mnis
is an R package to pull data from the UK parliament through the Members’ Name Information Service API, with the ability to tidy that data into object classes that are easy to work with in R. It emphasises simplicity and ease of use, so that users unfamiliar with APIs can easily retrieve large volumes of high quality data. The Members’ Name Information Service API does not require registration or a token, and is very generous with the number of requests allowed (it is unclear what limits are applied to the API, but I have yet to hit the limit, aside from custom requests using mnis_base
.)
mnis
is for researchers, journalists and developers who follow the UK parliament for work, pleasure or some combination thereof. It has a sister package called hansard
that retrieves data from a different API, and while there is some overlap in function between the two packages, mnis
is focused on retrieving data on individual MPs and Peers, government departments, cabinet and shadow cabinet positions, other parliamentary and political roles, and parliamentary reference data.
All functions requests data in JSON format and parse it to a tibble, except for mnis_constituency_results
which returns a list (with constituency details) and a tibble (with constituency election results).
Functions are divided into three main types:
Reference Functions
Additional Information Functions
Fixed Scope Functions
There is also the mnis_base
function that allows for fully flexibility in all API requests, by allowing you to fully specify the URL you want to call data from.
install.packages("mnis")
install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("EvanOdell/mnis")
library(mnis)
The mnis_base()
function accepts requests to the mnis API. The full list of request options is available on the mnis website: http://data.parliament.uk/membersdataplatform/memberquery.aspx
A series of functions to return reference data. This data is useful for providing parameters for other function calls. These functions do not accept any arguments.
ref_address_types()
ref_answering_bodies()
ref_areas()
ref_area_types()
ref_biography_categories()
ref_cabinets()
ref_committees()
ref_committee_types()
ref_constituencies()
ref_constituency_areas()
ref_constituency_types()
ref_countries()
ref_departments()
ref_disqualification_types()
ref_elections()
ref_election_types()
ref_end_reasons()
ref_experience_types()
ref_government_post_departments()
ref_government_posts()
ref_government_ranks()
ref_honourary_prefixes()
ref_honour_lists()
ref_honours()
ref_interest_categories()
ref_lords_membership_types()
ref_lords_ranks()
ref_opposition_post_departments()
ref_opposition_posts()
ref_opposition_ranks()
ref_other_parliaments()
ref_parliamentary_posts()
ref_parliamentary_ranks()
ref_parliament_types()
ref_parties()
ref_party_sub_types()
ref_photo_outputs()
ref_statuses()
ref_titles()
library(mnis)
x <- ref_titles(tidy = FALSE)
x
# Title_Id Name
#1 22 Canon
#2 1 Dame
#4 3 Hon
#3 2 Dr
#6 5 Lord
#5 4 Lady
#7 6 Lt Col
#8 21 Lt Gen
#9 7 Miss
#10 8 Mr
#11 9 Mrs
#12 10 Ms
#13 11 Prof
#14 19 Professor
#15 12 Rev
#16 13 Rev Dr
#17 18 Revd
#18 20 Revd Dr
#20 15 Sir
#19 14 Reverend
#21 16 The Rev
#22 17 The Reverend
With the tidy
parameter
library(mnis)
x <- ref_titles(tidy = TRUE)
x
# title_id name
#1 22 Canon
#2 1 Dame
#4 3 Hon
#3 2 Dr
#6 5 Lord
#5 4 Lady
#7 6 Lt Col
#8 21 Lt Gen
#9 7 Miss
#10 8 Mr
#11 9 Mrs
#12 10 Ms
#13 11 Prof
#14 19 Professor
#15 12 Rev
#16 13 Rev Dr
#17 18 Revd
#18 20 Revd Dr
#20 15 Sir
#19 14 Reverend
#21 16 The Rev
#22 17 The Reverend
mnis_additional()
mnis_addresses()
mnis_basic_details()
mnis_biography_entries()
mnis_committees()
mnis_constituencies()
mnis_elections_contested
mnis_experiences()
mnis_government_posts()
mnis_honours()
mnis_house_memberships()
mnis_interests()
mnis_known_as()
mnis_maiden_speeches()
mnis_opposition_posts()
mnis_other_parliaments()
mnis_parliamentary_posts()
mnis_parties()
mnis_preferred_names()
mnis_staff()
mnis_statuses()
The mnis_extra()
function acts as a wrapper to the additional information functions. By default it calls all functions, which is equivalent to mnis_full_biog()
.
There are seven fixed scope functions that return ready-made datasets. They are:
mnis_party_state()
mnis_constituency_results()
mnis_department()
mnis_general_election_results()
mnis_lords_type()
mnis_member_date()
mnis_party_state()
Fixed scope example, returning the state of all parties in the House of Commons, as reported on 2017-04-04.
library(mnis)
x <- mnis_party_state()
x
# house party_id party_name party_male_count party_female_count party_total_count
# 1 Commons 4 Conservative 260 70 330
# 2 Commons 15 Labour 128 101 229
# 3 Commons 29 Scottish National Party 36 18 54
# 4 Commons 17 Liberal Democrat 8 1 9
# 5 Commons 7 Democratic Unionist Party 8 0 8
# 6 Commons 8 Independent 1 3 4
# 7 Commons 30 Sinn Fein 4 0 4
# 8 Commons 22 Plaid Cymru 2 1 3
# 9 Commons 31 Social Democratic & Labour Party 2 1 3
# 10 Commons 38 Ulster Unionist Party 2 0 2
# 11 Commons 44 Green Party 0 1 1
# 12 Commons 47 Speaker 1 0 1
# 13 Commons 35 UK Independence Party 1 0 1
# 14 Commons 0 Vacant 0 0 1
mnis
contains a parameter option called tidy
with all functions except for mnis_base
. The default variable names are unnecessarily lengthy, repeat the same piece of information several times in a row and contain non-alphanumeric characters. They also use a mixture of camelCase, .
s, @
s and #
s to seperate words in multi-word variable names. tidy
fixes this, and defaults to TRUE, so you won’t have to deal with the clunky and over-complicated default variable names unless you really want to.
There is also an internal function to remove byte-order marks from the API response.