Who are the most rebellious MPs across different policy areas?
Who toes the line?
This interactive data visualisation is a prototype for showing which MPs have rebelled against their own party line in voting for a particular bill. We've shown the bills categorised as "policies" - e.g. "Terrorism Laws" - and shown which are the top rebels for bills in those categories. The most rebellious MPs are shown above the thick red line, with the least rebellious below the line. The policy being displayed can be changed by clicking the pointing hands.
It is left up to the viewer to decide if these rebels are seen as "free-thinkers" or "trouble-makers".
By Premasagar Rose, Peter Cook and Chris James.
Created for Rewired State's Parliament Hack 2012 hack weekend.
We won the award for making Parliament more transparent.
In the House of Commons, there is a thick red line on the floor by both the government's and the opposition benches. The lines are supposedly two sword-lengths apart, and all members are expected to keep behind their line, to keep order and prevent physical attacks between opposing members.
Other than generally improving the look and experience of using the tool, we would have loved to include some engagement mechanism where a person could enter, say, a postcode to display his or her own MP and see whether the MP sticks their neck out on certain issues or stays close to the party and, therefore, whether the MP truly represents the views of their constituent. We'd then like to integrate easy ways for the viewer to contact their MP to communicate their views.
Would also like to include:
- Contextual information about each MP, their voting record and their constituency.
- Other indicators of "free-thinking", such as which MPs introduce their own new bills to Parliament.
- Information about which rebellions were made in the face of three-line whips or other measures (this particular data is not made public at present).
We have primarily used voting data made available on Public Whip, in addition to some MP data from They Work For You.
While both Public Whip and They Work For You offer data downloads and APIs, the particular groupings of bills and votes that we needed meant that we needed to resort to "scraping" - i.e. plucking bits of data straight out of the web pages.
We used a homegrown Node.js scraper module called Noodle to compile the data set from many hundreds of separate web pages. The compiled data set (collected on 25th November, 2012) is available in our open source repository. The repository itself can be copied and improved.
Thank you, Public Whip and They Work For You.