MPs have lost more than 50 days early in the past six months, the E -mail can reveal.
Promised accusations that work presents a 'zombie' parliament, the commons has wasted an entire working week by ending early.
In total, the House rose from 54 times since September before the planned end time – missing a combined 39 hours of parliamentary time.
Last night Tory MPS said that the analysis of the mail suggested that the government was 'in record time' without energy.
Labor was chosen for a mandate for 'change' and Sir Keir Starmer was on the eve of the poll day last July that he was 'ready for the government'.
The prime minister said that his team 'hard prepared', so that they could 'start running on the first day'.
But hours of parliamentary times are now wasted every week – where critics say that the commons 'often shorter hours than a typical high school'.
The house is usually from 2.30 pm to 10.30 pm on a Monday from 11.30 am to 7.30 pm on a Tuesday and Wednesday, and from 9.30 am to 5.30 pm on Thursday.

MPs have lost more than 50 days early in the past six months, the E -mail can reveal. Shown: The House of Commons

Tory Justice spokesperson Robert Jenrick (photo) told the mail: 'Never before has such a new government looked so tired. We already have a zombie government '

In total, the House rose from 54 times since September before the planned end time – missing a combined 39 hours of parliamentary time. Shown: Houses of Parliament
Occasionally it is on a Friday, when the company starts at 9.30 am and runs until 3 pm.
But on various occasions in the past six months, the Commons postponed for hours – including last Tuesday [February 11]When the house rose at 4.41 pm.
On others it rose only a minute before the planned end time – and it was occasionally later than planned.
Some labor sources point their finger on Sue Gray, the deposed staff chef, who, according to them, not fully prepare a legislative agenda before they enter the government.
But others are critical of Lucy Powell, the commons leader, who is responsible for organizing government activities in the commons for not packing the parliamentary timetable.
Last night the government insisted that “the most ambitious legislative program had outlined for every new government in history.”
But Tory Justice spokesperson Robert Jenrick said to the mail: 'Never before has such a new government looked so tired. We already have a zombieering.
'Starmer pretended that Labor had an official plan in the elections. He has wasted his first 6 months and now he scratches his head while the problems with which the national stack is highly confronted.

Some labor sources point their finger on Sue Gray, the deposed staff chef (depicted in the House of Lords after leaving her role), which they claim that they do not fully prepare a legislative agenda before they enter the government

Others are critical of Lucy Powell (photo), the commons leader, who is responsible for organizing government activities in the commons for not packing the parliamentary timetable
'Backbench Labor Parliament members want a four-day week and it seems that this government wants a part-time parliament. No wonder this country has a productivity crisis. '
Tory former cabinet minister Esther Mcvy added: 'This Labor government is not contact out, from ideas and from energy in record time.
'The breaking of a series of election promises and the abandonment of pensioners, farmers and companies with their rotten budget have left the moral of Labor MPs on the ground.
'I suspect that the reason why things in the Lower House collapse are a deliberate tactic to keep Labor MPs away from parliament to prevent them from being planning to remove a starmer.
“But if they don't succeed in removing it, the voters will do it if they get the chance.”
Tory Parliament member Ben Obese injection said it was 'ridiculous' that the parliament 'often shorter hours than a typical high school'.
'It seems incredible that work cannot fulfill the parliamentary schedule when important topics are ignored or hardly allocated for debate.
'Hours valuable parliamentary times are wasted every week. It is extremely frustrating and simply shows how the legislative program of the Wafel-Dunne Labor is. '
![On various occasions in the past six months, the Commons postponed the hours early, including last Tuesday [February 11]When the house was at 4.41 pm instead of 7.30 pm as normal. Shown: file photo](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/16/20/95273343-14403687-image-a-19_1739736514533.jpg)
On various occasions in the past six months, the Commons postponed for hours – including last Tuesday [February 11]When the house was at 4.41 pm instead of 7.30 pm as normal. Shown: file photo

Tory Former cabinet minister Esther McVey (depicted on the counting for her constituency in the general elections of 2024) said: “This Labor government is no contact out, out of ideas and from energy in record time”
And Elliot Keck, head of campaigns at the alliance of the taxpayers, said: 'It is clear as a day that ministers have no answers to the problems of the nation, considering how regularly our legislators click away early …
“Taxpayers expect that MPs are dealing with the problems of the nation, not on their way to their responsibilities.”
A government spokesperson said: “This characterization is completely incorrect. We have outlined the most ambitious legislative program for every new government in history to deliver the plan plan – whereby the parliament is currently debating on important legislation, including border security, asylum and immigration account, Great British Energy Bill, tenant rights law.
“On Thursday, the Modernization Committee has set its early work to make the parliament more effective and to ensure that the commons remains the melting pot of the national debate.”