Committee stage
A Bill to make provision extending the right to vote to 16 and 17 year olds; to make provision about the registration of voters; to make provision about the administration and conduct of elections, re
The Representation of the People Bill is a Government Bill introduced on 12 February 2026 that lowers the UK voting age to 16, moves towards automated voter registration, tightens rules on political donations (including a 'know your donor' duty, a UK-connection test for corporate donors and stronger Electoral Commission enforcement), expands accepted voter ID, introduces a new electoral sanction for intimidation of candidates and election staff, and repeals the Government's power to issue a strategy and policy statement to the Electoral Commission.
If enacted as drafted the Bill represents the largest single change to the UK franchise since 1969 and the most significant overhaul of political finance rules since the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000, with material consequences for party fundraising, electoral administration in MHCLG/Electoral Commission, and candidate safety.
The Bill completed Public Bill Committee on 16 April 2026 and was reprinted as Bill 418 as amended in Committee on 27 April 2026; Report stage in the Commons is now imminent, with notices of amendments running daily from 20-30 April 2026.
The Bill as introduced on 12 February 2026, extending the franchise to 16-17 year olds, providing for automated registration pilots, restructuring political donation rules and Electoral Commission enforcement, and introducing protections for candidates and election staff.
The Bill as reprinted on 27 April 2026 after Public Bill Committee, incorporating amendments agreed across nine sittings between 18 March and 16 April 2026.
Government's pre-Bill strategy that announced the package now legislated for, including votes at 16, automated registration, digital imprints, and stronger donor checks.
Secretary of State Steve Reed's Second Reading speech setting out the Bill's four objectives — extending the franchise, protecting participants, future-proofing administration, and defending against foreign interference.
Formal introduction of the Bill in the Commons.
Clause-by-clause explanation of the Bill's effect on the 1983, 1985, 2000, 2006 and 2022 Acts.
Government policy summary on lowering the voting age, including the new duty on local authorities and HSC trusts in Northern Ireland to support looked-after children to register.
MHCLG's set of detailed policy summaries explaining individual measures including donations, digital imprints, Electoral Commission reform and intimidation offences.
House of Commons Library briefing paper on the Bill's proposals, statutory hooks and policy context — the standard reference document for Members preparing for Report stage.
ERS submission on automated registration, voter ID and donations regime.
Submission on the UK-connection test for corporate donors, warning that the 'revenue' test is gameable and proposing a profit-based threshold.
Submission on foreign interference, illicit finance routes and the limits of the Bill's 'know your donor' framework.
Joint civil society submission supporting franchise extension, automated registration and donations transparency.
Submission on candidate safety, intimidation offences and removal of home addresses from nomination papers.
EMB Scotland submission on devolved interaction, registration data flows and 16-17 year old registration mechanics.
AEA's view on deliverability of automated registration and the pilots framework.
Cross-House committee recommendation that the Bill be amended to address AI-generated election content and platform abuse — directly relevant to the digital imprints and intimidation clauses.
Committee text welcoming the Government's intention to legislate, used by stakeholders to argue for stronger 'know your donor' rules and the Rycroft review's findings being incorporated at Report stage.
Department's published impact assessment supporting the Bill, including the costed estimates referenced repeatedly in PQs during Committee.
Government's published analysis of the Bill's compatibility with the European Convention on Human Rights.
MHCLG memorandum to the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee on the Bill's secondary legislation powers, including the automated registration pilot framework.
Formal call generating the 50+ written submissions cited in PBC sittings.
At the 2024 general election, Labour's election manifesto committed to strengthening our democracy and upholding the integrity of elections... encouraging participation in our democracy, giving 16 and 17-year-olds the right to vote and improving voter registration, while fulfilling our pledge to strengthen protections against foreign interference, as well as to introduce rules around donations.
Why linked: Bill explicitly implements the 2024 Labour manifesto promise on franchise, registration and donations.
Why linked: Government strategy paper published by then-Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner setting out the policy package the Bill now legislates for, including votes at 16, automated registration, digital imprints, foreign-interference safeguards and candidate protection.
A Bill to make provision extending the right to vote to 16 and 17 year olds; to make provision about the registration of voters; to make provision about the administration and conduct of elections, re
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Representation of the People Act 1983
Why linked: MHCLG's published policy summaries for the Bill — directly operationalising and essential reading.
These policy summaries provide more information about the Representation of the People Bill, which was introduced in the House of Commons on 12 February 2026.
Why linked: Filled the "Government consultation responses on lowering the voting age or electoral reform" gap via web research
In response to: Representation of the People Bill: Policy summaries
Second Reading Madam Deputy Speaker (Caroline Nokes): The reasoned amendment in the name of the official Opposition has been selected. 17:51:00 The Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government (Steve Reed): I beg to move, That the Bill …
A Bill to make provision extending the right to vote to 16 and 17 year olds; to make provision about the registration of voters; to make provision about the administration and conduct of elections, re
A Bill to make provision extending the right to vote to 16 and 17 year olds; to make provision about the registration of voters; to make provision about the administration and conduct of elections, re
Why linked: Welsh Government consultation on the parallel 1983 Act security expenses Order — adjacent context on candidate-protection statutory machinery.
We want your views on the draft Local Elections (Wales) (Amendment) Rules 2026 and the draft Representation of the People Act 1983 (Security Expenses Exclusion) (Amendment) (Wales) Order 2026.
Why linked: Filled the "Government consultation responses on lowering the voting age or electoral reform" gap via web research
In response to: Restoring trust in our democracy: Our strategy for modern and secure elections
Why linked: Filled the "Electoral Commission guidance and codes of practice on campaign finance and conduct" gap via web research
In response to: Electoral Commission strategy and policy statement
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Elections Act 2022
These Regulations are the eleventh commencement regulations made under the Elections Act 2022 (c. 37) (“the 2022 Act”), and the first commencement regulations made under the Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023 (c. 55) (“the 2023 Act”).
The Representation of the People Bill is a Government Bill introduced on 12 February 2026 1 and now between Public Bill Committee and Report stage 2. It lowers the UK voting age to 16, pilots automated voter registration, tightens donor checks under PPERA, raises the Electoral Commission's maximum fine to £500,000, repeals the Elections Act 2022 strategy and policy statement, expands accepted voter ID, creates a new electoral sanction for intimidation of election staff and removes candidates' home addresses from ballot papers 3. The Bill implements both the 2024 Labour manifesto and the July 2025 MHCLG strategy 'Restoring trust in our democracy' 4. It is opposed in principle by the Conservatives, supported with amendments by the Liberal Democrats and the Greens, and is awaiting incorporation of recommendations from the independent Rycroft review on foreign interference 3.
The Bill (originally Bill 384) was introduced in the Commons on 12 February 2026 1 alongside Explanatory Notes 2, an Impact Assessment 3, an ECHR Memorandum 4 and a Delegated Powers Memorandum 5. Second Reading on 2 March 2026 6 saw the Government carry the Bill against a Conservative reasoned amendment moved by Sir James Cleverly that objected to votes at 16, automated registration, the absence of the Rycroft review and the lack of pre-introduction consultation with political parties 7. The Public Bill Committee, chaired by Dr Rosena Allin-Khan, Dame Siobhain McDonagh, David Mundell and Sir Desmond Swayne, ran nine sittings between 18 March and 16 April 2026 8, taking written evidence from over 50 organisations including the Electoral Reform Society 9, Spotlight on Corruption 10, RUSI 11, the Jo Cox Foundation 12, the Electoral Management Boards for Scotland 13 and Wales 14, the Children's Commissioner 15, the LGA 16 and the AEA 17. The Bill was reprinted as Bill 418 (as amended in Committee) on 27 April 2026 18. Notices of amendments for Report stage have been tabled daily through to 30 April 2026 19, with Commons Report and Third Reading expected imminently. The Government has written to the devolved legislatures to begin legislative consent 7.
The most material recent development is the conclusion of Public Bill Committee on 16 April 2026 1 and the publication of Bill 418 as amended on 27 April 2026 2. The cumulative weight of written evidence over the PBC phase has crystallised three pressure points likely to dominate Report stage: (i) the design of the UK-connection test for corporate donors, with Spotlight on Corruption 3 and the Liberal Democrats arguing the revenue test 4 should be replaced by a profit test; (ii) whether to legislate now against cryptocurrency donations, flagged by Emily Thornberry at Second Reading and to which the Secretary of State committed to return through Rycroft-driven amendments 4; and (iii) the deliverability and fairness of phased automated registration, a sustained Opposition concern about pre-general-election uneven roll-out 4. Eight Joint Committee on the National Security Strategy recommendations on AI-generated content and disinformation and on foreign interference are also pending Government response. Notices of amendments for Report were running daily as at 30 April 2026 5.
The Report stage will turn on whether the Government tables its own amendments on (a) cryptocurrency donations, (b) the UK-connection test, and (c) any provisions emerging from the Rycroft review on foreign interference — to all of which the Secretary of State committed at Second Reading 1. The Bill's compliance with the Delegated Powers Memorandum 2 is likely to be tested by the Lords Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee once the Bill reaches the second chamber. Three operational dependencies need to be watched in parallel. First, the phased roll-out of automated registration: which areas will pilot it, and whether the pilots will be complete before the next general election — this also has consequences for the next Boundary Commission review, which will use whichever register is in force on the relevant date. Second, the implementation of the £500,000 maximum Electoral Commission fine, which the Government has signalled will be set through secondary legislation rather than on the face of the Bill 1. Third, the devolved consent process: Scotland and Wales already have 16+ voting for devolved elections and the parallel Welsh Order 2026/82 on candidate security expenses shows that even narrow electoral SIs are now flowing through the devolved track. Implementation timelines in Northern Ireland, with its separate Electoral Office, also require funding clarity, as Sorcha Eastwood pressed at Second Reading 1. Finally, Members will be watching whether the new electoral sanction for intimidation of election staff dovetails cleanly with the existing Recall of MPs Act 2015 triggers or creates fresh anomalies on retrospectivity.
The Rycroft review on foreign interference is the largest known unknown: the Bill has been introduced before the review has reported and the Government has committed to incorporating its recommendations during passage 1, so a substantive amendment package can be expected. Inferred from corpus gap: the Government's response to written evidence and the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee report on the Bill are not yet in the retrieved corpus, both of which would normally precede Lords stages. Inferred from corpus gap: detailed PBC Hansard for most of the nine sittings is in the candidates list but not yet linked, limiting the granularity with which individual MP positions can be characterised. The interaction between the new intimidation electoral sanction and the Recall of MPs Act 2015 triggers as recently amended by Standing Order changes is unsettled and may be the subject of further amendment in the Lords.
The Representation of the People Bill operates as a consolidating overlay on four pre-existing statutes — the Representation of the People Acts 1983 and 1985, the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 (PPERA), the Electoral Administration Act 2006 — and as the first substantive revision of the Elections Act 2022 since its enactment. Each layer does different work.
The FRANCHISE layer amends the 1983 Act to lower the voting age to 16 across UK Parliamentary, English and Northern Irish elections (Scotland and Wales already use 16+ for devolved/local polls), and amends the 1985 Act to allow pre-16 registration. The Bill creates a new duty on GB local authorities and Northern Ireland HSC trusts to support looked-after children to register, plus a new offence for wrongful disclosure of registration data, sitting alongside the existing offences in the 1983 Act.
The REGISTRATION layer authorises pilots of automated voter registration, building on the architecture of individual electoral registration introduced by the Electoral Registration and Administration Act 2013. The Government has signalled phased roll-out rather than universal commencement, and the Bill switches the open register from opt-out to opt-in. The Delegated Powers Memorandum 1 sets out where the Secretary of State retains rule-making powers — a contested area in opposition arguments about uneven roll-out before the next general election.
The DONATIONS AND ENFORCEMENT layer amends PPERA. It introduces a 'know your donor' duty on recipients (a Committee on Standards in Public Life recommendation), a UK-connection test for company donors aimed at shell-company routing, increased transparency on significant donations, and re-categorises administrative offences for civil sanctions. The Electoral Commission's maximum fine rises 25-fold to £500,000, and the Government's section 4A PPERA power (inserted by Elections Act 2022 s.16) to impose a strategy and policy statement on the Commission is repealed in full.
The CANDIDATE AND ADMINISTRATION layer creates a statutory aggravating factor for offences motivated by hostility to candidates, campaigners or office-holders; a new electoral sanction disqualifying intimidators of returning officers, poll clerks and counters; and removes the requirement on candidates and their agents to publish a home address provided a correspondence address is supplied. Digital imprint transparency under Part 6 of the Elections Act 2022 is strengthened. The Rycroft review on foreign interference is expected to feed further amendments at Report or Lords stage.
A process by which eligible voters are added to the register from authoritative datasets rather than requiring an individual application.
A duty on political parties and other recipients to take reasonable steps to verify the legitimate source of donations above defined thresholds and to consider whether a donor may be facilitating an illegal donation.
A test for whether a company is sufficiently connected to the UK to be a permissible donor, currently drafted around UK revenue.
A new statutory disqualification from standing in future elections for anyone who harasses, intimidates or abuses returning officers, poll clerks or counting staff.
Full repeal of the Government's power, inserted by the Elections Act 2022, to issue a strategy and policy statement to the Electoral Commission.
Commons Report stage and Third Reading; key amendments to watch are cryptocurrency bans, profit-based UK-connection test, donations cap, and pre-Rycroft amendments.
Publication of the Rycroft review on foreign interference and any Government amendment package arising from it.
Legislative consent motions in the Scottish Parliament, Senedd Cymru and Northern Ireland Assembly.
Lords First and Second Reading; expected scrutiny from the Constitution Committee, Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee and Joint Committee on Human Rights.
Secondary legislation to raise the maximum Electoral Commission fine from £20,000 to £500,000 — Government announced at Second Reading it will be made via SI.
Bill sponsor; frames the Bill as implementing the 2024 manifesto and the July 2025 strategy, defending the franchise extension on parity-with-armed-forces grounds and the donations and Electoral Commission reforms as anti-foreign-interference measures.Mar 2026
Tension with Sir James Cleverly MP
Tabled the Conservative reasoned amendment opposing Second Reading on five grounds: lowering the voting age to 16 is inconsistent with the Children Act 1989 and UNCRC definitions of childhood; automated registration risks register accuracy and creates uneven pre-election effects; the Rycroft review has not reported; the Bill lacks effective measures against Chinese and other state interference; and there has been no proper cross-party consultation.Mar 2026
Tension with Steve Reed MP
Liberal Democrats support Second Reading and the franchise extension but argue the Bill is too timid: it should scrap voter ID, impose a cap on political donations, use a profit-based UK-connection test, and address foreign interference through stronger Electoral Commission powers.Mar 2026
Backs the broad direction but argues phased automated registration is vulnerable to judicial review because of uneven pre-election effects, and that the Bill should additionally remove the automatic right of Commonwealth citizens to vote.Mar 2026
As a former MHCLG minister responsible for the strategy, frames the Bill as essential to defend a 'fragile' democracy against organised online intimidation and foreign interference, and presses for express provisions banning cryptocurrency donations.Mar 2026
Long-standing votes-at-16 campaigner; supports the franchise clauses unconditionally and urges that political education in schools accompany commencement.Mar 2026
Supports franchise extension and automated registration; argues for repeal of voter ID and for a donations cap.Mar 2026
Supports the donations transparency direction but argues the UK-connection test should be profit-based rather than revenue-based to prevent gaming.Mar 2026Mar 2026
Supports the candidate-safety provisions, including the new electoral sanction for intimidation and the removal of home addresses from nomination papers.Mar 2026
Welcomes the foreign-interference framing but warns that 'know your donor' alone will not close illicit finance routes without further amendments, likely from the Rycroft review.Mar 2026