The government tonight saw off a backbench Tory revolt to defeat measures which would have blocked trade deals with any country guilty of genocide.
The vote came after the House of Lords three times passed amendments targeted at preventing a deal with China while it remains under accusation of committing genocide against the Uighur Muslims of Xinjiang province.
The so-called “genocide amendment” to the government’s Trade Bill was defeated by 318 votes to 300 in the House of Commons, despite passionate speeches in its favour from Tory MPs.
Some 29 Conservative MPs rebelled including former health secretary Jeremy Hunt, ex-party leader Iain Duncan Smith and former Brexit secretary David Davis.
The amendment would have created a parliamentary judicial committee to make independent assessments of whether allegations of genocide are substantiated.