Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick Alert Sample


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View the Parallel Parliament page for Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick

Information between 7th April 2026 - 17th April 2026

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Division Votes
13 Apr 2026 - English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 150 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 65 Noes - 173
13 Apr 2026 - English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 150 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 178 Noes - 231
13 Apr 2026 - English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 155 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 69 Noes - 332
13 Apr 2026 - English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 157 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 257 Noes - 180
13 Apr 2026 - English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 154 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 247 Noes - 187
13 Apr 2026 - English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 146 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 214 Noes - 156
15 Apr 2026 - Victims and Courts Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 169 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 270 Noes - 200
15 Apr 2026 - Victims and Courts Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 165 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 209 Noes - 260
16 Apr 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 130 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 186 Noes - 144
16 Apr 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 131 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 135 Noes - 154
16 Apr 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 132 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 142 Noes - 192
16 Apr 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 130 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 225 Noes - 144
16 Apr 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 127 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 216 Noes - 141
16 Apr 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 133 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 192 Noes - 142


Speeches
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick speeches from: Farming Road Map
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick contributed 2 speeches (103 words)
Thursday 16th April 2026 - Lords Chamber
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick speeches from: Marine Protected Areas: Bottom Trawling
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick contributed 1 speech (121 words)
Wednesday 15th April 2026 - Lords Chamber
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs


Written Answers
Data Centres
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Wednesday 8th April 2026

Question to the Department for Science, Innovation & Technology:

To ask His Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of the economic benefits of having an increased number of data centres in the UK.

Answered by Baroness Lloyd of Effra - Baroness in Waiting (HM Household) (Whip)

Data centres are foundational infrastructure for a modern, competitive UK economy, enabling the digital services that underpin productivity across numerous sector, from financial services and advanced manufacturing to public services and the creative industries. By enabling artificial intelligence, cloud computing and data intensive services, data centres generate productivity gains across the wider economy and reinforce the UK’s attractiveness as a crucial destination for investment.

Tech UK has estimated that UK data centres contribute £4.7 billion pounds in gross value added each year and support-tens of thousands of high-quality jobs across construction, operations and specialist supply chains. Operational employment is generally highly skilled and well paid, with wider employment supported through demand for electrical engineering, cooling, digital infrastructure and maintenance services.

HMG’s AI Growth Zone programme will unlock significant private investment and secure compute to drive AI growth, supporting high‑value local jobs and skills. HMG will also invest up to £5 million per Growth Zone, working with local areas to design tailored schemes to realise local economic benefits and boost AI adoption in local communities.

Vaccination
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Wednesday 15th April 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government, further to the Written Answer by Baroness Merron on 16 February (HL14349), on what evidence they base the conclusion that including wider societal benefits in vaccination appraisals would disadvantage programmes unable to evidence such benefits; and whether they have carried out a recent assessment of those benefits.

Answered by Baroness Merron - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

Our approach to decisions about vaccination programmes is informed by expert recommendations and advice from the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI). Working closely with the UK Health Security Agency‑based JCVI secretariat, the Department ensures that the cost-effectiveness methodology for assessing vaccination programmes enables the committee to advise on programmes that deliver the greatest health benefit to the greatest number of people.

Understanding the wider impacts of vaccination beyond health benefits is important in making the broader case for investment in vaccines and in encouraging uptake of vaccines amongst those who are offered them, and can be considered in exceptional cases in addition to the cost effectiveness assessment. In recognition of this, the Department strives to remain abreast of work demonstrating the benefits of vaccination to the wider economy.

However, changing the cost-effectiveness methodology itself to consider a broader range of costed benefits runs the risk of unintended consequences for vaccination programmes which cannot robustly demonstrate these benefits.


That is because decisions are required on how best to spend public funds. If wider socio-economic benefits can be robustly demonstrated for some vaccination programmes but not others due to data availability, there is a risk that changing the cost-effectiveness methodology to include wider benefits could result in programmes with high-quality data being considered more valuable. These programmes could therefore be prioritised for funding over other vaccination programmes, not because they deliver greater overall benefit, but because the data on their wider economic impact is more complete.

The potential impact of this, and potential consequences for the vaccine supply market, including vaccine price, would need to be carefully considered and risks properly evaluated, before any systematic change to methodology.




Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick mentioned

Live Transcript

Note: Cited speaker in live transcript data may not always be accurate. Check video link to confirm.

16 Apr 2026, 11:06 a.m. - House of Lords
">> >> First. >> First. Oral >> First. Oral Question >> First. Oral Question Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick. "
Baroness Hayman of Ullock, The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Labour) - View Video - View Transcript



Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick - Select Committee Information

Calendar
Monday 20th April 2026 2 p.m.
Childhood Vaccinations Committee - Oral evidence
Subject: Childhood Vaccinations
View calendar - Add to calendar
Monday 27th April 2026 2 p.m.
Childhood Vaccinations Committee - Oral evidence
Subject: Childhood Vaccinations
View calendar - Add to calendar


Select Committee Documents
Wednesday 15th April 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Lord Carlile of Berriew to Rt Hon Sir Stephen Timms MP (Minister for Social Security and Disability, DWP) re: Draft Chemicals (Health and Safety) (Amendment, Consequential and Transitional Provision) Regulations 2026, 15 April 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Friday 17th April 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Baroness Merron (DHSC) to Lord Carlile of Berriew re: Tobacco and Vapes Bill, 16 March 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Wednesday 22nd April 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Lord Carlile of Berriew to Lord Livermore (Financial Secretary to the Treasury) re: Duty relief exemption for small parcels, 22 April 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Wednesday 22nd April 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Lord Livermore, Financial Secretary to the Treasury re: the removal of duty relief for small parcels, 8 April 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Thursday 23rd April 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Lord Carlile of Berriew to Baroness Merron (Dept of Health and Social Care) re: Tobacco and Vapes Bill, 22 April 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Monday 20th April 2026
Oral Evidence - University College London (UCL), and Royal College of Midwives

Childhood Vaccinations - Childhood Vaccinations Committee
Monday 13th April 2026
Oral Evidence - Caafi Health, and Friends, Families and Travellers

Childhood Vaccinations - Childhood Vaccinations Committee
Monday 13th April 2026
Oral Evidence - British Somali Medical Association, and NHS England

Childhood Vaccinations - Childhood Vaccinations Committee
Monday 20th April 2026
Oral Evidence - Royal College of Nursing, Royal College of General Practitioners, and British Medical Association (BMA)

Childhood Vaccinations - Childhood Vaccinations Committee