BB
647 MPs·389 Bills·£2.9T
James MacCleary

James MacCleary

Liberal Democrat

MP for Lewes · Since 2024

24
Votes
23
Speeches
52
Total Events

Financial Snapshot

£2K
Gifts
View full register →

Recent Activity

Date:
🗳️

Voted NO on: King's Speech Motion for an Address

James MacCleary voted NO on 'King's Speech Motion for an Address' (307-171, passed)

20 May 2026NOvia Commons Divisions API
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Voted AYE on: King's Speech Motion for an Address: amendment (l)

James MacCleary voted AYE on 'King's Speech Motion for an Address: amendment (l)' (78-408, defeated)

20 May 2026AYEvia Commons Divisions API
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Voted AYE on: King's Speech Motion for an Address: amendment (l)

James MacCleary voted AYE on 'King's Speech Motion for an Address: amendment (l)' (78-408, defeated)

20 May 2026AYEvia Commons Divisions API
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Voted NO on: King's Speech Motion for an Address

James MacCleary voted NO on 'King's Speech Motion for an Address' (307-171, passed)

20 May 2026NOvia Commons Divisions API
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Defence Readiness

If His Majesty’s most Gracious Speech was meant to show that this Government have grasped the scale of the danger facing Britain, it fell a long way short. We live in a more dangerous world than at any point since the end of the cold war. Vladimir Putin is waging war in Europe, and Ukraine is fighting not just for its very survival, but for the security of our entire continent. Across Europe, we are seeing sabotage, cyber-attacks, disinformation, intimidation and hybrid warfare. Further afield,

20 May 2026via UK Parliament Hansard
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Defence Readiness

As has been pointed out, defence spending has been reduced by successive Governments over a very long period of time, so focusing on the Liberal Democrats’ record alone is somewhat unfair, to say the least.

20 May 2026via UK Parliament Hansard
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Defence Readiness

The Liberal Democrats have reaffirmed our commitment to our nuclear deterrent repeatedly, and we will continue to do so. The defence investment plan is still not published. Industry is still waiting for certainty, and our allies are still waiting for clarity. Our armed forces are still waiting for the investment that they need, so it was deeply disappointing that the promised defence readiness Bill was not included in the King’s Speech. It speaks volumes that the Government’s own Bill on readine

20 May 2026via UK Parliament Hansard
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Defence Readiness

Learning from Ukraine has been very important. To be fair, the Government have made some steps in that direction, but we can always do more to learn from our friends who are testing this technology in the field day in, day out. Defence takes time. Industry needs a demand signal, our allies need confidence and our adversaries need to see resolve. That is why the Liberal Democrats call on the Government to commit to spending 3% of GDP on defence by 2030 at the latest. That is not a slogan or a pre

20 May 2026via UK Parliament Hansard
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Spoke in debate: Defence Readiness

Parliamentary appearance by James MacCleary

20 May 2026via Hansard
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Defence Readiness

The hon. Gentleman is quite right that defence bonds, as with all bonds, would be borrowing. We have spoken before about the need to increase defence spending through cross-party talks, and a reversal in aid spending would be part of an overall package of how we would budget in the future. One way of doing that, which we have looked at and will propose later today, is rejoining a customs union with the European Union, which would generate increased spending. Those bonds would help to modernise o

20 May 2026via UK Parliament Hansard
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Defence Readiness

The right hon. Member enjoys raising the coalition quite a lot. You are talking about the nuclear submarines, aren’t you? That is what you asked about.

20 May 2026via UK Parliament Hansard
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Spoke in debate: Points of Order

Parliamentary appearance by James MacCleary

29 Apr 2026via Hansard
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Points of Order

rose—

29 Apr 2026via UK Parliament Hansard
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Points of Order

Further to that point of order, Mr Speaker. It seems that the right hon. Member for Newark (Robert Jenrick) was very busy yesterday, as alarmed residents in the town of Seaford in my constituency reported sighting him too. He was apparently there campaigning to support the Reform candidate for Seaford North, who is set to lose his seat to the Liberal Democrats. I understand that it is a common courtesy in this place for Members to inform one another of official visits to their constituencies, bu

29 Apr 2026via UK Parliament Hansard
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Voted AYE on: Privilege

James MacCleary voted AYE on 'Privilege' (223-335, defeated)

28 Apr 2026AYEvia Commons Divisions API
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Voted NO on: Draft Asylum Seekers (Reception Conditions) (Amendment) Regulations 2026

James MacCleary voted NO on 'Draft Asylum Seekers (Reception Conditions) (Amendment) Regulations 2026' (308-81, passed)

28 Apr 2026NOvia Commons Divisions API
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Voted NO on: Pension Schemes Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendments 15 to 24, 27, 30 to 34, 36, 38 to 42, 83 and 88, insist on Amendments 88C, 88E to 88P, 88R, 88S and 88W, and propose Amendments (a) to (j) in lieu of Amendments 88A, 88T, 88U and 88V

James MacCleary voted NO on 'Pension Schemes Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendments 15 to 24, 27, 30 to 34, 36, 38 to 42, 83 and 88, insist on Amendments 88C, 88E to 88P, 88R, 88S and 88W, and propose Amendments (a) to (j) in lieu of Amendments 88A, 88T, 88U and 88V' (335-158, passed)

28 Apr 2026NOvia Commons Divisions API
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Voted NO on: Draft Asylum Seekers (Reception Conditions) (Amendment) Regulations 2026

James MacCleary voted NO on 'Draft Asylum Seekers (Reception Conditions) (Amendment) Regulations 2026' (308-81, passed)

28 Apr 2026NOvia Commons Divisions API
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Voted NO on: Pension Schemes Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendments 15 to 24, 27, 30 to 34, 36, 38 to 42, 83 and 88, insist on Amendments 88C, 88E to 88P, 88R, 88S and 88W, and propose Amendments (a) to (j) in lieu of Amendments 88A, 88T, 88U and 88V

James MacCleary voted NO on 'Pension Schemes Bill: motion to disagree with Lords Amendments 15 to 24, 27, 30 to 34, 36, 38 to 42, 83 and 88, insist on Amendments 88C, 88E to 88P, 88R, 88S and 88W, and propose Amendments (a) to (j) in lieu of Amendments 88A, 88T, 88U and 88V' (335-158, passed)

28 Apr 2026NOvia Commons Divisions API
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Voted AYE on: Privilege

James MacCleary voted AYE on 'Privilege' (223-335, defeated)

28 Apr 2026AYEvia Commons Divisions API