Students of legislative behaviour appear to agree with Mayhew’s starting point, and consider MPs as ‘single minded seekers of re-election’. Consequently, most of the things MPs do in the present are attributed to their individual desire to future re-election. However, within the premises of legislative studies, little attention has been paid to whether MP behaviour in parliament indeed affects electoral performance. This paper aims at lessening this gap by investigating the role of policy issues in determining one’s electoral fate. I look at the occurrence of agricultural and rural development issues within Hungarian MPs’ questioning practice in parliament as well as account for the level of specialization within the legislative career of the MP by controlling for membership in the Agricultural Committee across five electoral terms. To establish the electoral connection, these two kinds of activities will be contrasted to the population setup of the MPs constituencies in terms of their rural character. A greater emphasis on agricultural issues in parliament is hypothesized to be reflected in the electoral performance of the legislators in constituencies with a larger proportion of agricultural population.