patricia Gibson (Scottish National Party – North Ayrshire and Arran)
Patrick Grady (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North)
Peter Grant (Scottish National Party – Glenrothes)
Neil Gray (Scottish National Party – Airdrie and Shotts)
Lilian Greenwood (Labour – Nottingham South)
Helen Hayes (Labour – Dulwich and West Norwood)
Drew Hendry (Scottish National Party – Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey)
Lady Hermon (Independent – North Down)
Meg Hillier (Labour (Co-op) – Hackney South and Shoreditch)
Stewart Hosie (Scottish National Party – Dundee East)
Dr Rupa Huq (Labour – Ealing Central and Acton)
George Kerevan (Scottish National Party – East Lothian)
Calum Kerr (Scottish National Party – Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk)
Peter Kyle (Labour – Hove)
Mr David Lammy (Labour – Tottenham)
Chris Law (Scottish National Party – Dundee West)
Caroline Lucas (Green Party – Brighton, Pavilion)
Angus Brendan MacNeil (Scottish National Party – Na h-Eileanan an Iar)
Rachael Maskell (Labour (Co-op) – York Central)
John Mc Nally (Scottish National Party – Falkirk)
Kerry McCarthy (Labour – Bristol East)
Stewart Malcolm McDonald (Scottish National Party – Glasgow South)
Stuart C. McDonald (Scottish National Party – Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East)
Dr Alasdair McDonnell (Social Democratic & Labour Party – Belfast South)
Natalie McGarry (Independent – Glasgow East)
Catherine McKinnell (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne North)
Anne McLaughlin (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North East)
Carol Monaghan (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North West)
Dr Paul Monaghan (Scottish National Party – Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross)
Mrs Madeleine Moon (Labour – Bridgend)
Roger Mullin (Scottish National Party – Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath)
Ian Murray (Labour – Edinburgh South)
Gavin Newlands (Scottish National Party – Paisley and Renfrewshire North)
John Nicolson (Scottish National Party – East Dunbartonshire)
Brendan O’Hara (Scottish National Party – Argyll and Bute)
Sarah Olney (Liberal Democrat – Richmond Park)
Kirsten Oswald (Scottish National Party – East Renfrewshire)
Steven Paterson (Scottish National Party – Stirling)
Stephen Pound (Labour – Ealing North)
John Pugh (Liberal Democrat – Southport)
Ms Margaret Ritchie (Social Democratic & Labour Party – South Down)
Angus Robertson (Scottish National Party – Moray)
Alex Salmond (Scottish National Party – Gordon)
Liz Saville Roberts (Plaid Cymru – Dwyfor Meirionnydd)
Mr Virendra Sharma (Labour – Ealing, Southall)
Tommy Sheppard (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh East)
Tulip Siddiq (Labour – Hampstead and Kilburn)
Andy Slaughter (Labour – Hammersmith)
Jeff Smith (Labour – Manchester, Withington)
Owen Smith (Labour – Pontypridd)
Chris Stephens (Scottish National Party – Glasgow South West)
Jo Stevens (Labour – Cardiff Central)
Alison Thewliss (Scottish National Party – Glasgow Central)
Michelle Thomson (Independent – Edinburgh West)
Owen Thompson (Scottish National Party – Midlothian)
Stephen Timms (Labour – East Ham)
Mike Weir (Scottish National Party – Angus)
Catherine West (Labour – Hornsey and Wood Green)
Dr Eilidh Whiteford (Scottish National Party – Banff and Buchan)
Dr Alan Whitehead (Labour – Southampton, Test)
Dr Philippa Whitford (Scottish National Party – Central Ayrshire)
Hywel Williams (Plaid Cymru – Arfon)
Mr Mark Williams (Liberal Democrat – Ceredigion)
Pete Wishart (Scottish National Party – Perth and North Perthshire)
Daniel Zeichner (Labour – Cambridge)
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workingclasshistory · 4 years
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On this day, 8 April 2013, former UK Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher died. Street parties spontaneously broke out across the country, particularly in working class areas and in former mining communities which were ravaged by Thatcher's policies. Her legacy is best remembered for her destruction of the organised workers' movement in Britain, after the defeat of the miners' strike of 1984-5. This set the scene for the drastic increase of economic equality and unemployment which occurred in the 1980s. Her government also effectively destroyed social housing, helping to create the situation today where it is unavailable for most people, while private property prices have skyrocketed to a level unaffordable for most young people. Thatcher also complained that children were being taught that "they have an inalienable right to be gay", so she introduced the vicious section 28 law prohibiting teaching of homosexuality as acceptable. In terms of foreign-policy, Thatcher was a powerful advocate for racism, advising the Australian foreign minister to beware of Asians, warning that his country should not "end up like Fiji, where the Indian migrants have taken over". She hosted apartheid South Africa's head of state, while denouncing the African National Congress as a "typical terrorist organisation". Margaret Thatcher was a close personal friend to Chilean dictator general Augusto Pinochet, who was responsible for the rape, murder and torture of tens of thousands of people. Back in Britain, she backed numerous high-profile child abusers, despite being aware of allegations against them like Sir Peter Hayman, and MPs Cyril Smith and Peter Morrison. And she lobbied for her friend, serial paedophile Jimmy Savile, to be knighted despite being warned about his behaviour by civil servants. She was eventually forced to step down after the defeat of her hated poll tax by a mass non-payment campaign. Pictured: Jimmy Savile welcoming Thatcher to hell, reportedly. https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1395124427339370/?type=3
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newstwitter-blog · 7 years
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New Post has been published on News Twitter
New Post has been published on http://www.news-twitter.com/2017/02/02/skynews-how-did-your-mp-vote-on-the-article-50-trigger-15/
Skynews: How did your MP vote on the Article 50 trigger?
The SNP, Liberal Democrats and many Labour MPs voted against the EU (Notification Of Withdrawal) Bill.
One hundred and fourteen MPs in total were noes, but did your constituency’s MP vote to push the bill forward?
YES:
Debbie Abrahams (Labour – Oldham East and Saddleworth)
Nigel Adams (Conservative – Selby and Ainsty)
Adam Afriyie (Conservative – Windsor)
Peter Aldous (Conservative – Waveney)
Lucy Allan (Conservative – Telford)
Heidi Allen (Conservative – South Cambridgeshire)
Sir David Amess (Conservative – Southend West)
Mr David Anderson (Labour – Blaydon)
Stuart Andrew (Conservative – Pudsey)
Caroline Ansell (Conservative – Eastbourne)
Edward Argar (Conservative – Charnwood)
Jonathan Ashworth (Labour (Co-op) – Leicester South)
Victoria Atkins (Conservative – Louth and Horncastle)
Ian Austin (Labour – Dudley North)
Mr Richard Bacon (Conservative – South Norfolk)
Mr Adrian Bailey (Labour (Co-op) – West Bromwich West)
Mr Steve Baker (Conservative – Wycombe)
Harriett Baldwin (Conservative – West Worcestershire)
Stephen Barclay (Conservative – North East Cambridgeshire)
Mr John Baron (Conservative – Basildon and Billericay)
Sir Kevin Barron (Labour – Rother Valley)
Gavin Barwell (Conservative – Croydon Central)
Guto Bebb (Conservative – Aberconwy)
Margaret Beckett (Labour – Derby South)
Sir Henry Bellingham (Conservative – North West Norfolk)
Hilary Benn (Labour – Leeds Central)
Richard Benyon (Conservative – Newbury)
Sir Paul Beresford (Conservative – Mole Valley)
James Berry (Conservative – Kingston and Surbiton)
Mr Clive Betts (Labour – Sheffield South East)
Andrew Bingham (Conservative – High Peak)
Bob Blackman (Conservative – Harrow East)
Nicola Blackwood (Conservative – Oxford West and Abingdon)
Tom Blenkinsop (Labour – Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)
Paul Blomfield (Labour – Sheffield Central)
Crispin Blunt (Conservative – Reigate)
Mr Peter Bone (Conservative – Wellingborough)
Victoria Borwick (Conservative – Kensington)
Sir Peter Bottomley (Conservative – Worthing West)
Tracy Brabin (Labour – Batley and Spen)
Karen Bradley (Conservative – Staffordshire Moorlands)
Mr Graham Brady (Conservative – Altrincham and Sale West)
Sir Julian Brazier (Conservative – Canterbury)
Andrew Bridgen (Conservative – North West Leicestershire)
Steve Brine (Conservative – Winchester)
James Brokenshire (Conservative – Old Bexley and Sidcup)
Mr Nicholas Brown (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne East)
Fiona Bruce (Conservative – Congleton)
Robert Buckland (Conservative – South Swindon)
Richard Burden (Labour – Birmingham, Northfield)
Richard Burgon (Labour – Leeds East)
Andy Burnham (Labour – Leigh)
Conor Burns (Conservative – Bournemouth West)
Sir Simon Burns (Conservative – Chelmsford)
Mr David Burrowes (Conservative – Enfield, Southgate)
Alistair Burt (Conservative – North East Bedfordshire)
Liam Byrne (Labour – Birmingham, Hodge Hill)
Alun Cairns (Conservative – Vale of Glamorgan)
Mr Alan Campbell (Labour – Tynemouth)
Mr Gregory Campbell (Democratic Unionist Party – East Londonderry)
Mr Ronnie Campbell (Labour – Blyth Valley)
Neil Carmichael (Conservative – Stroud)
Mr Douglas Carswell (UK Independence Party – Clacton)
James Cartlidge (Conservative – South Suffolk)
Sir William Cash (Conservative – Stone)
Maria Caulfield (Conservative – Lewes)
Alex Chalk (Conservative – Cheltenham)
Sarah Champion (Labour – Rotherham)
Jenny Chapman (Labour – Darlington)
Rehman Chishti (Conservative – Gillingham and Rainham)
Mr Christopher Chope (Conservative – Christchurch)
Jo Churchill (Conservative – Bury St Edmunds)
Greg Clark (Conservative – Tunbridge Wells)
James Cleverly (Conservative – Braintree)
Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (Conservative – The Cotswolds)
Vernon Coaker (Labour – Gedling)
Dr Thérèse Coffey (Conservative – Suffolk Coastal)
Damian Collins (Conservative – Folkestone and Hythe)
Oliver Colvile (Conservative – Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport)
Julie Cooper (Labour – Burnley)
Rosie Cooper (Labour – West Lancashire)
Yvette Cooper (Labour – Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford)
Jeremy Corbyn (Labour – Islington North)
Alberto Costa (Conservative – South Leicestershire)
Robert Courts (Conservative – Witney)
Mr Geoffrey Cox (Conservative – Torridge and West Devon)
Stephen Crabb (Conservative – Preseli Pembrokeshire)
Sir David Crausby (Labour – Bolton North East)
Tracey Crouch (Conservative – Chatham and Aylesford)
Jon Cruddas (Labour – Dagenham and Rainham)
John Cryer (Labour – Leyton and Wanstead)
Judith Cummins (Labour – Bradford South)
Alex Cunningham (Labour – Stockton North)
Mr Jim Cunningham (Labour – Coventry South)
Nic Dakin (Labour – Scunthorpe)
Simon Danczuk (Independent – Rochdale)
Wayne David (Labour – Caerphilly)
Byron Davies (Conservative – Gower)
Chris Davies (Conservative – Brecon and Radnorshire)
David T. C. Davies (Conservative – Monmouth)
Dr James Davies (Conservative – Vale of Clwyd)
Glyn Davies (Conservative – Montgomeryshire)
Mims Davies (Conservative – Eastleigh)
Philip Davies (Conservative – Shipley)
Mr David Davis (Conservative – Haltemprice and Howden)
Gloria De Piero (Labour – Ashfield)
Caroline Dinenage (Conservative – Gosport)
Mr Jonathan Djanogly (Conservative – Huntingdon)
Mr Nigel Dodds (Democratic Unionist Party – Belfast North)
Sir Jeffrey M. Donaldson (Democratic Unionist Party – Lagan Valley)
Michelle Donelan (Conservative – Chippenham)
Nadine Dorries (Conservative – Mid Bedfordshire)
Steve Double (Conservative – St Austell and Newquay)
Peter Dowd (Labour – Bootle)
Oliver Dowden (Conservative – Hertsmere)
Jackie Doyle-Price (Conservative – Thurrock)
Richard Drax (Conservative – South Dorset)
Jack Dromey (Labour – Birmingham, Erdington)
Mrs Flick Drummond (Conservative – Portsmouth South)
James Duddridge (Conservative – Rochford and Southend East)
Michael Dugher (Labour – Barnsley East)
Mr Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative – Chingford and Woodford Green)
Sir Alan Duncan (Conservative – Rutland and Melton)
Mr Philip Dunne (Conservative – Ludlow)
Ms Angela Eagle (Labour – Wallasey)
Clive Efford (Labour – Eltham)
Julie Elliott (Labour – Sunderland Central)
Tom Elliott (Ulster Unionist Party – Fermanagh and South Tyrone)
Michael Ellis (Conservative – Northampton North)
Jane Ellison (Conservative – Battersea)
Mr Tobias Ellwood (Conservative – Bournemouth East)
Chris Elmore (Labour – Ogmore)
Charlie Elphicke (Conservative – Dover)
Bill Esterson (Labour – Sefton Central)
George Eustice (Conservative – Camborne and Redruth)
Chris Evans (Labour (Co-op) – Islwyn)
Graham Evans (Conservative – Weaver Vale)
Mr Nigel Evans (Conservative – Ribble Valley)
David Evennett (Conservative – Bexleyheath and Crayford)
Michael Fabricant (Conservative – Lichfield)
Sir Michael Fallon (Conservative – Sevenoaks)
Suella Fernandes (Conservative – Fareham)
Frank Field (Labour – Birkenhead)
Mark Field (Conservative – Cities of London and Westminster)
Jim Fitzpatrick (Labour – Poplar and Limehouse)
Robert Flello (Labour – Stoke-on-Trent South)
Colleen Fletcher (Labour – Coventry North East)
Caroline Flint (Labour – Don Valley)
Paul Flynn (Labour – Newport West)
Kevin Foster (Conservative – Torbay)
Yvonne Fovargue (Labour – Makerfield)
Dr Liam Fox (Conservative – North Somerset)
Mr Mark Francois (Conservative – Rayleigh and Wickford)
Lucy Frazer (Conservative – South East Cambridgeshire)
George Freeman (Conservative – Mid Norfolk)
Mike Freer (Conservative – Finchley and Golders Green)
Richard Fuller (Conservative – Bedford)
Gill Furniss (Labour – Sheffield, Brightside and Hillsborough)
Marcus Fysh (Conservative – Yeovil)
Barry Gardiner (Labour – Brent North)
Mark Garnier (Conservative – Wyre Forest)
Sir Edward Garnier (Conservative – Harborough)
Mr David Gauke (Conservative – South West Hertfordshire)
Nusrat Ghani (Conservative – Wealden)
Nick Gibb (Conservative – Bognor Regis and Littlehampton)
Mrs Cheryl Gillan (Conservative – Chesham and Amersham)
John Glen (Conservative – Salisbury)
Mary Glindon (Labour – North Tyneside)
Helen Goodman (Labour – Bishop Auckland)
Mr Robert Goodwill (Conservative – Scarborough and Whitby)
Michael Gove (Conservative – Surrey Heath)
Richard Graham (Conservative – Gloucester)
Mrs Helen Grant (Conservative – Maidstone and The Weald)
James Gray (Conservative – North Wiltshire)
Chris Grayling (Conservative – Epsom and Ewell)
Chris Green (Conservative – Bolton West)
Damian Green (Conservative – Ashford)
Justine Greening (Conservative – Putney)
Margaret Greenwood (Labour – Wirral West)
Mr Dominic Grieve (Conservative – Beaconsfield)
Nia Griffith (Labour – Llanelli)
Andrew Griffiths (Conservative – Burton)
Ben Gummer (Conservative – Ipswich)
Andrew Gwynne (Labour – Denton and Reddish)
Mr Sam Gyimah (Conservative – East Surrey)
Louise Haigh (Labour – Sheffield, Heeley)
Robert Halfon (Conservative – Harlow)
Luke Hall (Conservative – Thornbury and Yate)
Fabian Hamilton (Labour – Leeds North East)
Mr Philip Hammond (Conservative – Runnymede and Weybridge)
Stephen Hammond (Conservative – Wimbledon)
Matt Hancock (Conservative – West Suffolk)
Greg Hands (Conservative – Chelsea and Fulham)
Mr David Hanson (Labour – Delyn)
Ms Harriet Harman (Labour – Camberwell and Peckham)
Mr Mark Harper (Conservative – Forest of Dean)
Richard Harrington (Conservative – Watford)
Carolyn Harris (Labour – Swansea East)
Rebecca Harris (Conservative – Castle Point)
Simon Hart (Conservative – Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire)
Mr John Hayes (Conservative – South Holland and The Deepings)
Sue Hayman (Labour – Workington)
Sir Oliver Heald (Conservative – North East Hertfordshire)
John Healey (Labour – Wentworth and Dearne)
James Heappey (Conservative – Wells)
Chris Heaton-Harris (Conservative – Daventry)
Peter Heaton-Jones (Conservative – North Devon)
Gordon Henderson (Conservative – Sittingbourne and Sheppey)
Mr Mark Hendrick (Labour (Co-op) – Preston)
Mr Stephen Hepburn (Labour – Jarrow)
Nick Herbert (Conservative – Arundel and South Downs)
Damian Hinds (Conservative – East Hampshire)
Simon Hoare (Conservative – North Dorset)
Mrs Sharon Hodgson (Labour – Washington and Sunderland West)
Kate Hoey (Labour – Vauxhall)
Kate Hollern (Labour – Blackburn)
George Hollingbery (Conservative – Meon Valley)
Kevin Hollinrake (Conservative – Thirsk and Malton)
Mr Philip Hollobone (Conservative – Kettering)
Adam Holloway (Conservative – Gravesham)
Kelvin Hopkins (Labour – Luton North)
Kris Hopkins (Conservative – Keighley)
Sir Gerald Howarth (Conservative – Aldershot)
John Howell (Conservative – Henley)
Ben Howlett (Conservative – Bath)
Nigel Huddleston (Conservative – Mid Worcestershire)
Mr Jeremy Hunt (Conservative – South West Surrey)
Mr Nick Hurd (Conservative – Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner)
Imran Hussain (Labour – Bradford East)
Mr Stewart Jackson (Conservative – Peterborough)
Margot James (Conservative – Stourbridge)
Dan Jarvis (Labour – Barnsley Central)
Sajid Javid (Conservative – Bromsgrove)
Mr Ranil Jayawardena (Conservative – North East Hampshire)
Mr Bernard Jenkin (Conservative – Harwich and North Essex)
Andrea Jenkyns (Conservative – Morley and Outwood)
Robert Jenrick (Conservative – Newark)
Alan Johnson (Labour – Kingston upon Hull West and Hessle)
Boris Johnson (Conservative – Uxbridge and South Ruislip)
Diana Johnson (Labour – Kingston upon Hull North)
Dr Caroline Johnson (Conservative – Sleaford and North Hykeham)
Gareth Johnson (Conservative – Dartford)
Joseph Johnson (Conservative – Orpington)
Andrew Jones (Conservative – Harrogate and Knaresborough)
Gerald Jones (Labour – Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney)
Graham Jones (Labour – Hyndburn)
Helen Jones (Labour – Warrington North)
Mr David Jones (Conservative – Clwyd West)
Mr Kevan Jones (Labour – North Durham)
Mr Marcus Jones (Conservative – Nuneaton)
Susan Elan Jones (Labour – Clwyd South)
Mike Kane (Labour – Wythenshawe and Sale East)
Daniel Kawczynski (Conservative – Shrewsbury and Atcham)
Barbara Keeley (Labour – Worsley and Eccles South)
Liz Kendall (Labour – Leicester West)
Seema Kennedy (Conservative – South Ribble)
Danny Kinahan (Ulster Unionist Party – South Antrim)
Stephen Kinnock (Labour – Aberavon)
Simon Kirby (Conservative – Brighton, Kemptown)
Julian Knight (Conservative – Solihull)
Sir Greg Knight (Conservative – East Yorkshire)
Kwasi Kwarteng (Conservative – Spelthorne)
Mark Lancaster (Conservative – Milton Keynes North)
Pauline Latham (Conservative – Mid Derbyshire)
Ian Lavery (Labour – Wansbeck)
Andrea Leadsom (Conservative – South Northamptonshire)
Dr Phillip Lee (Conservative – Bracknell)
Jeremy Lefroy (Conservative – Stafford)
Sir Edward Leigh (Conservative – Gainsborough)
Charlotte Leslie (Conservative – Bristol North West)
Sir Oliver Letwin (Conservative – West Dorset)
Mrs Emma Lewell-Buck (Labour – South Shields)
Brandon Lewis (Conservative – Great Yarmouth)
Clive Lewis (Labour – Norwich South)
Dr Julian Lewis (Conservative – New Forest East)
Mr Ivan Lewis (Labour – Bury South)
Mr Ian Liddell-Grainger (Conservative – Bridgwater and West Somerset)
Mr David Lidington (Conservative – Aylesbury)
Mr Peter Lilley (Conservative – Hitchin and Harpenden)
Rebecca Long Bailey (Labour – Salford and Eccles)
Jack Lopresti (Conservative – Filton and Bradley Stoke)
Mr Jonathan Lord (Conservative – Woking)
Tim Loughton (Conservative – East Worthing and Shoreham)
Ian C. Lucas (Labour – Wrexham)
Holly Lynch (Labour – Halifax)
Craig Mackinlay (Conservative – South Thanet)
David Mackintosh (Conservative – Northampton South)
Fiona Mactaggart (Labour – Slough)
Justin Madders (Labour – Ellesmere Port and Neston)
Mr Khalid Mahmood (Labour – Birmingham, Perry Barr)
Shabana Mahmood (Labour – Birmingham, Ladywood)
Mrs Anne Main (Conservative – St Albans)
Mr Alan Mak (Conservative – Havant)
Seema Malhotra (Labour (Co-op) – Feltham and Heston)
Kit Malthouse (Conservative – North West Hampshire)
John Mann (Labour – Bassetlaw)
Scott Mann (Conservative – North Cornwall)
Rob Marris (Labour – Wolverhampton South West)
Gordon Marsden (Labour – Blackpool South)
Christian Matheson (Labour – City of Chester)
Dr Tania Mathias (Conservative – Twickenham)
Mrs Theresa May (Conservative – Maidenhead)
Paul Maynard (Conservative – Blackpool North and Cleveleys)
Steve McCabe (Labour – Birmingham, Selly Oak)
Jason McCartney (Conservative – Colne Valley)
Karl McCartney (Conservative – Lincoln)
Siobhain McDonagh (Labour – Mitcham and Morden)
Andy McDonald (Labour – Middlesbrough)
John McDonnell (Labour – Hayes and Harlington)
Mr Pat McFadden (Labour – Wolverhampton South East)
Conor McGinn (Labour – St Helens North)
Alison McGovern (Labour – Wirral South)
Liz McInnes (Labour – Heywood and Middleton)
Sir Patrick McLoughlin (Conservative – Derbyshire Dales)
Jim McMahon (Labour (Co-op) – Oldham West and Royton)
Stephen McPartland (Conservative – Stevenage)
Sir Alan Meale (Labour – Mansfield)
Mark Menzies (Conservative – Fylde)
Johnny Mercer (Conservative – Plymouth, Moor View)
Huw Merriman (Conservative – Bexhill and Battle)
Stephen Metcalfe (Conservative – South Basildon and East Thurrock)
Edward Miliband (Labour – Doncaster North)
Mrs Maria Miller (Conservative – Basingstoke)
Amanda Milling (Conservative – Cannock Chase)
Nigel Mills (Conservative – Amber Valley)
Anne Milton (Conservative – Guildford)
Mr Andrew Mitchell (Conservative – Sutton Coldfield)
Penny Mordaunt (Conservative – Portsmouth North)
Jessica Morden (Labour – Newport East)
Nicky Morgan (Conservative – Loughborough)
Anne Marie Morris (Conservative – Newton Abbot)
David Morris (Conservative – Morecambe and Lunesdale)
Grahame Morris (Labour – Easington)
James Morris (Conservative – Halesowen and Rowley Regis)
Wendy Morton (Conservative – Aldridge-Brownhills)
David Mowat (Conservative – Warrington South)
David Mundell (Conservative – Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale)
Mrs Sheryll Murray (Conservative – South East Cornwall)
Dr Andrew Murrison (Conservative – South West Wiltshire)
Lisa Nandy (Labour – Wigan)
Robert Neill (Conservative – Bromley and Chislehurst)
Sarah Newton (Conservative – Truro and Falmouth)
Caroline Nokes (Conservative – Romsey and Southampton North)
Jesse Norman (Conservative – Hereford and South Herefordshire)
Mr David Nuttall (Conservative – Bury North)
Dr Matthew Offord (Conservative – Hendon)
Melanie Onn (Labour – Great Grimsby)
Chi Onwurah (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne Central)
Guy Opperman (Conservative – Hexham)
Kate Osamor (Labour (Co-op) – Edmonton)
Mr George Osborne (Conservative – Tatton)
Albert Owen (Labour – Ynys Môn)
Ian Paisley (Democratic Unionist Party – North Antrim)
Neil Parish (Conservative – Tiverton and Honiton)
Priti Patel (Conservative – Witham)
Mr Owen Paterson (Conservative – North Shropshire)
Mark Pawsey (Conservative – Rugby)
Teresa Pearce (Labour – Erith and Thamesmead)
Mike Penning (Conservative – Hemel Hempstead)
Matthew Pennycook (Labour – Greenwich and Woolwich)
John Penrose (Conservative – Weston-super-Mare)
Andrew Percy (Conservative – Brigg and Goole)
Toby Perkins (Labour – Chesterfield)
Claire Perry (Conservative – Devizes)
Jess Phillips (Labour – Birmingham, Yardley)
Bridget Phillipson (Labour – Houghton and Sunderland South)
Chris Philp (Conservative – Croydon South)
Sir Eric Pickles (Conservative – Brentwood and Ongar)
Christopher Pincher (Conservative – Tamworth)
Dr Dan Poulter (Conservative – Central Suffolk and North Ipswich)
Rebecca Pow (Conservative – Taunton Deane)
Lucy Powell (Labour (Co-op) – Manchester Central)
Victoria Prentis (Conservative – Banbury)
Mr Mark Prisk (Conservative – Hertford and Stortford)
Mark Pritchard (Conservative – The Wrekin)
Tom Pursglove (Conservative – Corby)
Jeremy Quin (Conservative – Horsham)
Will Quince (Conservative – Colchester)
Yasmin Qureshi (Labour – Bolton South East)
Dominic Raab (Conservative – Esher and Walton)
Angela Rayner (Labour – Ashton-under-Lyne)
John Redwood (Conservative – Wokingham)
Mr Steve Reed (Labour (Co-op) – Croydon North)
Christina Rees (Labour (Co-op) – Neath)
Mr Jacob Rees-Mogg (Conservative – North East Somerset)
Rachel Reeves (Labour – Leeds West)
Emma Reynolds (Labour – Wolverhampton North East)
Jonathan Reynolds (Labour (Co-op) – Stalybridge and Hyde)
Marie Rimmer (Labour – St Helens South and Whiston)
Mr Laurence Robertson (Conservative – Tewkesbury)
Gavin Robinson (Democratic Unionist Party – Belfast East)
Mary Robinson (Conservative – Cheadle)
Mr Geoffrey Robinson (Labour – Coventry North West)
Andrew Rosindell (Conservative – Romford)
Steve Rotheram (Labour – Liverpool, Walton)
Amber Rudd (Conservative – Hastings and Rye)
David Rutley (Conservative – Macclesfield)
Joan Ryan (Labour – Enfield North)
Antoinette Sandbach (Conservative – Eddisbury)
Paul Scully (Conservative – Sutton and Cheam)
Andrew Selous (Conservative – South West Bedfordshire)
Naz Shah (Labour – Bradford West)
Jim Shannon (Democratic Unionist Party – Strangford)
Grant Shapps (Conservative – Welwyn Hatfield)
Alok Sharma (Conservative – Reading West)
Mr Barry Sheerman (Labour (Co-op) – Huddersfield)
Alec Shelbrooke (Conservative – Elmet and Rothwell)
Paula Sherriff (Labour – Dewsbury)
David Simpson (Democratic Unionist Party – Upper Bann)
Mr Keith Simpson (Conservative – Broadland)
Chris Skidmore (Conservative – Kingswood)
Mr Dennis Skinner (Labour – Bolsover)
Ruth Smeeth (Labour – Stoke-on-Trent North)
Cat Smith (Labour – Lancaster and Fleetwood)
Chloe Smith (Conservative – Norwich North)
Henry Smith (Conservative – Crawley)
Julian Smith (Conservative – Skipton and Ripon)
Mr Andrew Smith (Labour – Oxford East)
Nick Smith (Labour – Blaenau Gwent)
Royston Smith (Conservative – Southampton, Itchen)
Karin Smyth (Labour – Bristol South)
Sir Nicholas Soames (Conservative – Mid Sussex)
Amanda Solloway (Conservative – Derby North)
Anna Soubry (Conservative – Broxtowe)
John Spellar (Labour – Warley)
Dame Caroline Spelman (Conservative – Meriden)
Mark Spencer (Conservative – Sherwood)
Keir Starmer (Labour – Holborn and St Pancras)
Andrew Stephenson (Conservative – Pendle)
John Stevenson (Conservative – Carlisle)
Bob Stewart (Conservative – Beckenham)
Iain Stewart (Conservative – Milton Keynes South)
Rory Stewart (Conservative – Penrith and The Border)
Mr Gary Streeter (Conservative – South West Devon)
Wes Streeting (Labour – Ilford North)
Mel Stride (Conservative – Central Devon)
Graham Stringer (Labour – Blackley and Broughton)
Graham Stuart (Conservative – Beverley and Holderness)
Ms Gisela Stuart (Labour – Birmingham, Edgbaston)
Julian Sturdy (Conservative – York Outer)
Rishi Sunak (Conservative – Richmond (Yorks))
Sir Desmond Swayne (Conservative – New Forest West)
Sir Hugo Swire (Conservative – East Devon)
Mr Robert Syms (Conservative – Poole)
Mark Tami (Labour – Alyn and Deeside)
Derek Thomas (Conservative – St Ives)
Gareth Thomas (Labour (Co-op) – Harrow West)
Nick Thomas-Symonds (Labour – Torfaen)
Emily Thornberry (Labour – Islington South and Finsbury)
Maggie Throup (Conservative – Erewash)
Edward Timpson (Conservative – Crewe and Nantwich)
Kelly Tolhurst (Conservative – Rochester and Strood)
Justin Tomlinson (Conservative – North Swindon)
Michael Tomlinson (Conservative – Mid Dorset and North Poole)
Craig Tracey (Conservative – North Warwickshire)
David Tredinnick (Conservative – Bosworth)
Mrs Anne-Marie Trevelyan (Conservative – Berwick-upon-Tweed)
Jon Trickett (Labour – Hemsworth)
Elizabeth Truss (Conservative – South West Norfolk)
Tom Tugendhat (Conservative – Tonbridge and Malling)
Anna Turley (Labour (Co-op) – Redcar)
Karl Turner (Labour – Kingston upon Hull East)
Mr Andrew Turner (Conservative – Isle of Wight)
Derek Twigg (Labour – Halton)
Stephen Twigg (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, West Derby)
Mr Andrew Tyrie (Conservative – Chichester)
Mr Chuka Umunna (Labour – Streatham)
Mr Edward Vaizey (Conservative – Wantage)
Mr Shailesh Vara (Conservative – North West Cambridgeshire)
Keith Vaz (Labour – Leicester East)
Valerie Vaz (Labour – Walsall South)
Martin Vickers (Conservative – Cleethorpes)
Mrs Theresa Villiers (Conservative – Chipping Barnet)
Mr Charles Walker (Conservative – Broxbourne)
Mr Robin Walker (Conservative – Worcester)
Mr Ben Wallace (Conservative – Wyre and Preston North)
David Warburton (Conservative – Somerton and Frome)
Matt Warman (Conservative – Boston and Skegness)
Dame Angela Watkinson (Conservative – Hornchurch and Upminster)
Tom Watson (Labour – West Bromwich East)
James Wharton (Conservative – Stockton South)
Helen Whately (Conservative – Faversham and Mid Kent)
Heather Wheeler (Conservative – South Derbyshire)
Chris White (Conservative – Warwick and Leamington)
Craig Whittaker (Conservative – Calder Valley)
Mr John Whittingdale (Conservative – Maldon)
Bill Wiggin (Conservative – North Herefordshire)
Craig Williams (Conservative – Cardiff North)
Gavin Williamson (Conservative – South Staffordshire)
Mr Rob Wilson (Conservative – Reading East)
Phil Wilson (Labour – Sedgefield)
Sammy Wilson (Democratic Unionist Party – East Antrim)
Mr David Winnick (Labour – Walsall North)
Dame Rosie Winterton (Labour – Doncaster Central)
Dr Sarah Wollaston (Conservative – Totnes)
John Woodcock (Labour (Co-op) – Barrow and Furness)
William Wragg (Conservative – Hazel Grove)
Jeremy Wright (Conservative – Kenilworth and Southam)
Mr Iain Wright (Labour – Hartlepool)
Nadhim Zahawi (Conservative – Stratford-on-Avon)
NO:
Ms Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh (Scottish National Party – Ochil and South Perthshire)
Heidi Alexander (Labour – Lewisham East)
Rushanara Ali (Labour – Bethnal Green and Bow)
Mr Graham Allen (Labour – Nottingham North)
Dr Rosena Allin-Khan (Labour – Tooting)
Richard Arkless (Scottish National Party – Dumfries and Galloway)
Hannah Bardell (Scottish National Party – Livingston)
Luciana Berger (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, Wavertree)
Mhairi Black (Scottish National Party – Paisley and Renfrewshire South)
Ian Blackford (Scottish National Party – Ross, Skye and Lochaber)
Kirsty Blackman (Scottish National Party – Aberdeen North)
Philip Boswell (Scottish National Party – Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill)
Mr Ben Bradshaw (Labour – Exeter)
Tom Brake (Liberal Democrat – Carshalton and Wallington)
Kevin Brennan (Labour – Cardiff West)
Deidre Brock (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh North and Leith)
Alan Brown (Scottish National Party – Kilmarnock and Loudoun)
Lyn Brown (Labour – West Ham)
Chris Bryant (Labour – Rhondda)
Ms Karen Buck (Labour – Westminster North)
Dawn Butler (Labour – Brent Central)
Ruth Cadbury (Labour – Brentford and Isleworth)
Dr Lisa Cameron (Scottish National Party – East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow)
Mr Alistair Carmichael (Liberal Democrat – Orkney and Shetland)
Douglas Chapman (Scottish National Party – Dunfermline and West Fife)
Joanna Cherry (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh South West)
Mr Kenneth Clarke (Conservative – Rushcliffe)
Mr Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat – Sheffield, Hallam)
Ann Clwyd (Labour – Cynon Valley)
Ann Coffey (Labour – Stockport)
Ronnie Cowan (Scottish National Party – Inverclyde)
Neil Coyle (Labour – Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
Angela Crawley (Scottish National Party – Lanark and Hamilton East)
Mary Creagh (Labour – Wakefield)
Stella Creasy (Labour (Co-op) – Walthamstow)
Martyn Day (Scottish National Party – Linlithgow and East Falkirk)
Thangam Debbonaire (Labour – Bristol West)
Martin Docherty-Hughes (Scottish National Party – West Dunbartonshire)
Stuart Blair Donaldson (Scottish National Party – West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine)
Stephen Doughty (Labour (Co-op) – Cardiff South and Penarth)
Jim Dowd (Labour – Lewisham West and Penge)
Mark Durkan (Social Democratic & Labour Party – Foyle)
Maria Eagle (Labour – Garston and Halewood)
Mrs Louise Ellman (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, Riverside)
Paul Farrelly (Labour – Newcastle-under-Lyme)
Tim Farron (Liberal Democrat – Westmorland and Lonsdale)
Marion Fellows (Scottish National Party – Motherwell and Wishaw)
Margaret Ferrier (Scottish National Party – Rutherglen and Hamilton West)
Vicky Foxcroft (Labour – Lewisham, Deptford)
Mike Gapes (Labour (Co-op) – Ilford South)
Stephen Gethins (Scottish National Party – North East Fife)
Patricia Gibson (Scottish National Party – North Ayrshire and Arran)
Patrick Grady (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North)
Peter Grant (Scottish National Party – Glenrothes)
Neil Gray (Scottish National Party – Airdrie and Shotts)
Lilian Greenwood (Labour – Nottingham South)
Helen Hayes (Labour – Dulwich and West Norwood)
Drew Hendry (Scottish National Party – Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey)
Lady Hermon (Independent – North Down)
Meg Hillier (Labour (Co-op) – Hackney South and Shoreditch)
Stewart Hosie (Scottish National Party – Dundee East)
Dr Rupa Huq (Labour – Ealing Central and Acton)
George Kerevan (Scottish National Party – East Lothian)
Calum Kerr (Scottish National Party – Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk)
Peter Kyle (Labour – Hove)
Mr David Lammy (Labour – Tottenham)
Chris Law (Scottish National Party – Dundee West)
Caroline Lucas (Green Party – Brighton, Pavilion)
Angus Brendan MacNeil (Scottish National Party – Na h-Eileanan an Iar)
Rachael Maskell (Labour (Co-op) – York Central)
John Mc Nally (Scottish National Party – Falkirk)
Kerry McCarthy (Labour – Bristol East)
Stewart Malcolm McDonald (Scottish National Party – Glasgow South)
Stuart C. McDonald (Scottish National Party – Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East)
Dr Alasdair McDonnell (Social Democratic & Labour Party – Belfast South)
Natalie McGarry (Independent – Glasgow East)
Catherine McKinnell (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne North)
Anne McLaughlin (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North East)
Carol Monaghan (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North West)
Dr Paul Monaghan (Scottish National Party – Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross)
Mrs Madeleine Moon (Labour – Bridgend)
Roger Mullin (Scottish National Party – Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath)
Ian Murray (Labour – Edinburgh South)
Gavin Newlands (Scottish National Party – Paisley and Renfrewshire North)
John Nicolson (Scottish National Party – East Dunbartonshire)
Brendan O’Hara (Scottish National Party – Argyll and Bute)
Sarah Olney (Liberal Democrat – Richmond Park)
Kirsten Oswald (Scottish National Party – East Renfrewshire)
Steven Paterson (Scottish National Party – Stirling)
Stephen Pound (Labour – Ealing North)
John Pugh (Liberal Democrat – Southport)
Ms Margaret Ritchie (Social Democratic & Labour Party – South Down)
Angus Robertson (Scottish National Party – Moray)
Alex Salmond (Scottish National Party – Gordon)
Liz Saville Roberts (Plaid Cymru – Dwyfor Meirionnydd)
Mr Virendra Sharma (Labour – Ealing, Southall)
Tommy Sheppard (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh East)
Tulip Siddiq (Labour – Hampstead and Kilburn)
Andy Slaughter (Labour – Hammersmith)
Jeff Smith (Labour – Manchester, Withington)
Owen Smith (Labour – Pontypridd)
Chris Stephens (Scottish National Party – Glasgow South West)
Jo Stevens (Labour – Cardiff Central)
Alison Thewliss (Scottish National Party – Glasgow Central)
Michelle Thomson (Independent – Edinburgh West)
Owen Thompson (Scottish National Party – Midlothian)
Stephen Timms (Labour – East Ham)
Mike Weir (Scottish National Party – Angus)
Catherine West (Labour – Hornsey and Wood Green)
Dr Eilidh Whiteford (Scottish National Party – Banff and Buchan)
Dr Alan Whitehead (Labour – Southampton, Test)
Dr Philippa Whitford (Scottish National Party – Central Ayrshire)
Hywel Williams (Plaid Cymru – Arfon)
Mr Mark Williams (Liberal Democrat – Ceredigion)
Pete Wishart (Scottish National Party – Perth and North Perthshire)
Daniel Zeichner (Labour – Cambridge)
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Skynews: How did your MP vote on the Article 50 trigger?
The SNP, Liberal Democrats and many Labour MPs voted against the EU (Notification Of Withdrawal) Bill.
One hundred and fourteen MPs in total were noes, but did your constituency’s MP vote to push the bill forward?
YES:
Debbie Abrahams (Labour – Oldham East and Saddleworth)
Nigel Adams (Conservative – Selby and Ainsty)
Adam Afriyie (Conservative – Windsor)
Peter Aldous (Conservative – Waveney)
Lucy Allan (Conservative – Telford)
Heidi Allen (Conservative – South Cambridgeshire)
Sir David Amess (Conservative – Southend West)
Mr David Anderson (Labour – Blaydon)
Stuart Andrew (Conservative – Pudsey)
Caroline Ansell (Conservative – Eastbourne)
Edward Argar (Conservative – Charnwood)
Jonathan Ashworth (Labour (Co-op) – Leicester South)
Victoria Atkins (Conservative – Louth and Horncastle)
Ian Austin (Labour – Dudley North)
Mr Richard Bacon (Conservative – South Norfolk)
Mr Adrian Bailey (Labour (Co-op) – West Bromwich West)
Mr Steve Baker (Conservative – Wycombe)
Harriett Baldwin (Conservative – West Worcestershire)
Stephen Barclay (Conservative – North East Cambridgeshire)
Mr John Baron (Conservative – Basildon and Billericay)
Sir Kevin Barron (Labour – Rother Valley)
Gavin Barwell (Conservative – Croydon Central)
Guto Bebb (Conservative – Aberconwy)
Margaret Beckett (Labour – Derby South)
Sir Henry Bellingham (Conservative – North West Norfolk)
Hilary Benn (Labour – Leeds Central)
Richard Benyon (Conservative – Newbury)
Sir Paul Beresford (Conservative – Mole Valley)
James Berry (Conservative – Kingston and Surbiton)
Mr Clive Betts (Labour – Sheffield South East)
Andrew Bingham (Conservative – High Peak)
Bob Blackman (Conservative – Harrow East)
Nicola Blackwood (Conservative – Oxford West and Abingdon)
Tom Blenkinsop (Labour – Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)
Paul Blomfield (Labour – Sheffield Central)
Crispin Blunt (Conservative – Reigate)
Mr Peter Bone (Conservative – Wellingborough)
Victoria Borwick (Conservative – Kensington)
Sir Peter Bottomley (Conservative – Worthing West)
Tracy Brabin (Labour – Batley and Spen)
Karen Bradley (Conservative – Staffordshire Moorlands)
Mr Graham Brady (Conservative – Altrincham and Sale West)
Sir Julian Brazier (Conservative – Canterbury)
Andrew Bridgen (Conservative – North West Leicestershire)
Steve Brine (Conservative – Winchester)
James Brokenshire (Conservative – Old Bexley and Sidcup)
Mr Nicholas Brown (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne East)
Fiona Bruce (Conservative – Congleton)
Robert Buckland (Conservative – South Swindon)
Richard Burden (Labour – Birmingham, Northfield)
Richard Burgon (Labour – Leeds East)
Andy Burnham (Labour – Leigh)
Conor Burns (Conservative – Bournemouth West)
Sir Simon Burns (Conservative – Chelmsford)
Mr David Burrowes (Conservative – Enfield, Southgate)
Alistair Burt (Conservative – North East Bedfordshire)
Liam Byrne (Labour – Birmingham, Hodge Hill)
Alun Cairns (Conservative – Vale of Glamorgan)
Mr Alan Campbell (Labour – Tynemouth)
Mr Gregory Campbell (Democratic Unionist Party – East Londonderry)
Mr Ronnie Campbell (Labour – Blyth Valley)
Neil Carmichael (Conservative – Stroud)
Mr Douglas Carswell (UK Independence Party – Clacton)
James Cartlidge (Conservative – South Suffolk)
Sir William Cash (Conservative – Stone)
Maria Caulfield (Conservative – Lewes)
Alex Chalk (Conservative – Cheltenham)
Sarah Champion (Labour – Rotherham)
Jenny Chapman (Labour – Darlington)
Rehman Chishti (Conservative – Gillingham and Rainham)
Mr Christopher Chope (Conservative – Christchurch)
Jo Churchill (Conservative – Bury St Edmunds)
Greg Clark (Conservative – Tunbridge Wells)
James Cleverly (Conservative – Braintree)
Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (Conservative – The Cotswolds)
Vernon Coaker (Labour – Gedling)
Dr Thérèse Coffey (Conservative – Suffolk Coastal)
Damian Collins (Conservative – Folkestone and Hythe)
Oliver Colvile (Conservative – Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport)
Julie Cooper (Labour – Burnley)
Rosie Cooper (Labour – West Lancashire)
Yvette Cooper (Labour – Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford)
Jeremy Corbyn (Labour – Islington North)
Alberto Costa (Conservative – South Leicestershire)
Robert Courts (Conservative – Witney)
Mr Geoffrey Cox (Conservative – Torridge and West Devon)
Stephen Crabb (Conservative – Preseli Pembrokeshire)
Sir David Crausby (Labour – Bolton North East)
Tracey Crouch (Conservative – Chatham and Aylesford)
Jon Cruddas (Labour – Dagenham and Rainham)
John Cryer (Labour – Leyton and Wanstead)
Judith Cummins (Labour – Bradford South)
Alex Cunningham (Labour – Stockton North)
Mr Jim Cunningham (Labour – Coventry South)
Nic Dakin (Labour – Scunthorpe)
Simon Danczuk (Independent – Rochdale)
Wayne David (Labour – Caerphilly)
Byron Davies (Conservative – Gower)
Chris Davies (Conservative – Brecon and Radnorshire)
David T. C. Davies (Conservative – Monmouth)
Dr James Davies (Conservative – Vale of Clwyd)
Glyn Davies (Conservative – Montgomeryshire)
Mims Davies (Conservative – Eastleigh)
Philip Davies (Conservative – Shipley)
Mr David Davis (Conservative – Haltemprice and Howden)
Gloria De Piero (Labour – Ashfield)
Caroline Dinenage (Conservative – Gosport)
Mr Jonathan Djanogly (Conservative – Huntingdon)
Mr Nigel Dodds (Democratic Unionist Party – Belfast North)
Sir Jeffrey M. Donaldson (Democratic Unionist Party – Lagan Valley)
Michelle Donelan (Conservative – Chippenham)
Nadine Dorries (Conservative – Mid Bedfordshire)
Steve Double (Conservative – St Austell and Newquay)
Peter Dowd (Labour – Bootle)
Oliver Dowden (Conservative – Hertsmere)
Jackie Doyle-Price (Conservative – Thurrock)
Richard Drax (Conservative – South Dorset)
Jack Dromey (Labour – Birmingham, Erdington)
Mrs Flick Drummond (Conservative – Portsmouth South)
James Duddridge (Conservative – Rochford and Southend East)
Michael Dugher (Labour – Barnsley East)
Mr Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative – Chingford and Woodford Green)
Sir Alan Duncan (Conservative – Rutland and Melton)
Mr Philip Dunne (Conservative – Ludlow)
Ms Angela Eagle (Labour – Wallasey)
Clive Efford (Labour – Eltham)
Julie Elliott (Labour – Sunderland Central)
Tom Elliott (Ulster Unionist Party – Fermanagh and South Tyrone)
Michael Ellis (Conservative – Northampton North)
Jane Ellison (Conservative – Battersea)
Mr Tobias Ellwood (Conservative – Bournemouth East)
Chris Elmore (Labour – Ogmore)
Charlie Elphicke (Conservative – Dover)
Bill Esterson (Labour – Sefton Central)
George Eustice (Conservative – Camborne and Redruth)
Chris Evans (Labour (Co-op) – Islwyn)
Graham Evans (Conservative – Weaver Vale)
Mr Nigel Evans (Conservative – Ribble Valley)
David Evennett (Conservative – Bexleyheath and Crayford)
Michael Fabricant (Conservative – Lichfield)
Sir Michael Fallon (Conservative – Sevenoaks)
Suella Fernandes (Conservative – Fareham)
Frank Field (Labour – Birkenhead)
Mark Field (Conservative – Cities of London and Westminster)
Jim Fitzpatrick (Labour – Poplar and Limehouse)
Robert Flello (Labour – Stoke-on-Trent South)
Colleen Fletcher (Labour – Coventry North East)
Caroline Flint (Labour – Don Valley)
Paul Flynn (Labour – Newport West)
Kevin Foster (Conservative – Torbay)
Yvonne Fovargue (Labour – Makerfield)
Dr Liam Fox (Conservative – North Somerset)
Mr Mark Francois (Conservative – Rayleigh and Wickford)
Lucy Frazer (Conservative – South East Cambridgeshire)
George Freeman (Conservative – Mid Norfolk)
Mike Freer (Conservative – Finchley and Golders Green)
Richard Fuller (Conservative – Bedford)
Gill Furniss (Labour – Sheffield, Brightside and Hillsborough)
Marcus Fysh (Conservative – Yeovil)
Barry Gardiner (Labour – Brent North)
Mark Garnier (Conservative – Wyre Forest)
Sir Edward Garnier (Conservative – Harborough)
Mr David Gauke (Conservative – South West Hertfordshire)
Nusrat Ghani (Conservative – Wealden)
Nick Gibb (Conservative – Bognor Regis and Littlehampton)
Mrs Cheryl Gillan (Conservative – Chesham and Amersham)
John Glen (Conservative – Salisbury)
Mary Glindon (Labour – North Tyneside)
Helen Goodman (Labour – Bishop Auckland)
Mr Robert Goodwill (Conservative – Scarborough and Whitby)
Michael Gove (Conservative – Surrey Heath)
Richard Graham (Conservative – Gloucester)
Mrs Helen Grant (Conservative – Maidstone and The Weald)
James Gray (Conservative – North Wiltshire)
Chris Grayling (Conservative – Epsom and Ewell)
Chris Green (Conservative – Bolton West)
Damian Green (Conservative – Ashford)
Justine Greening (Conservative – Putney)
Margaret Greenwood (Labour – Wirral West)
Mr Dominic Grieve (Conservative – Beaconsfield)
Nia Griffith (Labour – Llanelli)
Andrew Griffiths (Conservative – Burton)
Ben Gummer (Conservative – Ipswich)
Andrew Gwynne (Labour – Denton and Reddish)
Mr Sam Gyimah (Conservative – East Surrey)
Louise Haigh (Labour – Sheffield, Heeley)
Robert Halfon (Conservative – Harlow)
Luke Hall (Conservative – Thornbury and Yate)
Fabian Hamilton (Labour – Leeds North East)
Mr Philip Hammond (Conservative – Runnymede and Weybridge)
Stephen Hammond (Conservative – Wimbledon)
Matt Hancock (Conservative – West Suffolk)
Greg Hands (Conservative – Chelsea and Fulham)
Mr David Hanson (Labour – Delyn)
Ms Harriet Harman (Labour – Camberwell and Peckham)
Mr Mark Harper (Conservative – Forest of Dean)
Richard Harrington (Conservative – Watford)
Carolyn Harris (Labour – Swansea East)
Rebecca Harris (Conservative – Castle Point)
Simon Hart (Conservative – Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire)
Mr John Hayes (Conservative – South Holland and The Deepings)
Sue Hayman (Labour – Workington)
Sir Oliver Heald (Conservative – North East Hertfordshire)
John Healey (Labour – Wentworth and Dearne)
James Heappey (Conservative – Wells)
Chris Heaton-Harris (Conservative – Daventry)
Peter Heaton-Jones (Conservative – North Devon)
Gordon Henderson (Conservative – Sittingbourne and Sheppey)
Mr Mark Hendrick (Labour (Co-op) – Preston)
Mr Stephen Hepburn (Labour – Jarrow)
Nick Herbert (Conservative – Arundel and South Downs)
Damian Hinds (Conservative – East Hampshire)
Simon Hoare (Conservative – North Dorset)
Mrs Sharon Hodgson (Labour – Washington and Sunderland West)
Kate Hoey (Labour – Vauxhall)
Kate Hollern (Labour – Blackburn)
George Hollingbery (Conservative – Meon Valley)
Kevin Hollinrake (Conservative – Thirsk and Malton)
Mr Philip Hollobone (Conservative – Kettering)
Adam Holloway (Conservative – Gravesham)
Kelvin Hopkins (Labour – Luton North)
Kris Hopkins (Conservative – Keighley)
Sir Gerald Howarth (Conservative – Aldershot)
John Howell (Conservative – Henley)
Ben Howlett (Conservative – Bath)
Nigel Huddleston (Conservative – Mid Worcestershire)
Mr Jeremy Hunt (Conservative – South West Surrey)
Mr Nick Hurd (Conservative – Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner)
Imran Hussain (Labour – Bradford East)
Mr Stewart Jackson (Conservative – Peterborough)
Margot James (Conservative – Stourbridge)
Dan Jarvis (Labour – Barnsley Central)
Sajid Javid (Conservative – Bromsgrove)
Mr Ranil Jayawardena (Conservative – North East Hampshire)
Mr Bernard Jenkin (Conservative – Harwich and North Essex)
Andrea Jenkyns (Conservative – Morley and Outwood)
Robert Jenrick (Conservative – Newark)
Alan Johnson (Labour – Kingston upon Hull West and Hessle)
Boris Johnson (Conservative – Uxbridge and South Ruislip)
Diana Johnson (Labour – Kingston upon Hull North)
Dr Caroline Johnson (Conservative – Sleaford and North Hykeham)
Gareth Johnson (Conservative – Dartford)
Joseph Johnson (Conservative – Orpington)
Andrew Jones (Conservative – Harrogate and Knaresborough)
Gerald Jones (Labour – Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney)
Graham Jones (Labour – Hyndburn)
Helen Jones (Labour – Warrington North)
Mr David Jones (Conservative – Clwyd West)
Mr Kevan Jones (Labour – North Durham)
Mr Marcus Jones (Conservative – Nuneaton)
Susan Elan Jones (Labour – Clwyd South)
Mike Kane (Labour – Wythenshawe and Sale East)
Daniel Kawczynski (Conservative – Shrewsbury and Atcham)
Barbara Keeley (Labour – Worsley and Eccles South)
Liz Kendall (Labour – Leicester West)
Seema Kennedy (Conservative – South Ribble)
Danny Kinahan (Ulster Unionist Party – South Antrim)
Stephen Kinnock (Labour – Aberavon)
Simon Kirby (Conservative – Brighton, Kemptown)
Julian Knight (Conservative – Solihull)
Sir Greg Knight (Conservative – East Yorkshire)
Kwasi Kwarteng (Conservative – Spelthorne)
Mark Lancaster (Conservative – Milton Keynes North)
Pauline Latham (Conservative – Mid Derbyshire)
Ian Lavery (Labour – Wansbeck)
Andrea Leadsom (Conservative – South Northamptonshire)
Dr Phillip Lee (Conservative – Bracknell)
Jeremy Lefroy (Conservative – Stafford)
Sir Edward Leigh (Conservative – Gainsborough)
Charlotte Leslie (Conservative – Bristol North West)
Sir Oliver Letwin (Conservative – West Dorset)
Mrs Emma Lewell-Buck (Labour – South Shields)
Brandon Lewis (Conservative – Great Yarmouth)
Clive Lewis (Labour – Norwich South)
Dr Julian Lewis (Conservative – New Forest East)
Mr Ivan Lewis (Labour – Bury South)
Mr Ian Liddell-Grainger (Conservative – Bridgwater and West Somerset)
Mr David Lidington (Conservative – Aylesbury)
Mr Peter Lilley (Conservative – Hitchin and Harpenden)
Rebecca Long Bailey (Labour – Salford and Eccles)
Jack Lopresti (Conservative – Filton and Bradley Stoke)
Mr Jonathan Lord (Conservative – Woking)
Tim Loughton (Conservative – East Worthing and Shoreham)
Ian C. Lucas (Labour – Wrexham)
Holly Lynch (Labour – Halifax)
Craig Mackinlay (Conservative – South Thanet)
David Mackintosh (Conservative – Northampton South)
Fiona Mactaggart (Labour – Slough)
Justin Madders (Labour – Ellesmere Port and Neston)
Mr Khalid Mahmood (Labour – Birmingham, Perry Barr)
Shabana Mahmood (Labour – Birmingham, Ladywood)
Mrs Anne Main (Conservative – St Albans)
Mr Alan Mak (Conservative – Havant)
Seema Malhotra (Labour (Co-op) – Feltham and Heston)
Kit Malthouse (Conservative – North West Hampshire)
John Mann (Labour – Bassetlaw)
Scott Mann (Conservative – North Cornwall)
Rob Marris (Labour – Wolverhampton South West)
Gordon Marsden (Labour – Blackpool South)
Christian Matheson (Labour – City of Chester)
Dr Tania Mathias (Conservative – Twickenham)
Mrs Theresa May (Conservative – Maidenhead)
Paul Maynard (Conservative – Blackpool North and Cleveleys)
Steve McCabe (Labour – Birmingham, Selly Oak)
Jason McCartney (Conservative – Colne Valley)
Karl McCartney (Conservative – Lincoln)
Siobhain McDonagh (Labour – Mitcham and Morden)
Andy McDonald (Labour – Middlesbrough)
John McDonnell (Labour – Hayes and Harlington)
Mr Pat McFadden (Labour – Wolverhampton South East)
Conor McGinn (Labour – St Helens North)
Alison McGovern (Labour – Wirral South)
Liz McInnes (Labour – Heywood and Middleton)
Sir Patrick McLoughlin (Conservative – Derbyshire Dales)
Jim McMahon (Labour (Co-op) – Oldham West and Royton)
Stephen McPartland (Conservative – Stevenage)
Sir Alan Meale (Labour – Mansfield)
Mark Menzies (Conservative – Fylde)
Johnny Mercer (Conservative – Plymouth, Moor View)
Huw Merriman (Conservative – Bexhill and Battle)
Stephen Metcalfe (Conservative – South Basildon and East Thurrock)
Edward Miliband (Labour – Doncaster North)
Mrs Maria Miller (Conservative – Basingstoke)
Amanda Milling (Conservative – Cannock Chase)
Nigel Mills (Conservative – Amber Valley)
Anne Milton (Conservative – Guildford)
Mr Andrew Mitchell (Conservative – Sutton Coldfield)
Penny Mordaunt (Conservative – Portsmouth North)
Jessica Morden (Labour – Newport East)
Nicky Morgan (Conservative – Loughborough)
Anne Marie Morris (Conservative – Newton Abbot)
David Morris (Conservative – Morecambe and Lunesdale)
Grahame Morris (Labour – Easington)
James Morris (Conservative – Halesowen and Rowley Regis)
Wendy Morton (Conservative – Aldridge-Brownhills)
David Mowat (Conservative – Warrington South)
David Mundell (Conservative – Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale)
Mrs Sheryll Murray (Conservative – South East Cornwall)
Dr Andrew Murrison (Conservative – South West Wiltshire)
Lisa Nandy (Labour – Wigan)
Robert Neill (Conservative – Bromley and Chislehurst)
Sarah Newton (Conservative – Truro and Falmouth)
Caroline Nokes (Conservative – Romsey and Southampton North)
Jesse Norman (Conservative – Hereford and South Herefordshire)
Mr David Nuttall (Conservative – Bury North)
Dr Matthew Offord (Conservative – Hendon)
Melanie Onn (Labour – Great Grimsby)
Chi Onwurah (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne Central)
Guy Opperman (Conservative – Hexham)
Kate Osamor (Labour (Co-op) – Edmonton)
Mr George Osborne (Conservative – Tatton)
Albert Owen (Labour – Ynys Môn)
Ian Paisley (Democratic Unionist Party – North Antrim)
Neil Parish (Conservative – Tiverton and Honiton)
Priti Patel (Conservative – Witham)
Mr Owen Paterson (Conservative – North Shropshire)
Mark Pawsey (Conservative – Rugby)
Teresa Pearce (Labour – Erith and Thamesmead)
Mike Penning (Conservative – Hemel Hempstead)
Matthew Pennycook (Labour – Greenwich and Woolwich)
John Penrose (Conservative – Weston-super-Mare)
Andrew Percy (Conservative – Brigg and Goole)
Toby Perkins (Labour – Chesterfield)
Claire Perry (Conservative – Devizes)
Jess Phillips (Labour – Birmingham, Yardley)
Bridget Phillipson (Labour – Houghton and Sunderland South)
Chris Philp (Conservative – Croydon South)
Sir Eric Pickles (Conservative – Brentwood and Ongar)
Christopher Pincher (Conservative – Tamworth)
Dr Dan Poulter (Conservative – Central Suffolk and North Ipswich)
Rebecca Pow (Conservative – Taunton Deane)
Lucy Powell (Labour (Co-op) – Manchester Central)
Victoria Prentis (Conservative – Banbury)
Mr Mark Prisk (Conservative – Hertford and Stortford)
Mark Pritchard (Conservative – The Wrekin)
Tom Pursglove (Conservative – Corby)
Jeremy Quin (Conservative – Horsham)
Will Quince (Conservative – Colchester)
Yasmin Qureshi (Labour – Bolton South East)
Dominic Raab (Conservative – Esher and Walton)
Angela Rayner (Labour – Ashton-under-Lyne)
John Redwood (Conservative – Wokingham)
Mr Steve Reed (Labour (Co-op) – Croydon North)
Christina Rees (Labour (Co-op) – Neath)
Mr Jacob Rees-Mogg (Conservative – North East Somerset)
Rachel Reeves (Labour – Leeds West)
Emma Reynolds (Labour – Wolverhampton North East)
Jonathan Reynolds (Labour (Co-op) – Stalybridge and Hyde)
Marie Rimmer (Labour – St Helens South and Whiston)
Mr Laurence Robertson (Conservative – Tewkesbury)
Gavin Robinson (Democratic Unionist Party – Belfast East)
Mary Robinson (Conservative – Cheadle)
Mr Geoffrey Robinson (Labour – Coventry North West)
Andrew Rosindell (Conservative – Romford)
Steve Rotheram (Labour – Liverpool, Walton)
Amber Rudd (Conservative – Hastings and Rye)
David Rutley (Conservative – Macclesfield)
Joan Ryan (Labour – Enfield North)
Antoinette Sandbach (Conservative – Eddisbury)
Paul Scully (Conservative – Sutton and Cheam)
Andrew Selous (Conservative – South West Bedfordshire)
Naz Shah (Labour – Bradford West)
Jim Shannon (Democratic Unionist Party – Strangford)
Grant Shapps (Conservative – Welwyn Hatfield)
Alok Sharma (Conservative – Reading West)
Mr Barry Sheerman (Labour (Co-op) – Huddersfield)
Alec Shelbrooke (Conservative – Elmet and Rothwell)
Paula Sherriff (Labour – Dewsbury)
David Simpson (Democratic Unionist Party – Upper Bann)
Mr Keith Simpson (Conservative – Broadland)
Chris Skidmore (Conservative – Kingswood)
Mr Dennis Skinner (Labour – Bolsover)
Ruth Smeeth (Labour – Stoke-on-Trent North)
Cat Smith (Labour – Lancaster and Fleetwood)
Chloe Smith (Conservative – Norwich North)
Henry Smith (Conservative – Crawley)
Julian Smith (Conservative – Skipton and Ripon)
Mr Andrew Smith (Labour – Oxford East)
Nick Smith (Labour – Blaenau Gwent)
Royston Smith (Conservative – Southampton, Itchen)
Karin Smyth (Labour – Bristol South)
Sir Nicholas Soames (Conservative – Mid Sussex)
Amanda Solloway (Conservative – Derby North)
Anna Soubry (Conservative – Broxtowe)
John Spellar (Labour – Warley)
Dame Caroline Spelman (Conservative – Meriden)
Mark Spencer (Conservative – Sherwood)
Keir Starmer (Labour – Holborn and St Pancras)
Andrew Stephenson (Conservative – Pendle)
John Stevenson (Conservative – Carlisle)
Bob Stewart (Conservative – Beckenham)
Iain Stewart (Conservative – Milton Keynes South)
Rory Stewart (Conservative – Penrith and The Border)
Mr Gary Streeter (Conservative – South West Devon)
Wes Streeting (Labour – Ilford North)
Mel Stride (Conservative – Central Devon)
Graham Stringer (Labour – Blackley and Broughton)
Graham Stuart (Conservative – Beverley and Holderness)
Ms Gisela Stuart (Labour – Birmingham, Edgbaston)
Julian Sturdy (Conservative – York Outer)
Rishi Sunak (Conservative – Richmond (Yorks))
Sir Desmond Swayne (Conservative – New Forest West)
Sir Hugo Swire (Conservative – East Devon)
Mr Robert Syms (Conservative – Poole)
Mark Tami (Labour – Alyn and Deeside)
Derek Thomas (Conservative – St Ives)
Gareth Thomas (Labour (Co-op) – Harrow West)
Nick Thomas-Symonds (Labour – Torfaen)
Emily Thornberry (Labour – Islington South and Finsbury)
Maggie Throup (Conservative – Erewash)
Edward Timpson (Conservative – Crewe and Nantwich)
Kelly Tolhurst (Conservative – Rochester and Strood)
Justin Tomlinson (Conservative – North Swindon)
Michael Tomlinson (Conservative – Mid Dorset and North Poole)
Craig Tracey (Conservative – North Warwickshire)
David Tredinnick (Conservative – Bosworth)
Mrs Anne-Marie Trevelyan (Conservative – Berwick-upon-Tweed)
Jon Trickett (Labour – Hemsworth)
Elizabeth Truss (Conservative – South West Norfolk)
Tom Tugendhat (Conservative – Tonbridge and Malling)
Anna Turley (Labour (Co-op) – Redcar)
Karl Turner (Labour – Kingston upon Hull East)
Mr Andrew Turner (Conservative – Isle of Wight)
Derek Twigg (Labour – Halton)
Stephen Twigg (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, West Derby)
Mr Andrew Tyrie (Conservative – Chichester)
Mr Chuka Umunna (Labour – Streatham)
Mr Edward Vaizey (Conservative – Wantage)
Mr Shailesh Vara (Conservative – North West Cambridgeshire)
Keith Vaz (Labour – Leicester East)
Valerie Vaz (Labour – Walsall South)
Martin Vickers (Conservative – Cleethorpes)
Mrs Theresa Villiers (Conservative – Chipping Barnet)
Mr Charles Walker (Conservative – Broxbourne)
Mr Robin Walker (Conservative – Worcester)
Mr Ben Wallace (Conservative – Wyre and Preston North)
David Warburton (Conservative – Somerton and Frome)
Matt Warman (Conservative – Boston and Skegness)
Dame Angela Watkinson (Conservative – Hornchurch and Upminster)
Tom Watson (Labour – West Bromwich East)
James Wharton (Conservative – Stockton South)
Helen Whately (Conservative – Faversham and Mid Kent)
Heather Wheeler (Conservative – South Derbyshire)
Chris White (Conservative – Warwick and Leamington)
Craig Whittaker (Conservative – Calder Valley)
Mr John Whittingdale (Conservative – Maldon)
Bill Wiggin (Conservative – North Herefordshire)
Craig Williams (Conservative – Cardiff North)
Gavin Williamson (Conservative – South Staffordshire)
Mr Rob Wilson (Conservative – Reading East)
Phil Wilson (Labour – Sedgefield)
Sammy Wilson (Democratic Unionist Party – East Antrim)
Mr David Winnick (Labour – Walsall North)
Dame Rosie Winterton (Labour – Doncaster Central)
Dr Sarah Wollaston (Conservative – Totnes)
John Woodcock (Labour (Co-op) – Barrow and Furness)
William Wragg (Conservative – Hazel Grove)
Jeremy Wright (Conservative – Kenilworth and Southam)
Mr Iain Wright (Labour – Hartlepool)
Nadhim Zahawi (Conservative – Stratford-on-Avon)
NO:
Ms Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh (Scottish National Party – Ochil and South Perthshire)
Heidi Alexander (Labour – Lewisham East)
Rushanara Ali (Labour – Bethnal Green and Bow)
Mr Graham Allen (Labour – Nottingham North)
Dr Rosena Allin-Khan (Labour – Tooting)
Richard Arkless (Scottish National Party – Dumfries and Galloway)
Hannah Bardell (Scottish National Party – Livingston)
Luciana Berger (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, Wavertree)
Mhairi Black (Scottish National Party – Paisley and Renfrewshire South)
Ian Blackford (Scottish National Party – Ross, Skye and Lochaber)
Kirsty Blackman (Scottish National Party – Aberdeen North)
Philip Boswell (Scottish National Party – Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill)
Mr Ben Bradshaw (Labour – Exeter)
Tom Brake (Liberal Democrat – Carshalton and Wallington)
Kevin Brennan (Labour – Cardiff West)
Deidre Brock (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh North and Leith)
Alan Brown (Scottish National Party – Kilmarnock and Loudoun)
Lyn Brown (Labour – West Ham)
Chris Bryant (Labour – Rhondda)
Ms Karen Buck (Labour – Westminster North)
Dawn Butler (Labour – Brent Central)
Ruth Cadbury (Labour – Brentford and Isleworth)
Dr Lisa Cameron (Scottish National Party – East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow)
Mr Alistair Carmichael (Liberal Democrat – Orkney and Shetland)
Douglas Chapman (Scottish National Party – Dunfermline and West Fife)
Joanna Cherry (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh South West)
Mr Kenneth Clarke (Conservative – Rushcliffe)
Mr Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat – Sheffield, Hallam)
Ann Clwyd (Labour – Cynon Valley)
Ann Coffey (Labour – Stockport)
Ronnie Cowan (Scottish National Party – Inverclyde)
Neil Coyle (Labour – Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
Angela Crawley (Scottish National Party – Lanark and Hamilton East)
Mary Creagh (Labour – Wakefield)
Stella Creasy (Labour (Co-op) – Walthamstow)
Martyn Day (Scottish National Party – Linlithgow and East Falkirk)
Thangam Debbonaire (Labour – Bristol West)
Martin Docherty-Hughes (Scottish National Party – West Dunbartonshire)
Stuart Blair Donaldson (Scottish National Party – West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine)
Stephen Doughty (Labour (Co-op) – Cardiff South and Penarth)
Jim Dowd (Labour – Lewisham West and Penge)
Mark Durkan (Social Democratic & Labour Party – Foyle)
Maria Eagle (Labour – Garston and Halewood)
Mrs Louise Ellman (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, Riverside)
Paul Farrelly (Labour – Newcastle-under-Lyme)
Tim Farron (Liberal Democrat – Westmorland and Lonsdale)
Marion Fellows (Scottish National Party – Motherwell and Wishaw)
Margaret Ferrier (Scottish National Party – Rutherglen and Hamilton West)
Vicky Foxcroft (Labour – Lewisham, Deptford)
Mike Gapes (Labour (Co-op) – Ilford South)
Stephen Gethins (Scottish National Party – North East Fife)
Patricia Gibson (Scottish National Party – North Ayrshire and Arran)
Patrick Grady (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North)
Peter Grant (Scottish National Party – Glenrothes)
Neil Gray (Scottish National Party – Airdrie and Shotts)
Lilian Greenwood (Labour – Nottingham South)
Helen Hayes (Labour – Dulwich and West Norwood)
Drew Hendry (Scottish National Party – Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey)
Lady Hermon (Independent – North Down)
Meg Hillier (Labour (Co-op) – Hackney South and Shoreditch)
Stewart Hosie (Scottish National Party – Dundee East)
Dr Rupa Huq (Labour – Ealing Central and Acton)
George Kerevan (Scottish National Party – East Lothian)
Calum Kerr (Scottish National Party – Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk)
Peter Kyle (Labour – Hove)
Mr David Lammy (Labour – Tottenham)
Chris Law (Scottish National Party – Dundee West)
Caroline Lucas (Green Party – Brighton, Pavilion)
Angus Brendan MacNeil (Scottish National Party – Na h-Eileanan an Iar)
Rachael Maskell (Labour (Co-op) – York Central)
John Mc Nally (Scottish National Party – Falkirk)
Kerry McCarthy (Labour – Bristol East)
Stewart Malcolm McDonald (Scottish National Party – Glasgow South)
Stuart C. McDonald (Scottish National Party – Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East)
Dr Alasdair McDonnell (Social Democratic & Labour Party – Belfast South)
Natalie McGarry (Independent – Glasgow East)
Catherine McKinnell (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne North)
Anne McLaughlin (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North East)
Carol Monaghan (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North West)
Dr Paul Monaghan (Scottish National Party – Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross)
Mrs Madeleine Moon (Labour – Bridgend)
Roger Mullin (Scottish National Party – Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath)
Ian Murray (Labour – Edinburgh South)
Gavin Newlands (Scottish National Party – Paisley and Renfrewshire North)
John Nicolson (Scottish National Party – East Dunbartonshire)
Brendan O’Hara (Scottish National Party – Argyll and Bute)
Sarah Olney (Liberal Democrat – Richmond Park)
Kirsten Oswald (Scottish National Party – East Renfrewshire)
Steven Paterson (Scottish National Party – Stirling)
Stephen Pound (Labour – Ealing North)
John Pugh (Liberal Democrat – Southport)
Ms Margaret Ritchie (Social Democratic & Labour Party – South Down)
Angus Robertson (Scottish National Party – Moray)
Alex Salmond (Scottish National Party – Gordon)
Liz Saville Roberts (Plaid Cymru – Dwyfor Meirionnydd)
Mr Virendra Sharma (Labour – Ealing, Southall)
Tommy Sheppard (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh East)
Tulip Siddiq (Labour – Hampstead and Kilburn)
Andy Slaughter (Labour – Hammersmith)
Jeff Smith (Labour – Manchester, Withington)
Owen Smith (Labour – Pontypridd)
Chris Stephens (Scottish National Party – Glasgow South West)
Jo Stevens (Labour – Cardiff Central)
Alison Thewliss (Scottish National Party – Glasgow Central)
Michelle Thomson (Independent – Edinburgh West)
Owen Thompson (Scottish National Party – Midlothian)
Stephen Timms (Labour – East Ham)
Mike Weir (Scottish National Party – Angus)
Catherine West (Labour – Hornsey and Wood Green)
Dr Eilidh Whiteford (Scottish National Party – Banff and Buchan)
Dr Alan Whitehead (Labour – Southampton, Test)
Dr Philippa Whitford (Scottish National Party – Central Ayrshire)
Hywel Williams (Plaid Cymru – Arfon)
Mr Mark Williams (Liberal Democrat – Ceredigion)
Pete Wishart (Scottish National Party – Perth and North Perthshire)
Daniel Zeichner (Labour – Cambridge)
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