225 MPs (34%) are women in the House of Commons; 222 peers (28%) in the House of Lords. In UK general population this is 51% (2021 census)
10% of MPs in the House of Commons are of BAME background; 6% of peers in the House of Lords . In the UK general population it is 18% (2021 census)
56 MPs (9%) are LGB* in the House of Commons . UK general population 3.2% ( 2021 census , although number likely to be higher because question in census was voluntary)
Backbenchers
Members of parliament who are not in the government
The 1922 Committee (led by Graham Brady) were responsible for triggering a leadership contest in 2022, following 55 submitted letters. Just a scheduled meeting with the committee caused Truss to resign
In January 2021, the Covid Recovery Group wrote a letter to PM Boris Johnson. It stated his "leadership will be on the table" is he did not publish an exit strategy for lockdowns
From 2016-17, 25 out of 28 government bills that were introduced managed to gain royal assent, however only 8 out of 163 PMBs succeeded in the same way
Discussing proposed government bills takes up over 1/3 of the commons time in any parliamentary session. The discussion of PMBs takes up less than 5% of the time
Prevent sexual harassment in the workplace and drive a culture change (substantially watered down by Lords to avoid exposing employers to costly lawsuits)
PMBs introduced by backbenchers are only likely to pass if they come from the ruling party. For example, during the coalition government, 41 out of 42 PMBs passed were from either the Conservatives or Lib Dems
In 2016, when the department for Exiting the European Union was established by Theresa May, the chairman, Hilary Benn MP and the committee had the opportunity to question ministers on the impact of many different scenarios that could take place due to our departure. This helped the government decide what kind of exit would be the most beneficial for the country, and also plan for every outcome to ensure whatever happens, there are as few limitations as possible.
Frank Field
Elected head of the Work and Pensions Committee in 2015, re-elected in 2017
Politician since 1979
Experienced in welfare and poverty issues
One of the only Labour supporters of Brexit
Known for being straight talking
Confrontational nature helpful in pushing government for answers and holding them accountable
In May of 2018, Conservative committee members John Whittingdale, Andrea Jenkyns and Jacob Rees-Mogg publicly criticised the committee for being too pro-remain