EU Relations

UK-EU relationship post-Brexit

Based on 3 parliamentary votes

Related Trade and Brexit Issues

How Parties Voted on EU Relations

Government alignment shows how often each party voted with the government's stated position. Issue-aligned direction shows agreement with the AI-identified supportive stance.

Voted with government positionVoted in issue-aligned direction
Scottish National Party9 MPs · 14 votes
100%
57%
Liberal Democrats70 MPs · 129 votes
100%
52%
100%
51%
Plaid Cymru4 MPs · 8 votes
100%
50%
100%
43%
Independent9 MPs · 16 votes
60%
50%

Recent Votes

VoteResultDate
A vote on whether to allow a bill to be introduced that would require the government to negotiate a UK-EU customs union. The vote was tied 100-100 and the Speaker used her casting vote in favour, following parliamentary convention to allow further debate.
Yes = Support allowing Parliament to debate legislation requiring the government to pursue a UK-EU customs union, arguing Brexit has damaged trade and the economy · No = Oppose introducing a bill to mandate customs union negotiations with the EU, defending the UK's post-Brexit independent trade policy
102-1029 Dec 2025
Parliament voted on a government amendment to an opposition motion about the UK-EU Summit. The opposition (likely Conservatives or Reform) brought a motion criticising or shaping the government's approach to post-Brexit EU relations, and the government tabled its own amendment to replace or modify that motion with wording more favourable to its position.
Yes = Support the Labour government's framing of UK-EU relations and its approach to the summit, backing closer engagement with the EU on the government's terms · No = Reject the government's amendment, preferring the original opposition motion — likely reflecting concerns about the terms of UK-EU rapprochement or a more sceptical stance on closer EU ties
Govt: Aye
321-10413 May 2025
An opposition party called a debate and vote on the government's handling of the UK-EU Summit, likely calling for greater parliamentary scrutiny or a specific negotiating approach. The government defeated the motion, with 402 MPs voting against and only 104 in favour.
Yes = Support the opposition's motion on the UK-EU Summit, signalling concern about the government's approach to post-Brexit EU relations and demanding greater transparency or accountability · No = Back the government's handling of the UK-EU Summit and reject the opposition's attempt to constrain or criticise its negotiating strategy with the EU
Govt: No
106-40213 May 2025
How is this calculated?

Government alignment (primary bar) shows how often a party's MPs voted with the government's stated position on this issue. This is the most comparable metric across parties, as it measures the same reference point for everyone.

Issue-aligned direction (secondary bar) shows how often MPs voted in the direction tagged as supportive of this issue by AI analysis. For example, if a vote is tagged “pro-environment”, a Yes vote counts as aligned. This can be misleading when the tagged direction happens to align with opposition amendments rather than government bills.

Why these metrics may differ: Opposition parties often vote against government bills for strategic or procedural reasons, even when they broadly support the policy area. The government alignment metric makes this clearer by showing the actual voting pattern against a consistent reference.

Source: Commons division data from the UK Parliament Votes API. Alignment direction determined by AI analysis of vote stance tags. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0.

EU Relations — Party Comparison | Beyond The Vote