Al Pinkerton
MP for Surrey Heath
Lib Dem
Questions Asked by This MP
Parliamentary questions and government responses.
Response classifications show how directly each question was answered.
My Surrey Heath constituent Christopher was discharged from the RAF in 1966 solely for being gay, but—despite the Government committing to restoring the medals and the berets—his case has been dismissed out of hand, with only a letter that contained the tracked changes from the template. Can I ask the Prime Minister to take a personal interest in this case to ensure that it is resolved swiftly?
Context
A constituent was dishonorably discharged from the RAF in 1966 for being gay. The case has been dismissed.
Keir Starmer
I will do everything that I can to ensure that that happens, which is absolutely what should happen. This was an absolute scandal—the gays in the military ban—and it is absolutely right that it was overturned, but we must follow through on that.
Session: PMQs 2026-02-11
View Full Session -->
Can the Minister indicate what proportion of a typical business energy bill is driven by wholesale costs, network charges and policy costs?
Context
Small and large businesses in Surrey Heath face high operating costs due to energy prices.
Chris McDonald
UK gas costs are competitive with Europe after policy costs, but we aim to remove businesses from relying on fossil fuel market fluctuations through renewable energy investment. The clean power mission aims to provide low-cost and secure home-grown energy.
Session: Businesses Cost of Energy 2026-02-10
View All Questions -->
Why has the opportunity for Chagossians to have a referendum been stripped from today’s discussions on the Chagos Bill, when the same rights are considered fundamental for Greenlanders?
Context
In answer to an earlier question, the Foreign Secretary stated that Greenland's future should be decided by Greenlanders and Danes. The Chagos Islands are currently under discussion in a bill.
Stephen Doughty
We will be discussing these issues this afternoon and there will be ample time to discuss amendments. We have engaged extensively with Chagossian communities.
Session: Topical Questions 2026-01-20
View All Questions -->
May I take the Minister back to the circumstances of constituents who are living in retirement communities? I have a community of constituents who live at Mytchett Heath, owned by Cognatum Estates. They are experiencing very high service charges, and I have written to the Minister about that before. They are made nervous by talk of delay. They are often on a fixed income with fixed-income pensions. They are getting older, and they want to enjoy their retirement in peace. Can the Minister offer them any reassurance today?
Context
Residents of a retirement community called Mytchett Heath are experiencing high service charges and are concerned about the delay in leasehold reforms. Dr Pinkerton has previously written to the Minister regarding this issue.
Matthew Pennycook (The Minister for Housing and Planning)
The hon. Gentleman has written to me about that issue and he has, if I may politely say, generated a huge number of questions on it. We have met about it on one occasion, I think, and I am more than happy to have another conversation with him to try to get to the root of his concerns.
Session: Leasehold Reform 2026-01-12
View All Questions -->
With growing Chinese espionage, Russian aggression on the European continent and a capricious President in the United States, it is more important than ever that we deepen our security co-operation with our European allies. Can I ask the Minister explicitly whether he recognises, as I do, that the UK’s deepest possible participation in the EU’s Security Action for Europe scheme is vital to common European security? What have he and the Government done to try to prompt the restart of the negotiations with the European Union that sadly broke down last week?
Context
With increasing concerns about Chinese espionage, Russian aggression in Europe, and US foreign policy instability, the UK needs to deepen its security co-operation with European allies.
Stephen Doughty
Our security and defence partnership is broad. The UK entered discussions with the EU on the SAFE scheme in good faith, recognising mutual strategic interest and continued commitment. We were clear with the EU that we were prepared to make a fair financial contribution that reflects the potential for a mutually beneficial relationship and value for the taxpayer. However, we have always said that we will not sign deals unless they are genuinely in the national interest, and in this case the deal on offer from the EU did not pass that test. But I am absolutely confident that our wider defence and industrial relationships are not affected. In fact, our deal with Norway on frigates, our £8 billion agreement with Turkey for the purchase of 20 Typhoon jets, and our agreement with Germany on joint export campaigns in relation to Boxer armoured vehicles all very much represent the very best of European defence industrial co-operation.
Session: UK-EU Relations 2025-12-02
View All Questions -->
What steps is the Minister taking to ensure that homes in Surrey Heath insulated under those schemes are remediated in a timely and trustworthy manner, and what assessment has he made of the role that home insulation will play in our wider efforts to reduce bills but also protect climate and nature?
Context
The National Audit Office reported that homes insulated under previous government schemes are at risk of damp and mould unless remediated.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero (Martin McCluskey)
All those affected by the ECO4 situation will receive letters offering them a free audit, many have already received these letters. I encourage hon Members across the House to make sure that their constituents are taking up this offer as it is the gateway to remediation. The future system is being designed on principles ensuring we do not get into a situation like this ever again.
Session: Reducing Energy Bills 2025-11-18
View All Questions -->
Will the Minister commit today to implementing the Domestic Abuse Commissioner's recent recommendations to better protect children at risk?
Context
A Surrey Heath resident is enduring the family court process following domestic abuse, and has raised concerns about child safety during court-ordered contact.
Alex Davies-Jones
This Government are clear that child safety during court-ordered contact is vital. We are improving multi-agency working to support early identification of risk and enable referral to specialist domestic abuse support. We are carefully considering the Domestic Abuse Commissioner's report, and we will publish our response by the end of this year.
Session: Topical Questions 2025-11-11
View All Questions -->
May I begin by associating myself and my party with the sentiments reflected by the Secretary of State about the terrible events in Huntingdon at the weekend? The Secretary of State’s ambition to reverse the outflows from our armed forces is absolutely right, particularly considering the damage the last Government did to our military, but it is far from clear that the Government are doing enough to achieve the necessary changes. There continue to be more service personnel leaving the Army year on year than are joining. In order to strengthen our defence, we need to give more people better incentives to join the armed forces. Will the Minister consider accelerating recruitment properly and tackling outflow rates by backing Liberal Democrat proposals for a £10,000 signing bonus to attract new recruits?
Context
Al Pinkerton thanked the Secretary of State for his sentiments regarding recent events in Huntingdon. He expressed concern about the outflow rates from the armed forces and proposed a £10,000 signing bonus to attract new recruits.
The Minister for Veterans and People (Louise Sandher-Jones)
In addition to the measures I have outlined to speed up recruitment, we are looking at expanding novel ways of entry into the armed forces, such as direct entry in the cyber stream. We are hugely focused on retention, and this is a very personal mission for me, having left the forces in 2020 and knowing what measures might have helped retain me in service for longer. We are utterly dedicated to addressing the reasons that people give for leaving, not least with our multibillion-pound investment into fixing forces housing.
Session: Army Recruitment 2025-11-03
View All Questions -->
Like the Minister, I had the pleasure of being in Gibraltar in the summer at the invitation of the Government, and I draw the House’s attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests. I saw for myself the vital necessity of this deal to secure the economy and the social fabric of Gibraltar and, in particular, the movement of 15,000 people across the Spain-Gibraltar frontier every day. Can the Minister commit himself to bringing the treaty to the House at the first possible opportunity, so that the details can be given the fullest possible scrutiny?
Context
The UK-EU agreement in June aims to secure the economy and social fabric of Gibraltar, addressing daily border crossings for 15,000 people.
Stephen Doughty (Minister of State, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office)
Absolutely. The hon. Gentleman mentioned the challenges that have existed at the border. I have been stuck in those queues, Mr Speaker, and you may have been as well. This deal will mean an end to that, and a new, positive relationship. Indeed, much will be positive for the economy and for all the people of Gibraltar. We will bring the treaty to the House as soon as possible—as soon as it is finalised—and it will go through the normal processes. Parliament will, of course, be able to debate its terms if it wishes to do so.
Session: Gibraltar UK-EU Agreement 2025-10-28
View All Questions -->
The FSB report highlights continuing disruption for small and medium-sized enterprises in Northern Ireland despite dual market access through the Windsor framework. The Government's failure to effectively communicate these benefits has led to increased scepticism among businesses. Can the Secretary of State identify concrete benefits that this dual market access is currently providing to Northern Ireland firms? How does he respond to growing criticism from UK companies burdened by bureaucratic red tape and uncertainty?
Context
The Federation of Small Businesses has warned that Northern Ireland businesses face ongoing disruption under the Windsor framework, with inadequate communication from the Government on its supposed advantages. There is growing criticism from firms across the UK due to red tape and uncertainty.
Hilary Benn
The Secretary of State acknowledges the FSB report and notes that he regularly speaks with companies in Northern Ireland who report experiencing benefits from dual market access. He emphasises the responsibility to highlight these opportunities, as businesses tend to seize such advantages when they see them. However, he did not provide specific examples or evidence of concrete benefits.
Session: EU Trade Agreement Economic Impact 2025-07-02
View All Questions -->
I am grateful to the Secretary of State for his response. Now that the Prime Minister has made a cast-iron commitment to meet NATO’s 5% defence spending target, will the Secretary of State make a similarly welcome commitment to cross-party talks to establish a credible and durable path towards meeting that goal ahead of NATO’s 2029 capability review?
Context
Following last week's NATO summit in The Hague, where member nations agreed to increase defence spending targets and capability pledges.
The Secretary of State for Defence (John Healey)
I welcome the Liberal Democrats’ support for the commitment we have made at NATO; the Leader of the Opposition was unable to offer that support at Prime Minister’s questions last week. If the hon. Gentleman has ideas about how we should fund that commitment in the next Parliament, I would be perfectly happy to hear them.
Session: Topical Questions 2025-06-30
View All Questions -->
An increasing number of pensioners are reaching the end of their mortgages with outstanding borrowing and finding themselves unable to meet later-life lending criteria, and this is likely to become even more prevalent in years to come as house price rises continue to outstrip earnings. What discussions is the Minister having with lenders and the mortgage industry about expanding those criteria and giving hard-working pensioners who might otherwise be forced to seek council support the opportunity to remain in their own homes?
Context
An increasing number of pensioners are reaching the end of their mortgages with outstanding borrowing and finding themselves unable to meet later-life lending criteria, a trend likely to increase due to rising house prices.
Emma Reynolds (Economic Secretary to the Treasury)
I thank the hon. Gentleman for raising this important issue. I discuss mortgages with lenders and, indeed, with the Financial Conduct Authority on a weekly basis, and I will ensure that I pass on his comments.
Session: Lifetime Mortgages Support for Older People 2025-05-20
View All Questions -->
What assessment has the Northern Ireland Office made of the impact of those tax rises on small and medium-sized enterprises? What practical discussions is the Secretary of State having with the Northern Ireland Executive to support SMEs, which are the future of Northern Ireland’s growth?
Context
Belfast Chamber, representing 600 businesses, warned that many Northern Irish businesses are being forced to freeze growth plans, halt recruitment, and cut jobs due to rising costs from national insurance contributions.
The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Hilary Benn)
Of course the increase in employer’s national insurance will be difficult for some firms—that is clearly the case—but, as I said, the North Ireland economy is growing faster than the rest of the United Kingdom and has low unemployment. The rest of today’s questions time has highlighted the huge areas of potential that the Northern Ireland economy has to continue to grow and create new jobs and businesses.
Session: Autumn Budget 2024 2025-04-02
View All Questions -->
The hon. Gentleman noted his recent visit to the 77th Brigade and learned about their work tackling Russian disinformation in eastern Europe. Following the US announcement of ceasing offensive cyber-operations against Russia, Dr Pinkerton raised concerns over UK capabilities to address this threat, particularly for the 77th Brigade and other agencies.
Context
Following a visit to the 77th Brigade as part of the armed forces parliamentary scheme, Dr Pinkerton is concerned about the growing pressure on UK capabilities after the U.S. President's decision to cease American offensive cyber-operations.
The Minister for the Armed Forces (Luke Pollard)
UK defence networks face a range of state threats from malign actors. The Government are expanding provision and range of capabilities, including creating a new direct entry cyber-pathway to recruit people into our cyber-forces. The hon. Gentleman will understand that I cannot talk about ongoing operations, but we are investing more in this area.
Session: US Cyber-operations against Russia 2025-03-24
View All Questions -->
Hon. Members across the House have raised concerns about the now-expelled fire safety engineer Adam Kiziak, following investigations into alleged signature fraud, including in my constituency of Surrey Heath. From what I understand, a second fire engineer, Adair Lewis, has now disowned a further 20 Tri Fire EWS1 forms that he alleges falsely bear his signature. Will the Secretary of State join me in requesting an urgent police investigation into these fraud allegations? Does she agree that her Department must urgently reassess buildings that have been surveyed by Tri Fire to protect residents from further uncertainty and market disruption?
Context
The MP raises concerns about the now-expelled fire safety engineer Adam Kiziak, alleging signature fraud. A second fire engineer, Adair Lewis, has also disowned 20 Tri Fire EWS1 forms that he alleges falsely bear his signature.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government (Alex Norris)
I stress that the EWS1 form is an industry form rather than a fire safety one. If those buildings are in a Government scheme, any fire risk assessment will have been quality assured. If they are in the developer contract, those schemes have been audited as well, which should give cover. I would not want to speak about individual cases at the Dispatch Box. We believe that the quality of those assessments must be sacrosanct and they must be done in good faith. That is why, as part of our response to the Grenfell inquiry, we have made significant commitments on standards in this area.
Session: Building Safety Documentation 2025-03-03
View All Questions -->
Pharmacies in Northern Ireland are in a declared state of crisis. Pharmacists are having to dip into their savings just to stay afloat, and they are cutting staff numbers and opening hours. The National Pharmacy Association has warned that its members may have to further cut opening hours, halt home deliveries and reduce local support services. What conversations has the Secretary of State had with the Northern Ireland Executive to safeguard access to crucial pharmacy services across rural and urban regions? Does he agree that an urgent impact assessment on pharmacy underfunding is required to highlight the scale of the crisis?
Context
Pharmacies across Northern Ireland are facing financial difficulties, threatening reduced opening hours and service reductions.
Hilary Benn
That issue did not figure in the discussions I had recently with the NI Health Minister, but it will be addressed in future conversations.
Session: Public Services 2025-02-26
View All Questions -->
Last week, the Under-Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs, the hon. Member for Lincoln (Mr Falconer), left open the possibility that the FCDO might revisit the issue of explicit carbon monoxide warnings on FCDO travel advisory pages—a change that we contend would have a cascading effect on the UK travel industry, drive up the use of carbon monoxide alarms and save lives of British travellers overseas. May I encourage the Front-Bench team to pick up this issue in the name of my constituent, Hudson Foley, to ensure that the lives of British travellers overseas are kept safe?
Context
The FCDO may revisit the issue of explicit carbon monoxide warnings on travel advisory pages. The questioner wants to encourage the Front-Bench team to ensure that this change is made in the name of a constituent.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs (Mr Hamish Falconer)
I can confirm that I will be adding information to our dedicated page for independent travellers to highlight the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning globally. I shall be writing to Cathy Foley, who I was moved to meet, and to the hon. Member.
Session: Topical Questions 2025-02-25
View All Questions -->
In 2019, the Wigston review identified that serving personnel from ethnic minority backgrounds are subject to higher levels of harassment and bullying than their white British counterparts. Given the recent success of the Atherton review, which cast light on the structural challenges faced by women in the armed forces, and given that 16% of the British Army workforce comes from ethnic minority groups, does the ministerial team think it might be time to have an Atherton-style review, independent of the MOD, into the challenges faced by ethnic minority groups to ensure and enhance recruitment, retention and promotional opportunities?
Context
The Wigston review identified higher levels of harassment and bullying against ethnic minority serving personnel compared to white British counterparts. The Atherton review recently addressed structural challenges faced by women in the military.
The Minister for Veterans and People (Al Carns)
I thank the hon. Member for his useful comments. We have launched our Raising our Standards programme, which will take standards from where they were and raise them. We will make Defence the most inclusive career and, indeed, the most rewarding for any part of society to join. The Defence Committee will hold us to account on some of that.
Session: Minority Groups in the Armed Forces 2025-02-10
View All Questions -->
Residents of Mytchett Heath report regular withholding of invoices, excessive insurance charges, and significant maintenance costs without rationale. What is the Minister doing to hold not-for-profit companies accountable for these issues?
Context
Residents in a retirement community face high service charges, withheld invoices, and excessive insurance charges.
The Minister for Housing and Planning (Matthew Pennycook)
We intend to implement service charge transparency provisions of the 2024 Act, enabling easier challenges to unreasonable increases. Complaints can be made to the housing ombudsman, and I am willing to hear more about this case.
Session: Leasehold Reform 2025-01-20
View All Questions -->
What conversations have the Secretary of State and Minister had with the Northern Ireland Executive to ensure they have the resources needed for this immediate healthcare crisis?
Context
A&E waiting times exceeding 12 hours, lack of beds leading to treatment in ambulances.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Fleur Anderson)
I have met the Minister for Health, and I have been round and visited many of the healthcare provision services, all of which are feeling pressures at this time as a result of successive Executives not tackling reform and being absent along the way. That is why we set up the Public Service Transformation Board. The Executive face huge challenges, and this Government’s priority is to work with them. The funding is there, the Executive are committed, and they need to work together to deliver change urgently.
Session: Public Services 2025-01-15
View All Questions -->
Across Surrey last year, more than 1,800 children with special educational needs were absent from school for more than a third of the time. Special educational needs co-ordinators are incredibly frustrated that EHCPs are coming back from our local council with the wrong names, describing the wrong conditions and offering the wrong packages of care. Teachers are stretched, headteachers cannot stretch their budgets any further, and one or both parents are having to give up employment to look after their children, yet the leadership of Surrey county council has said that there is not a problem with special educational needs, but that there are parents who are too articulate. Would the Minister please meet me and SENCOs to discuss this very serious situation?
Context
The question focuses on problems with special educational needs co-ordination, including issues with education, health and care plans and the impact on families.
Catherine McKinnell
Following the most recent local area SEND inspection by Ofsted and the Care Quality Commission in September 2023, the Department—working alongside NHS England—continues to track the progress that the Surrey partnership is making against the areas for improvement that were identified, offering support and advice to the local authority. I appreciate the significant concerns that the hon. Gentleman outlines, and we will continue to keep the situation under review.
Session: SEND Pupils Support 2024-12-09
View All Questions -->
What steps her Department is taking to improve support for children with special educational needs and disabilities?
Context
The question addresses the need to improve support for children with special educational needs and disabilities, seeking specifics on steps being taken by the Department.
Catherine McKinnell
The Government's ambition is that all children with special educational needs receive the right support to succeed, where possible in mainstream schools. We will strengthen accountability and improve inclusivity through Ofsted, and we will support professionals to develop their SEND expertise. High needs funding will increase by almost £1 billion in the next spending year.
Session: SEND Pupils Support 2024-12-09
View All Questions -->
Northern Ireland has been systemically underfunded since 2022. The fiscal council estimates an annual shortfall of between £300 million and £400 million, with a reported £559 million overspend from 2022 to 2024. What measures are the Government taking to address Northern Ireland's immediate budgetary pressures, ensure long-term financial stability and equitable funding, and guarantee sustainable public services?
Context
The Northern Ireland fiscal council estimates an annual shortfall of between £300 million and £400 million since 2022, with a reported £559 million overspend from 2022 to 2024.
Hilary Benn
In addition to the £3.3 billion package that followed the restoration of the Executive, the Executive gained £185 million in July when the main estimates were published. In order to avoid having to repay the debt, they have to put their finances on a sustainable path, deliver a balanced budget, and raise the additional £130 million revenue to which they committed when the deal was done. The fiscal council's view is that 124% is the right funding.
Session: Budget Sustainability Plan 2024-10-23
View All Questions -->
The Government have announced a strategic defence review, but the challenges faced by the UK in the mid-21st century are military-related, development-related and diplomacy-related. May I have an assurance that the Foreign Office will have a distinct role to play in the strategic defence review—especially in the light of the conversation that we have just had, which has shown the complexities of the UK's global posture in the 21st century?
Context
The Government have announced a strategic defence review, but there is concern about the complexities of the UK's global posture in the 21st century.
Anneliese Dodds
I am grateful to the hon. Member for his point. Of course, all these issues are strongly related. We are absolutely determined to work with colleagues in Defence, as well as across the whole Government, so that we ensure that we are putting our country's interests first and, above all, protecting our security—the first responsibility of any Government.
Session: Gaza Humanitarian Situation 2024-07-30
View All Questions -->
Other Parliamentary Activity
Debates led and petitions presented.
Driving Test Availability: South-east
26 November 2025
Responding: Simon Lightwood
Main Concerns
['The driving test availability issue in Surrey Heath is persistent with constituents facing a weekly ritual of early morning online queues for slots. Families report a practical and emotional toll, with young people losing confidence and opportunities due to delays. Some face up to one year wait times, affecting their education, training, and employment prospects.']
Specific Asks
['Calls for more funding to support the recruitment of driving examiners with sufficient pay benefits and better leadership at DVSA to address the problem of bots capturing test slots.']
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning: Travel Advice
11 February 2025
Responding: Mr Hamish Falconer
Main Concerns
['The debate addresses the lack of accurate data on carbon monoxide-related deaths overseas, highlighting a case where Hudson Foley died from undetected carbon monoxide levels in Ecuador. The issue involves under-recognition and misdiagnosis of CO poisoning in post-mortem reports. Survivors face long-term health implications such as cognitive impairments.']
Specific Asks
['The Government is urged to increase awareness of the risks of carbon monoxide poisoning among travellers and ensure that all accommodation providers pay attention to CO safety measures.']
Occupied Palestinian Territories Genocide Risk Assessment 2026-02-05
05 February 2026
General Debate
Contributed to this debate
Calls for the UK Government to recognise a serious risk of genocide in Gaza based on overwhelming evidence. Criticises the government's failure to meet its legal obligation under the genocide conventi...
Sudan 2026-02-05
05 February 2026
Ministerial Statement
Contributed to this debate
Local Government Finances Surrey 2026-01-22
22 January 2026
Adjournment Debate
Contributed to this debate
The amount of money that local government authorities have, such as Surrey county council and the new east Surrey and west Surrey unitary councils, has a huge day-to-day impact on residents. It determ...
Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill 2026-01-20
20 January 2026
General Debate
Contributed to this debate
National security must always be the first priority of any Government, especially during uncertain times. The deal secures the vital military asset for future generations, allowing the base to continu...
Arctic Security 2026-01-19
19 January 2026
Ministerial Statement
Contributed to this debate
Iran Protests 2026-01-19
19 January 2026
Urgent Question
Contributed to this debate
Will the Minister confirm the British Government’s response to the Iranian regime’s brutal crackdown on protests? The UK is deeply concerned about reports of protesters being killed in cold blood and ...
Finance (No. 2) Bill 2026-01-13
13 January 2026
General Debate
Contributed to this debate
Nigeria Freedom of Religion or Belief 2026-01-13
13 January 2026
Adjournment Debate
Contributed to this debate
It is a great pleasure to lead this debate on Government support for freedom of religion or belief in Nigeria; I hope that we have some good debate. Recent events have thrown a spotlight on Nigeria in...
Human Rights Abuses Magnitsky Sanctions 2026-01-08
08 January 2026
General Debate
Contributed to this debate
The motion expresses concern over the escalation of human rights abuses and corruption globally, highlighting the inconsistent implementation of Magnitsky sanctions in the UK. It urges for a more robu...
Venezuela 2026-01-05
05 January 2026
Ministerial Statement
Contributed to this debate
Attendance
68.2%
15 of 22 votes
Aye Votes
9
40.9% of votes
No Votes
6
27.3% of votes
Abstentions
7
31.8% of votes
03 Feb 2026
DID NOT VOTE
Universal Credit (Removal of Two Child Limit) Bill: Second Reading
Ayes: 458
Noes: 104
Passed
28 Jan 2026
DID NOT VOTE
Opposition Day: British Indian Ocean Territory
Ayes: 103
Noes: 284
Failed
28 Jan 2026
DID NOT VOTE
Opposition Day: Youth unemployment
Ayes: 91
Noes: 287
Failed
27 Jan 2026
DID NOT VOTE
Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill: Amendment 9
Ayes: 91
Noes: 378
Failed
27 Jan 2026
DID NOT VOTE
Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill: Amendment 1
Ayes: 88
Noes: 310
Failed
27 Jan 2026
DID NOT VOTE
Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill: Amendment 2
Ayes: 61
Noes: 311
Failed
21 Jan 2026
VOTED AYE
National Insurance Contributions (Employer Pensions Contributions) Bill Commi...
Ayes: 195
Noes: 317
Failed
21 Jan 2026
VOTED AYE
The Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Act 2023 (Remedial...
Ayes: 373
Noes: 106
Passed
21 Jan 2026
VOTED NO
National Insurance Contributions (Employer Pensions Contributions) Bill: Thir...
Ayes: 316
Noes: 194
Passed
21 Jan 2026
VOTED AYE
National Insurance Contributions (Employer Pensions Contributions) Bill Commi...
Ayes: 191
Noes: 326
Failed
20 Jan 2026
VOTED NO
Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill: motion to...
Ayes: 347
Noes: 184
Passed
20 Jan 2026
DID NOT VOTE
Sentencing Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 7
Ayes: 319
Noes: 127
Passed
20 Jan 2026
VOTED NO
Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill: motion to...
Ayes: 344
Noes: 182
Passed
20 Jan 2026
VOTED NO
Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill: motion to...
Ayes: 347
Noes: 185
Passed
13 Jan 2026
VOTED NO
Finance (No. 2) Bill Committee: Clause 63 Stand part
Ayes: 348
Noes: 167
Passed
13 Jan 2026
VOTED AYE
Finance (No. 2) Bill Committee: New Clause 26
Ayes: 172
Noes: 334
Failed
13 Jan 2026
VOTED AYE
Finance (No. 2) Bill Committee: New Clause 9
Ayes: 181
Noes: 335
Failed
13 Jan 2026
VOTED NO
Finance (No. 2) Bill Committee: Clause 86 stand part
Ayes: 344
Noes: 173
Passed
13 Jan 2026
VOTED AYE
Finance (No. 2) Bill Committee: New Clause 25
Ayes: 187
Noes: 351
Failed
13 Jan 2026
VOTED AYE
Finance (No. 2) Bill Committee: New Clause 24
Ayes: 184
Noes: 331
Failed
12 Jan 2026
VOTED AYE
Finance (No. 2) Bill Committee: New Clause 7
Ayes: 188
Noes: 341
Failed
12 Jan 2026
VOTED AYE
Finance (No. 2) Bill Committee: Amendment 3
Ayes: 185
Noes: 344
Failed
1
PMQs Asked
23
Ministerial Questions Asked
64
House of Commons Debates Involved
2
Westminster Hall Debates Led
0
Statements / Bills
0
Petitions Presented
22
Voting Record
Activity Compared to Peers
How does this MP's parliamentary activity compare to the national average across 649 MPs?
Prime Minister's Questions
-48% below average
This MP:
1
Average:
1.9
Ministerial Questions
+190% above average
This MP:
23
Average:
7.9
Westminster Hall Debates Led
+30% above average
This MP:
2
Average:
1.5
Commons Chamber Debates
+2606% above average
This MP:
64
Average:
2.4
Statements / Bills Proposed
-100% below average
This MP:
0
Average:
5.1
Petitions Presented
-100% below average
This MP:
0
Average:
2.2
Voting Attendance Rate (%)
-10% below average
This MP:
68.2
Average:
75.6
Important Context
- - Ministers answer questions rather than asking them, so have different activity patterns
- - Activity quantity doesn't measure quality or effectiveness of representation
- - Some MPs focus more on constituency work than parliamentary questions
- - Newly elected MPs will have less parliamentary history
About This Page
This page tracks Al Pinkerton's parliamentary activity including questions asked, debates (Commons Chamber + Westminster Hall), statements/bills, and petitions presented.