Timeline
“Inactivity” measures how often a deputy did not cast a For or Against vote on motions they could have voted on — whether absent, or present but not registering, abstaining, or not pressing. A non-vote is not neutral: a motion passes only with a majority of For votes, so being present yet not voting effectively withholds support — counting, in practice, the same as a vote against. Attendance shows how often a deputy at least registered for the sitting.
How is this calculated?
Inactivity % = (Votes available − Voted (for/against)) / Votes available = (11498 − 2201) / 11498 = 80.9%
Registered 11498 · Absent 0
· Votes available 11498
For: 1916 · Against: 285 ·
Abstain: 716 · Did not vote: 8581 ·
Absent: 0
Party loyalty % — Party loyalty is the share of a deputy's ballots cast with their faction's majority stance, over the policy votes they took part in.
ℹ️ Very high inactivity usually means the person served as a minister or Prime Minister (the cabinet doesn't vote) or left parliament mid-term.
Votes most like / Votes most unlike
Share of votes where both deputies cast the same For/Against ballot, over the motions both took part in (at least 50 in common).
Votes most like
- Ingrida Valinskienė 98% agreement
- Arūnė Stirblytė 98% agreement
- Arūnas Valinskas 97% agreement
- Algis Čaplikas 97% agreement
- Andrius Burba 96% agreement
- Dainius Budrys 96% agreement
- Jonas Liesys 96% agreement
- Gintaras Steponavičius 96% agreement
Votes most unlike
- Egidijus Klumbys 43% agreement
- Zigmantas Balčytis 44% agreement
- Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis 50% agreement
- Jonas Ramonas 51% agreement
- Vilija Blinkevičiūtė 52% agreement
- Viktor Uspaskich 53% agreement
- Julius Veselka 54% agreement
- Juozas Olekas 54% agreement