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Representation of the People Bill

Lifecycle: Implementation Cabinet Office · Committee on Standards in Public Life · Foreign Affairs Committee · Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government · Office of the Chief Electoral Officer for Northern Ireland · Speaker's Committee on the Electoral Commission Last regenerated 1 month, 3 weeks ago · 8 new events since

Summary

What this is

The Representation of the People Bill is a 7-part, 11-schedule Government bill introduced 12 February 2026 by Steve Reed (Secretary of State, MHCLG) which lowers the voting age to 16 across UK Parliamentary, English and Northern Ireland local, PCC and recall elections; reforms voter registration (including powers for direct registration without application and an opt-in open register); expands accepted voter ID to UK bank cards; introduces candidate ID and party-withdrawal of nominations; tightens donation rules with risk-based due diligence and restrictions on company and unincorporated-association donations; transfers significant enforcement powers to the Electoral Commission; and extends disqualification orders for hostility-motivated offences against electoral staff.

Why it matters

The Bill is the principal legislative vehicle delivering Labour's manifesto commitment to lower the voting age and the Government's July 2025 'Restoring trust in our democracy' strategy. It rewrites the foundations of voter eligibility, electoral registration and political finance simultaneously, with downstream effects for an estimated 7-8 million unregistered or incorrectly registered electors, all political parties' donor-screening obligations, and the Electoral Commission's regulatory architecture.

Current status

First reading 12 February 2026; second reading 2 March 2026; Public Bill Committee sat across nine sittings between 18 March and 16 April 2026; the Bill emerged from Committee as Bill 418 (as amended in Committee) on 27 April 2026, with notices of amendments for Report stage being tabled through late April 2026.

What changed recently

  • 13 May 2026 — King's Speech 2026 confirms the Representation of the People Bill among the Government's flagship legislation for the session.
  • 27 Apr 2026 — Bill reprinted as Bill 418 (as amended in Committee), with Pt 5 renumbered to add clause 71 'Disclosure of information by Electoral Commission' between the EC governance and reform provisions.
  • 27 Apr 2026 — Rycroft Review on countering foreign financial influence and interference in UK politics published, recommending (among other things) a moratorium on cryptocurrency donations.
  • 16 Apr 2026 — Public Bill Committee concluded its nine sittings, with Pt 4 (donations) and Pt 6 (hostility/disqualification) the most contested portions in evidence.
  • 27 Mar 2026 — Foreign Affairs Committee report calls for the Bill to be amended to tackle AI-generated content, disinformation and electoral interference threats.

Key documents

Framework

Operationalising

Scrutiny

Evidence

Review

Consultations

Stakeholders

Sponsoring department 2

  • Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government → src
    Bill sponsor department; produced the Impact Assessment, Explanatory Notes, ECHR and Delegated Powers Memoranda.
  • Cabinet Office → src
    Co-lead on electoral integrity, digital ID and foreign interference dimensions; departmental respondent to many PQs on the Bill's interaction with digital ID consultation (CP1498).

Sponsoring minister 4

  • Steve Reed → src
    Secretary of State (MHCLG) and sponsor of the Bill; signed the s.19(1)(a) ECHR compatibility statement.
  • Rushanara Ali → src
    Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Homelessness and Democracy; issued the July 2025 'Restoring trust in our democracy' WMS (HCWS842) launching the strategy this Bill enacts; CURRENT STATUS UNKNOWN, treat as historical.
  • Lord Khan of Burnley → src
    Parliamentary Under Secretary of State who made the parallel Lords WMS (HLWS843) launching the elections strategy in July 2025; CURRENT STATUS UNKNOWN, treat as historical.
  • Samantha Dixon → src
    Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at MHCLG who carried the Bill through Public Bill Committee across all nine sittings.

Shadow minister 3

  • Paul Holmes → src
    Conservative MP (Hamble Valley) — lead Opposition voice across the PBC, with 18 touchpoints across sittings 3-9 on franchise, voter ID and donations.
  • David Simmonds → src
    Conservative MP (Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner) — Conservative front-bench engagement across the PBC sittings on registration and EC enforcement clauses.
  • Lewis Cocking → src
    Conservative MP (Broxbourne) — substantive Opposition engagement across PBC sittings 3-9, particularly on Pt 4 donations and Pt 6 disqualification.

Lead committee 5

  • Public Bill Committee on the Representation of the People Bill → src
    Chairs: Dr Rosena Allin-Khan, Dame Siobhain McDonagh, David Mundell, Sir Desmond Swayne; sat for nine sittings between 18 March and 16 April 2026.
  • Foreign Affairs Committee → src
    Report concluded the Bill should include provisions tackling AI-generated content, disinformation and foreign-interference threats; concerned about UK legislative readiness for election threats.
  • Speaker's Committee on the Electoral Commission → src
    Routed multiple parliamentary questions (via the Rt Hon Member for Kenilworth and Southam) on Electoral Commission readiness, voter ID at May 2026 polls, and Bill implementation.
  • Modernising Elections inquiry → src
    Committee work taking evidence on the Government's manifesto commitment to lower the voting age and the Bill more broadly.
  • Committee on Standards in Public Life → src
    Chair Doug Chalmers engaged with MHCLG on regulating election finance and welcomed the Government's July 2025 electoral reform strategy.

Witnesses & evidence-givers 12

  • Electoral Reform Society → src
    Written evidence to the PBC (RPB12) — long-standing advocate for the franchise extension and registration modernisation.
  • Association of Electoral Administrators → src
    Supplementary written evidence (RPB40) addressing practitioner concerns about registration without application and the deliverability of clause 33 deadlines.
  • Children's Commissioner → src
    Two written submissions (RPB34, RPB50) on safeguards for under-16 attainers and data protection under clauses 7-14.
  • Electoral Management Board for Scotland → src
    Written evidence (RPB26) and supplementary submission (RPB36) on cross-border canvass alignment and devolved-elections interaction.
  • Open Britain → src
    Two submissions (RPB10, RPB52) advocating broader scope on overseas electors and democratic participation.
  • Transparency International UK → src
    Supplementary written evidence (RPB31) on Pt 4 donations measures including company and unincorporated-association rules.
  • Spotlight on Corruption → src
    Written evidence (RPB17) focused on enforcement architecture in Pt 5 and EC powers.
  • Centre for Finance and Security at RUSI → src
    Written evidence (RPB15) on the foreign-money risk surface and the design of donations safeguards.
  • The Jo Cox Foundation → src
    Written evidence (RPB06) on the Pt 6 hostility, disqualification and aggravating-factor provisions.
  • Royal National Institute of Blind People → src
    Written evidence (RPB24) on accessibility of voter ID and absent-voting changes.
  • Local Government Association → src
    Supplementary written evidence (RPB42) on local-authority deliverability of registration reform and the new ERO seniority requirements.
  • Liberal Democrats Abroad → src
    Supplementary written evidence (RPB47) on the Bill's treatment of overseas electors and registration.

Regulator / delivery programme 3

  • Electoral Commission → src
    Receives expanded enforcement powers (Pt 5, clauses 66-71): decriminalisation of administrative offences, civil sanctions, information-disclosure powers; loses the strategy and policy statement (clause 70).
  • Office of the Chief Electoral Officer for Northern Ireland → src
    Delivery body for NI canvass reform (clauses 26-29), NI pre-election registration (clause 34) and electoral ID card changes (clause 35).
  • Electoral Office for Northern Ireland → src
    Issues NI electoral identity cards; under clause 35 will produce cards showing only month and year of birth to limit misuse as general-purpose ID.

Commentator 7

  • Dr Ellie Chowns → src
    Green MP (North Herefordshire) — 20 PBC touchpoints; substantive Green Party engagement across votes-at-16, registration and donations clauses.
  • Lisa Smart → src
    Liberal Democrat MP (Hazel Grove) — 20 PBC touchpoints; LD front-bench engagement across the Bill including overseas-elector and registration provisions.
  • Zöe Franklin → src
    Liberal Democrat MP (Guildford) — 12 PBC touchpoints across sittings 4, 8 and 9 on registration, voter ID and donations.
  • Sam Rushworth → src
    Labour MP (Bishop Auckland) — 12 PBC touchpoints; Government-side scrutiny across sittings 3-5.
  • Lloyd Hatton → src
    Labour MP (South Dorset) — 10 PBC touchpoints across sittings 6-8 on donations and EC enforcement clauses.
  • Katrina Murray → src
    Labour MP (Cumbernauld and Kirkintilloch) — 10 PBC touchpoints; engaged across NI-canvass and devolved-elections interaction.
  • Andrew Lewin → src
    Labour MP (Welwyn Hatfield) — 6 PBC touchpoints across sittings 1, 3 and 5.

Civil society 5

  • Unlock Democracy → src
    Written evidence (RPB20) supporting franchise extension and registration modernisation.
  • Full Fact → src
    Written evidence (RPB18) on digital imprints, disinformation and electronic-material provisions in clauses 64-65.
  • Generation Rent → src
    Written evidence (RPB28) — registration accuracy for frequent movers and renters identified in the IA as a priority cohort.
  • 50:50 Parliament and Centenary Action → src
    Joint written evidence (RPB14) on candidate intimidation and the Pt 6 hostility provisions.
  • Elect Her → src
    Two submissions (RPB04, RPB25) on candidate safety, election-agent address publication (clause 54) and Pt 6 disqualification orders.

Political commitments

  • commitment King's Speech announcement Labour · 2026 · King's Speech announces Representation of the People Bill

    King's Speech 2026 announces Representation of the People Bill

    Why linked: Confirms the Bill among the Government's legislative programme for the 2026 session as a vehicle for franchise extension and electoral-integrity reform.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Restoring trust in our democracy: Our strategy for modern and secure elections

    Restoring trust in our democracy: Our strategy for modern and secure elections

    I am delighted to announce the publication of the government's new strategy for modern and secure elections. This marks a significant step…

    Why linked: Rushanara Ali MP's July 2025 WMS (HCWS842) sets out the policy programme that the Bill enacts.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Restoring trust in our democracy: Our strategy for modern and secure elections

    Lords statement on Restoring trust in our democracy

    Why linked: Lord Khan of Burnley's parallel Lords WMS (HLWS843) committed the Government to delivering the strategy through legislation in this Parliament.

Open questions & gaps

Pending in the lifecycle

  • Report stage in the Commons — date not yet set; Bill 418 is the consolidated print awaiting Report.
  • Government response to the Rycroft Review's cryptocurrency-donations moratorium and other foreign-interference recommendations: whether amendments will be tabled at Report or left to subsequent regulations.
  • Foreign Affairs Committee request that the Bill be amended to address AI-generated content and deepfakes — Government has not yet indicated whether it will accept this scope expansion.
  • Legislative consent from Scotland and Wales: PQ 118891 (March 2026) asked whether the Government plans to obtain LCMs from devolved Administrations; not yet resolved.
  • Digital ID interaction: Cabinet Office consultation CP1498 (March 2026) is running in parallel; whether digital ID will be available to 16-17 year olds and how it will interact with voter ID under clause 47 remains open.

Beyond the corpus

  • MISSING Lords stages and Lords amendments — none yet, consistent with the Bill still being in Commons. — Bill is at Commons Report stage following PBC conclusion on 16 April 2026.
  • MISSING Government response to the Rycroft Review. — Review published 27 April 2026; the Bill is the natural vehicle for any legislative response on donations and foreign interference.
  • MISSING DPRRC and Constitution Committee Lords-side reports. — These typically appear once a bill reaches the Lords; not yet relevant given the Bill remains in Commons.

Confidence gaps

  • Exact text of post-Committee amendments and the renumbering between Bill 384 and Bill 418 (Bill 418 has 83 clauses vs 81 in Bill 384, indicating at least two clauses added).
  • Whether the Rycroft Review's recommendations will be implemented through this Bill or through separate primary or secondary legislation.
  • Programmed timetable for Lords stages and Royal Assent — not stated in the events.