“Labour will create a new Border Security Command, with hundreds of new investigators, intelligence officers, and cross-border police officers.”
Supporting weight ≥ 0.5 with no contradicting evidence — the promise is fulfilled.
2026-01-14 · Ayes: 301, Noes: 110
This division concerns police powers to stop and search people near critical national infrastructure. It is unrelated to the creation of a Border Security Command with investigators and cross-border officers.
Reviewed by Tomasz Mikuś
2025-06-18 · Ayes: 147, Noes: 305
Without access to the specific content of New Clause 43 to the Crime and Policing Bill, the connection to a Border Security Command cannot be determined. The division likely concerns crime and policing rather than border security.
Reviewed by Tomasz Mikuś
2025-05-12 · Ayes: 87, Noes: 404
This division proposes annual reporting on asylum and immigration policy impacts. It does not relate to the creation of a Border Security Command or the hiring of investigators and officers that the promise commits to.
Reviewed by Tomasz Mikuś
2025-05-12 · Ayes: 316, Noes: 95
The Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill's third reading passage is the final Commons approval for legislation that would establish the legal framework and authority for a Border Security Command. Voting Aye advances the bill that enables the promise's implementation.
Reviewed by Tomasz Mikuś
2025-05-12 · Ayes: 94, Noes: 315
This division proposes reporting mechanisms on asylum policy impact, which is distinct from the promise to create a Border Security Command with new personnel. Voting Aye would not directly advance the establishment of the command or its staffing.
Reviewed by Tomasz Mikuś
2025-05-12 · Ayes: 98, Noes: 402
This division concerns mandatory reporting on border and asylum policy effectiveness, not the creation of a Border Security Command. The promise focuses on institutional establishment and staffing, not transparency mechanisms.
Reviewed by Tomasz Mikuś
2025-05-12 · Ayes: 90, Noes: 318
This division concerns parliamentary reporting requirements on asylum and immigration policy effectiveness, not the creation or staffing of a Border Security Command. While both relate to border/asylum policy, voting Aye would not advance the specific promise to establish a new command with investigators and officers.
Reviewed by Tomasz Mikuś
2025-02-10 · Ayes: 333, Noes: 109
The Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill's second reading establishes parliamentary approval for the bill that would create the Border Security Command. Voting Aye advances the legislative foundation for the promise.
Reviewed by Tomasz Mikuś
{
"reason": "Supporting weight ≥ 0.5 with no contradicting evidence — the promise is fulfilled.",
"newStatus": "kept",
"previousStatus": "not_yet_tested"
}See an error? Report an issue