Information between 9th June 2025 - 29th June 2025
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Division Votes |
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9 Jun 2025 - Planning and Infrastructure Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 92 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 180 Noes - 307 |
9 Jun 2025 - Planning and Infrastructure Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 94 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 167 Noes - 334 |
9 Jun 2025 - Planning and Infrastructure Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 95 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 113 Noes - 335 |
10 Jun 2025 - Planning and Infrastructure Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 98 Conservative No votes vs 0 Conservative Aye votes Tally: Ayes - 306 Noes - 174 |
10 Jun 2025 - Planning and Infrastructure Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 95 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 107 Noes - 314 |
10 Jun 2025 - Data (Use and Access) Bill [Lords] - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 97 Conservative No votes vs 0 Conservative Aye votes Tally: Ayes - 304 Noes - 189 |
11 Jun 2025 - Electricity - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 91 Conservative No votes vs 1 Conservative Aye votes Tally: Ayes - 350 Noes - 176 |
13 Jun 2025 - Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and in line with the House One of 71 Conservative Aye votes vs 11 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 259 Noes - 216 |
13 Jun 2025 - Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 71 Conservative Aye votes vs 12 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 233 Noes - 254 |
13 Jun 2025 - Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 71 Conservative Aye votes vs 13 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 230 Noes - 256 |
17 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 103 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 189 Noes - 328 |
17 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 101 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 184 Noes - 336 |
17 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 84 Conservative Aye votes vs 9 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 117 Noes - 379 |
17 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 96 Conservative No votes vs 8 Conservative Aye votes Tally: Ayes - 379 Noes - 137 |
17 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House One of 102 Conservative No votes vs 1 Conservative Aye votes Tally: Ayes - 89 Noes - 428 |
17 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 103 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 194 Noes - 335 |
18 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 93 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 102 Noes - 390 |
18 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 82 Conservative No votes vs 1 Conservative Aye votes Tally: Ayes - 312 Noes - 95 |
18 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 97 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 178 Noes - 313 |
18 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 94 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 114 Noes - 310 |
18 Jun 2025 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 96 Conservative Aye votes vs 0 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 178 Noes - 313 |
20 Jun 2025 - Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 67 Conservative No votes vs 14 Conservative Aye votes Tally: Ayes - 275 Noes - 209 |
20 Jun 2025 - Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 66 Conservative No votes vs 13 Conservative Aye votes Tally: Ayes - 274 Noes - 224 |
20 Jun 2025 - Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 60 Conservative Aye votes vs 15 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 213 Noes - 266 |
20 Jun 2025 - Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 63 Conservative Aye votes vs 15 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 208 Noes - 261 |
20 Jun 2025 - Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted Aye - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 68 Conservative Aye votes vs 14 Conservative No votes Tally: Ayes - 223 Noes - 269 |
20 Jun 2025 - Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill - View Vote Context Shivani Raja voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House One of 92 Conservative No votes vs 20 Conservative Aye votes Tally: Ayes - 314 Noes - 291 |
Written Answers |
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Housing: Contracts
Asked by: Shivani Raja (Conservative - Leicester East) Thursday 12th June 2025 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, pursuant to the Answer of 4 June 2025 to Question 54068 on Housing: Contracts, what her definition her Department uses for the terms (a) Bed Space and (b) Bed Space Size in the context of the Accommodation Contracts. Answered by Angela Eagle - Minister of State (Home Office) There is no definition of those within current accommodation contracts. |
Packaging: Recycling
Asked by: Shivani Raja (Conservative - Leicester East) Thursday 12th June 2025 Question to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, what assessment he has made of the financial impact of being required to apply Extended Producer Responsibility charges retrospectively in the absence of published official rates for relevant material streams on businesses. Answered by Mary Creagh - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) The Regulations do not impose a retrospective charge and were subject to the required legal and parliamentary scrutiny before coming into force
To prepare businesses for the implementation of the packaging pEPR scheme we have now published illustrative base fees, based on local authority waste management costs forming the basis for indicative local authority payments for 2025, and on packaging tonnages reported by large producers for the first 6-months of 2024. These illustrative base fees for the first time show point estimates as opposed to ranges, providing further certainty to businesses. Producers were required to submit their final 2024 data by 1 April 2025. Following this deadline, regulators are conducting regulatory checks. Once checks are conducted to an appropriate level we will use 2024 data and insight from regulator checks to publish packaging Extended Producer Responsibility (pEPR) base fees in June 2025. |
NHS: Postage Stamps
Asked by: Shivani Raja (Conservative - Leicester East) Monday 16th June 2025 Question to the Department of Health and Social Care: To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, How much (a) NHS England and (b) NHS Trusts spent on postage in the 2024–25 financial year; and what steps he is taking to help reduce these costs. Answered by Karin Smyth - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care) Data on National Health Service total spend on postage for the 2024/25 financial year in England is not held centrally, and will be held locally by individual trusts. |
Packaging: Recycling
Asked by: Shivani Raja (Conservative - Leicester East) Tuesday 17th June 2025 Question to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, when his Department plans to publish the final pricing and billing rates for the Extended Producer Responsibility scheme. Answered by Mary Creagh - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) Producers were required to submit their final 2024 data by 1 April 2025. Following this deadline, regulators are conducting regulatory checks. Once checks are conducted to an appropriate level, we will use 2024 data and insight from regulator checks to publish packaging Extended Producer Responsibility (pEPR) base fees in June 2025. |
Packaging: Recycling
Asked by: Shivani Raja (Conservative - Leicester East) Monday 16th June 2025 Question to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, what steps his Department is taking to help tackle potential abuse of the Extended Producer Responsibility exemption threshold; and whether he has made an assessment of the impact of the £2 million turnover exemption on fair competition. Answered by Mary Creagh - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) As the environmental regulator for England, the Environment Agency (EA) conducts compliance checks to ensure businesses accurately assess themselves against regulatory thresholds. These checks include, but are not limited to, open-source reviews of company accounts via the Companies House website and requests for evidence to verify reported turnover.
The Producer Responsibility Obligations (Packaging and Packaging Waste) Regulations 2024 provide for the assessment of turnover thresholds within corporate groups. Where such a group exists, the turnover of all companies performing a producer function must be aggregated to determine whether the £2 million threshold is met. This measure prevents businesses from establishing additional entities to remain below the threshold.
All EA producer compliance monitoring audits include a review of company structures to ensure that all relevant organisations within a corporate group comply with the regulations.
In October 2024, the Government published an updated impact assessment for the introduction of Extended Responsibility for Packaging (pEPR), this includes an analysis of the impact of pEPR on competition. |
Carers: Ethnic Groups
Asked by: Shivani Raja (Conservative - Leicester East) Monday 16th June 2025 Question to the Department of Health and Social Care: To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what steps his Department is taking to support (a) hidden and (b) unpaid carers from ethnic minority communities; and whether he has made an assessment of support needs in Leicester East constituency. Answered by Stephen Kinnock - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care) Local authorities have duties to support people caring for their family and friends. The Care Act 2014 requires local authorities to deliver a wide range of sustainable, high-quality care and support services, including support for carers. Local authorities are required to undertake Carer’s Assessments to support people caring for their family and friends who appear to have a need for support, and to meet their eligible needs upon request from them. The Department works with the sector and partners to deliver an annual programme of universal and targeted support to local authorities and their partners. This includes the Partners in Care and Health (PCH) contract. PCH’s work to support sector partners includes a workstream dedicated to supporting local authorities’ work with unpaid carers. This workstream includes work to identify and support unpaid carers, with a particular focus on identifying those from ethnic minority communities and those who are least likely to self-identify as a carer. |
Carers and Kinship Care
Asked by: Shivani Raja (Conservative - Leicester East) Monday 16th June 2025 Question to the Department of Health and Social Care: To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what steps his Department is taking to (a) identify and (b) support (i) hidden and (ii) unpaid family carers who (A) are and (B) are not engaged with formal care systems. Answered by Stephen Kinnock - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care) Local authorities have duties to support people caring for their family and friends. The Care Act 2014 requires local authorities to deliver a wide range of sustainable, high-quality care and support services, including support for carers. Local authorities are required to undertake Carer’s Assessments to support people caring for their family and friends who appear to have a need for support, and to meet their eligible needs upon request from them. The Department works with the sector and partners to deliver an annual programme of universal and targeted support to local authorities and their partners. This includes the Partners in Care and Health (PCH) contract. PCH’s work to support sector partners includes a workstream dedicated to supporting local authorities’ work with unpaid carers. This workstream includes work to identify and support unpaid carers, with a particular focus on identifying those from ethnic minority communities and those who are least likely to self-identify as a carer. |
Carers and Kinship Care
Asked by: Shivani Raja (Conservative - Leicester East) Tuesday 17th June 2025 Question to the Department of Health and Social Care: To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, whether his Department is taking steps to ensure that family carers are meaningfully involved in the (a) planning and (b) decision-making processes of local integrated care systems. Answered by Stephen Kinnock - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care) Under the National Health Service Act 2006, integrated care boards (ICBs) must make arrangements to ensure patients, and their carers and representatives are involved in the planning and commissioning of health and care, whether through consultation or the provision of information.
While developing the Joint Forward Plans, ICBs and partner trusts must consult with individuals, patients, carers, and communities in the planning process to ensure the plan reflects the needs and preferences of the local population.
The Health and Care Act 2022 introduced provisions for ICBs to promote the involvement of patients, and their carers and representatives, if any, in decisions relating to the care and treatment of the person they care for. |
Bill Documents |
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Jun. 24 2025
All proceedings up to 24 June 2025 at Public Bill Committee Stage Victims and Courts Bill 2024-26 Bill proceedings: Commons Found: James McMurdock John Lamont Bradley Thomas Rebecca Paul Mr Peter Bedford Gareth Davies Shivani Raja |
Jun. 24 2025
Public Bill Amendments as at 24 June 2025 Victims and Courts Bill 2024-26 Amendment Paper Found: James McMurdock John Lamont Bradley Thomas Rebecca Paul Mr Peter Bedford Gareth Davies Shivani Raja |
Jun. 18 2025
Consideration of Bill Amendments as at 18 June 2025 - Large print Crime and Policing Bill 2024-26 Amendment Paper Found: Bedford Sir Ashley Fox Ms Marie Rimmer Mr Andrew Snowden Bradley Thomas Peter Fortune Shivani Raja |
Jun. 18 2025
Consideration of Bill Amendments as at 18 June 2025 Crime and Policing Bill 2024-26 Amendment Paper Found: Peter Bedford Sir Ashley Fox Ms Marie Rimmer Mr Andrew Snowden Bradley Thomas Peter Fortune Shivani Raja |
Jun. 17 2025
Report Stage Proceedings as at 17 June 2025 Crime and Policing Bill 2024-26 Bill proceedings: Commons Found: David Mundell Aphra Brandreth Jack Rankin Dr Al Pinkerton Sir Ashley Fox Tom Tugendhat Shivani Raja |
Jun. 17 2025
Consideration of Bill Amendments as at 17 June 2025 - Large print Crime and Policing Bill 2024-26 Amendment Paper Found: David Mundell Aphra Brandreth Jack Rankin Dr Al Pinkerton Sir Ashley Fox Tom Tugendhat Shivani Raja |
Jun. 17 2025
Consideration of Bill Amendments as at 17 June 2025 Crime and Policing Bill 2024-26 Amendment Paper Found: David Mundell Aphra Brandreth Jack Rankin Dr Al Pinkerton Sir Ashley Fox Tom Tugendhat Shivani Raja |
Jun. 16 2025
Notices of Amendments as at 16 June 2025 Crime and Policing Bill 2024-26 Amendment Paper Found: David Mundell Aphra Brandreth Jack Rankin Dr Al Pinkerton Sir Ashley Fox Tom Tugendhat Shivani Raja |
Jun. 13 2025
Notices of Amendments as at 13 June 2025 Crime and Policing Bill 2024-26 Amendment Paper Found: David Mundell Aphra Brandreth Jack Rankin Dr Al Pinkerton Sir Ashley Fox Tom Tugendhat Shivani Raja |
Jun. 12 2025
Notices of Amendments as at 12 June 2025 Crime and Policing Bill 2024-26 Amendment Paper Found: David Mundell Aphra Brandreth Jack Rankin Dr Al Pinkerton Sir Ashley Fox Tom Tugendhat Shivani Raja |
Jun. 11 2025
Notices of Amendments as at 11 June 2025 Crime and Policing Bill 2024-26 Amendment Paper Found: John Cooper Sir Ashley Fox Ms Marie Rimmer Mr Andrew Snowden Bradley Thomas Peter Fortune Shivani Raja |
Jun. 10 2025
All proceedings up to 10 June 2025 at Report Stage Planning and Infrastructure Bill 2024-26 Bill proceedings: Commons Found: Lamont Mr Louie French Nick Timothy Charlie Dewhirst George Freeman Sir Gavin Williamson Shivani Raja |