More than 100 new Labour MPs have landed roles on Commons select committees, new LabourList analysis of elections held this week reveals.
Our research suggests MPs newly elected in Labour’s July landslide bagged four in every five places available on the high-profile committees, tasked with holding government to account across departments.
It means almost half of the new 2024 intake are now on select committees. A string of others became ministers or parliamentary private secretaries soon after the election.
Some 116 MPs who joined the Commons just a few months ago have now been elected to committees through an internal Parliamentary Labour Party ballot. Labour ruled that at least half of its members on each committee should be women.
READ MORE: Commons select committee members: Full list of Labour MPs picked for roles
Among the 143 Labour MPs now holding committee roles, 75 are women and 68 men. Among the new intake, there was a 50/50 split, with 58 men and 58 women elected.
Only three MPs were elected who have been in parliament since Labour last came into power in 1997: Derek Twigg, Barry Gardiner and Siobhain McDonagh. Only 20 have been in the Commons since at least 2017.
Our research includes results for Labour MPs only, and across all committees where results were made available via Labour or MPs themselves sharing the news on social media.
At the election Labour gained 209 seats to take its MP tally to 411, though seven MPs have since lost the whip and one resigned it. Some 243 MPs were new in 2024, however, with MPs in newly held seats accompanied by others who replaced standing-down MPs in seats Labour already held.
Full results were not immediately available for the Northern Ireland committee. Labour and Commons officials have been approached for comment.
READ MORE: Labour’s first Budget 2024: What policies could Rachel Reeves announce?
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