The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 677 contributions

Speeches by Carns.

Every Hansard contribution by Al Carns this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

Showing 341360 of 677 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 18 of 34Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

I have been really clear: I have been working with veterans across the whole UK, with Northern Ireland and with the commissioners to ensure that the protections that we put in place are written into legislation and are well thought-through, so that the process does not become the punishment. People have said in Norther

defence
199
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

I thank my hon. Friend for his list. This Government have come into power and put in place a very clear, concise programme to increase recruitment and retention. There is a list: there is the armed forces discovery scheme, zig-zag careers, and the cyber direct entry scheme; the first cohort graduated in November ’25. W

defence
178
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

I thank my hon. Friend for his comments. The reality is that the last Act was opposed by every part of the Northern Ireland system, groups across the military and civilians in Northern Ireland. It left our veterans in a legal wild west. The honest answer is that our military will always adhere to the law, and to the hi

defence
168
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

In my last role, I had considerable dealings with the service justice system. I have been to visit the Defence Serious Crime Command and had a look at the victim support units that it has established, and I can say that since 2021 there has been a huge amount of revamping and rebuilding of the service justice system. I

defence
70
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

There has been no impact on our special forces recruitment. The SAS is the tip of the spear, one of the best regiments in the world. It will continue to be so, and I have no doubt that it will continue to attract the very best of our armed forces to join and serve in its ranks.

defence
57
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

I thank the hon. Member for his—as always—well-thought-through contribution. We have made our perspective clear: we must protect our veterans from the process being wielded as a punishment, and we must also ensure that none of the terrorists who caused 90% of the casualties in Northern Ireland can rewrite history to su

defence
90
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

I have made it very clear that anyone who served in Northern Ireland, and indeed any veteran, will receive the full legal and welfare support of the Ministry of Defence. We saw that in the Soldier F case, and we will see it in any case that goes through. The full weight of the Ministry of Defence will be provided to pr

defence
82
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

The hon. Member knows better than I the difficulties of Northern Ireland politics. My role in this is to ensure that veterans are protected. I speak to the Northern Ireland Veterans Commissioner on a weekly basis for hours on end to make sure that we are defining, refining and implementing the correct protections for o

defence
82
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

I have 100% respect for the views of anyone who has served in our armed forces, and I am willing to sit down and talk through, in detail, any of the statistics that we have in the Ministry of Defence that would show that statistics do not necessarily justify some of the comments that were made. I am happy to discuss th

defence
67
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

This Labour Government are committed to renewing the contract with those who serve, and our commitment is reflected in our actions. That is why we have given our armed forces the largest pay rise in 20 years, committed to invest £9 billion to fix forces homes, scrapped 100 out-of-date medical policies for entry standar

defence
464
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

I have worked very closely with those in the Northern Ireland Office on this issue, and I will allow them to come up with the answer, but from our perspective the legacy commission as a whole has the most powers to review the evidence that has gone through. It will get to truth, reconciliation and justice better than a

defence
97
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

No, I would join the Royal Marines.

defence
7
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

This Government have an exceptional record on supporting our veterans. We put more money into veterans than any other Government in the past 10 years. We put £50 million into Valour. We have enhanced the Op Restore programme. Op Courage on mental health has now got £21 million and has rolled out. Our career transition

defence
95
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

The reality is that the last Government’s legacy Act made promises that could not be kept, and explaining why to our veterans community is exceptionally difficult, and I will not lie on that. On the same hand, we have been clear that inquests that were started by the last Government, but stopped—such as Loughgall in 20

defence
78
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

The Haddon-Cave inquiry is an independent inquiry established by the last Government, and we must allow that to continue. We are focused today on ensuring that the correct protections are in place and written into law to ensure that no veteran who served so valiantly in Northern Ireland has any concerns about the North

defence
69
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

It is clear that the Government have our armed forces’ back. I have just spelled out a whole list of recruitment and retention initiatives. Indeed, we have individuals with the most military experience sat within the Department in the political space. They understand the line that they walk—they have walked it several

defence
61
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

I have spoken to several of the generals who have raised these concerns. I have spoken to the associations connected to a variety of organisations across the group, and I have spoken to active members of those organisations to ensure that statistics are communicated effectively and people are representing what is and w

defence
124
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

For almost a year and a half now, I have been in constant discussion with various veterans groups, whether that is co-ordinated by the Royal British Legion or whether that is individuals from our intelligence community, our special forces community or the Parachute Regiment, all the way through to line infantry members

defence
123
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

I fundamentally disagree. We hold our British forces, whether it be the Army, the Navy or the Air Force, to the highest legal standard. We always will, and it is what separates us from terrorists or dictatorships. I would be interested to read the French document so that we could have a discussion offline and see wheth

defence
66
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

This is not giving into the IRA’s demands in any way, shape or form; this is about truth, justice and reconciliation. It is about taking those three different groups of people—veterans; the families of those who have lost loved ones, who could be civilians or members of the PSNI or the RUC; and, families who have lost

defence
128
← PreviousPage 18 of 34 · click a debate to open the transcript with this MP’s speeches highlightedNext →
Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.