Four bills originating from government parties passed the House of Commons on Sunday, marking a continuation of the strong start of the government in accomplishing its agenda.Most significant was the Help to Buy Bill, which seeks to reintroduce the Help to Buy scheme repealed in the August 2016 budget. Although this was not including in the Conservative-National Unionist Queen's Speech, it was a feature of the Conservative general election campaign and DrCaeserMD and other Conservatives have made no secret in their desire to restore the programme.However, Conservatives expressed surprise at just how easy it was to pass the bill, with many privately criticising the state of the Traffic-Light Opposition for allowing it to pass to easily.When it came to voting, a poor 73% of Green Party MPs attended, followed by a 93% of Labour MPs, with only the Liberal Democrat MPs all attending the vote. Opposition allies in the United Communists had a 50% attendance rate for the bill.However, even amongst Traffic-Light with poor attendance, the votes were mixed.Significantly, AV200, the shadow secretary of state for communities and local government decided to abstain on the bill, a blow to the new leader of the opposition disclosedoak who has failed to stamp their mark on the party and has failed to protect a core Green achievement.AV200's abstention on a bill contained in his own portfolio, alongside a lack of turnout from Traffic-Light and the perception that the result was a forgone conclusion meant that Opposition MPs were more inclined to vote with their own beliefs.Green MP PM_ME_YOUR_PANZER voted for the bill, whilst akc8, the Labour shadow Brexit secretary and Labour shadow secretary for international development Giraffism went so far as to vote aye.Liberal Democrats could not give disclosedoak any comfort either, however, with Liberal Democrat leader RickCall12, leader of the commons thechattyshow, and m1cha3lm all abstaining.Speaking after the result, Trevism couldn't help himself expressing disappointment."I'm obviously incredibly disappointed to see a policy cast aside that I personally fought for a long time to implement. I can only hope that some of those who voted for the legislation or chose not to vote can understand what they have allowed through the house with minimal scrutiny, but I am confident that the policy's reintroduction will only be in the short term."