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4A PPERA power (inserted by Elections Act 2022 s.16) to impose a strategy and policy statement on the Commission is repealed in full.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.