Neil Coyle Alert Sample


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View the Parallel Parliament page for Neil Coyle

Information between 9th December 2025 - 8th January 2026

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Division Votes
9 Dec 2025 - Railways Bill - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 316 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 170 Noes - 332
9 Dec 2025 - Railways Bill - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted Aye - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 314 Labour Aye votes vs 0 Labour No votes
Tally: Ayes - 329 Noes - 173
10 Dec 2025 - Seasonal Work - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 311 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 98 Noes - 325
10 Dec 2025 - Seasonal Work - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted Aye - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 312 Labour Aye votes vs 0 Labour No votes
Tally: Ayes - 320 Noes - 98
10 Dec 2025 - Conduct of the Chancellor of the Exchequer - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 290 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 90 Noes - 297
15 Dec 2025 - Employment Rights Bill - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted Aye - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 304 Labour Aye votes vs 0 Labour No votes
Tally: Ayes - 311 Noes - 96
16 Dec 2025 - Finance (No. 2) Bill - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 333 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 118 Noes - 340
16 Dec 2025 - Finance (No. 2) Bill - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted Aye - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 329 Labour Aye votes vs 0 Labour No votes
Tally: Ayes - 341 Noes - 195
17 Dec 2025 - National Insurance Contributions (Employer Pensions Contributions) Bill - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted Aye - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 300 Labour Aye votes vs 0 Labour No votes
Tally: Ayes - 312 Noes - 165
7 Jan 2026 - Jury Trials - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 284 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 182 Noes - 290
7 Jan 2026 - Rural Communities - View Vote Context
Neil Coyle voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 328 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 105 Noes - 332


Speeches
Neil Coyle speeches from: No Recourse to Public Funds: Homelessness
Neil Coyle contributed 1 speech (63 words)
Tuesday 16th December 2025 - Westminster Hall
Home Office
Neil Coyle speeches from: NHS: Winter Preparedness
Neil Coyle contributed 1 speech (83 words)
Monday 15th December 2025 - Commons Chamber
Department of Health and Social Care


Written Answers
Office for National Statistics: Latin America
Asked by: Neil Coyle (Labour - Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
Monday 15th December 2025

Question to the Cabinet Office:

To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, what assessment he has made of the potential merits of including data for a Latin American ethnic group in national statistics.

Answered by Josh Simons - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Science, Innovation and Technology)

The information requested falls under the remit of the UK Statistics Authority.

A response to the Hon gentleman’s Parliamentary Question of 8th of December is attached.

Migrants: Homelessness
Asked by: Neil Coyle (Labour - Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
Tuesday 30th December 2025

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many people her Department’s Homelessness escalation service has helped move from No Recourse to Public Funds to having access to public funds in the latest period for which data is available.

Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office)

The requested information is not currently included in published migration data, so we are unable to provide this.

Elections: Subversion
Asked by: Neil Coyle (Labour - Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
Monday 5th January 2026

Question to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government:

To ask the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, if he will take legislative steps to ensure that no future election in the UK will be subject to outside interference.

Answered by Samantha Dixon - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Housing, Communities and Local Government)

The Government takes any attempts to intervene in democratic processes very seriously. It is, and always will be, an absolute priority to protect our democratic and electoral processes, including from foreign interference.

On the 16th of December, the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government announced an independent review into countering foreign financial influence and interference in UK politics. The review will report at the end of March and will inform the forthcoming Elections Bill. This builds on the major reforms announced in the Elections Strategy in July, and the launch last month of the Counter Political Interference and Espionage Action Plan to disrupt and deter spying from states.

The Government’s strategy for modern, secure and inclusive elections, published in July, sets out our plan to strengthen oversight of and safeguards against known and emerging threats, including foreign interference through covert political funding. We will deliver a robust and proportionate response to known risks, protecting the integrity of our system and reinforcing public trust in democracy.

This sits alongside the government’s robust toolkit of measures to investigate and disrupt the threat from foreign interference in UK politics. This includes the National Security Act 2023, the Defending Democracy Taskforce, which coordinates work to protect UK political parties, elected officials and the electoral infrastructure, and the Joint Election Security and Preparedness unit, which coordinates work across government to protect UK elections and referendums, and the Online Safety Act which requires services to take steps to remove illegal disinformation content including illegal state-sponsored disinformation in scope of the Foreign Interference Offence.

Elections: Subversion
Asked by: Neil Coyle (Labour - Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
Monday 5th January 2026

Question to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government:

To ask the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, whether he has met with his French counterparts to consider parallel legislation to prevent outside interference in domestic elections.

Answered by Samantha Dixon - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Housing, Communities and Local Government)

The Government takes any attempts to intervene in democratic processes very seriously. It is, and always will be, an absolute priority to protect our democratic and electoral processes, including from foreign interference.

We have a robust toolkit of measures including the foreign interference offence and foreign influence registration scheme introduced under the National Security Act 2023, the Defending Democracy Taskforce, which coordinates work to protect UK political parties, elected officials and electoral infrastructure from threats including foreign interference, the Joint Election Security and Preparedness unit, which coordinates work to protect UK elections and referendums, and the Counter Political Interference and Espionage Action Plan launched last month to disrupt and deter spying from states.

Additionally, on 16 December the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government announced an independent review into countering foreign financial influence and interference in UK politics, led by Philip Rycroft. We will consider how to take forward any recommendations from the review, including through the upcoming Elections Bill.

Special Educational Needs: Finance
Asked by: Neil Coyle (Labour - Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
Tuesday 6th January 2026

Question to the Department for Education:

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, with reference to her Department's press notice entitled £740 million allocated for 10,000 new places for pupils with SEND, published on 27 March 2025, what data she holds on how the additional funding was spent by Local Education Authorities.

Answered by Georgia Gould - Minister of State (Education)

The £740 million high needs capital investment in 2025/26 is on track to create around 10,000 new specialist places, in both special and mainstream schools.

Local authorities share plans for their HNPCA with the department as part of grant assurance checks. We do not publish these due to the potential commercial sensitivities, but we encourage local authorities to publish where possible to aid transparency.



MP Financial Interests
15th December 2025
Neil Coyle (Labour - Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
2. Donations and other support (including loans) for activities as an MP
Southwark Cathedral - £6,660.00
Source
15th December 2025
Neil Coyle (Labour - Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
3. Gifts, benefits and hospitality from UK sources
Bread Ahead - £1,930.00
Source



Neil Coyle mentioned

Live Transcript

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15 Dec 2025, 4:23 p.m. - House of Commons
" Neil Coyle. "
Neil Coyle MP (Bermondsey and Old Southwark, Labour) - View Video - View Transcript