Private Members’ Bills
This briefing describes the stages a bill goes through when it is introduced to the House of Commons as a private member's bill.
Short Money is allocated to opposition parties to support them in their parliamentary duties. Allocations are based on a party’s performance at the previous election.
Short Money – funding to support opposition parties – was introduced in 1975.
Short Money is made available to all opposition parties in the House of Commons that secured either two seats, or one seat and more than 150,000 votes, at the previous General Election. Short Money is not available to parties whose Members have not sworn the oath. A separate analogous scheme, Representative Money, was introduced in 2006 for parties whose Members had not taken the oath.
The Short Money scheme has three components:
The scheme is administered under a resolution of the House of 26 May 1999, as amended by a resolution of 23 March 2016, and consolidated and updated (PDF) by the Members Estimate Committee.
The amounts available to the parties from the each of the three components in the financial year commencing 1 April 2024 are set out below:
Each component is uprated annually on 1 April by the percentage increase in the consumer price index in the year to the previous December. Allocations throughout a Parliament are based on the results of the previous General Election.
Election years
In a general election year, amounts payable are revised, in the light of the results of the General Election. As a general election has just taken place, revised amounts for the remainder of 2024/25 will be calculated on the basis of those results. Pre-election annual amounts (based on the 2019 general election results) will also be pro-rated for the period up to the general election.
Funding for small parliamentary parties
The funding available to parties with five or fewer Members is subject to a floor and ceiling, set at 50% and 150%, respectively, of the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority’s (IPSA) staffing budget for non-London area MPs. For 2024/25, the staffing budget for non-London MPs is £250,820:
If qualifying parties with five or fewer MPs are entitled to an amount between the floor and the ceiling, they receive that amount.
In the 2024 Parliament, five parties with five or fewer MPs qualify for Short Money: the Democratic Unionist Party; the Green Party; Plaid Cymru; Reform; and the Social Democratic and Labour Party.
Accounting for Short Money
Parties claiming Short Money must provide the Accounting Officer of the House of Commons (the Clerk of the House) with an auditor’s certificate confirming that all expenses claimed were incurred exclusively in relation to the party’s Parliamentary business. In addition, parties have to provide information on staff employed and other costs funded through Short Money.
The required reports from qualifying parties from the 2016/17 financial year onwards can be found on the Financial Assistance to Opposition Parties section of the House of Commons’ Freedom of Information webpages.
This briefing describes the stages a bill goes through when it is introduced to the House of Commons as a private member's bill.
A briefing paper which "maps" (or summarises) the main elements of the United Kingdom's uncodified constitution.
Maiden speeches made by newly elected MPs since 1918, with links to Hansard where available.