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 4160 of 677 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Sixth sitting)

I place on the record again everything that I have just said, which of course was about the NATO status of forces agreement and the changes that we want to make to ensure that UK law is reinforced here in this country, while also establishing a clear and precise relationship with individuals who come here under the sta

defence
94
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Sixth sitting)

The clause amends section 2(4) of the Visiting Forces Act 1952 to make it explicit that a visiting force’s service court cannot impose a sentence of capital punishment while conducting proceedings in the United Kingdom. Under existing legislation, a scenario could potentially arise where a NATO sending state requests t

defence
285
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Seventh sitting)

Very kind. Question put, That the clause be read a Second time.

defencetechnologylabour-market
12
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Seventh sitting)

Our aim is to ensure that the decisions in the plan are robust and support the development of current and future capabilities to help drive the transformation of the armed forces, as described in the strategic defence review. It will be an affordable, deliverable programme to transform our armed forces, and it will hig

defencetechnologylabour-market
127
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Seventh sitting)

The DIP will be an affordable, deliverable programme to transform our armed forces. I hope I have provided the necessary reassurance to the hon. Member and, on those grounds, I ask him not to press the new clause.

defencetechnologylabour-market
38
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Seventh sitting)

I thank the right hon. Member for his views on the Bill and acknowledge his request for us to publish a defence readiness plan that must include information about the numbers and readiness of the reserve forces. One of the main reasons we are underinsured, underprepared and under attack is the systemic underfunding of

defencetechnologylabour-market
312
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Seventh sitting)

The reality is that we are already spending. We have awarded more than 1,200 major contracts since the election. There is a £1 billion contract for military helicopters in Yeovil, £500 million has been invested in state-of-the-art British Typhoon jets, and there has been a £100 million boost for the RAF P-8 submarine-h

defencetechnologylabour-market
103
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Seventh sitting)

I thank the right hon. Member for Rayleigh and Wickford for tabling new clause 16. The Defence Secretary has been really clear that we are working flat out to finalise the defence investment plan. I think it was a slip of the tongue that needs to be corrected in Hansard—

defencetechnologylabour-market
50
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Seventh sitting)

It has everything to do with it. The Committee needs to understand the details of what has been left, because it has everything to do with it. We cannot take anything in isolation; it is all combined. As a result, we have a deeply complex problem set to deal with.

defencetechnologylabour-market
50
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Seventh sitting)

My hon. Friend highlights that this is not just a multifaceted problem within defence or the security architecture of the nation, but a consequence of what the broader Government inherited collectively. If not over 14 years, at least in the last four years, we saw Ministers change at such a fast rate, we ceded responsi

defencetechnologylabour-market
112
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Seventh sitting)

The right hon. Gentleman left a massively hollowed-out and underfunded defence.

defencetechnologylabour-market
11
16 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Seventh sitting)

No. The right hon. Gentleman can wait two minutes.

defencetechnologylabour-market
9
14 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Fourth sitting)

Clause 17 will strengthen the duty of commanding officers to report allegations of serious offences to the service police. It removes an existing limitation where a commanding officer is obliged to report only a suspected schedule 2 offence committed by someone under their command. Under clause 17, where a commanding o

defence
145
14 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Fourth sitting)

The clauses will enhance the ability of our military police forces and our provost marshals to enact service justice. These measures will make the forces safer, enable them to look after the victims, and support their freedom to operate within the military system. Question put and agreed to. Clause 13 accordingly order

defence
89
14 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Fourth sitting)

Clause 18 gives a commanding officer the power to award a punishment of service detention to a “corporal, bombardier, lance sergeant or lance corporal of Horse in any of His Majesty’s military forces”. Those are OR-4 ranks, according to the NATO military rank codes. The power may be used only by commanding officers wit

defence
399
14 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Fourth sitting)

The purpose of clause 13 is to extend the powers of judge advocates to enable them to issue search warrants, which can include other premises that are occupied or controlled by a person subject to service law, or a civilian subject to service discipline, but are not necessarily occupied as a residence. Examples include

defence
651
14 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Fourth sitting)

Commanding officers should always report an issue if they see one. With this change, they will have to and will be held to account. Question put and agreed to. Clause 17 accordingly ordered to stand part of the Bill. Clause 18 Summary hearings: punishments available to commanding officers Question proposed, That the cl

defence
58
14 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Fourth sitting)

Is the hon. Gentleman talking about a lack of capacity of senior officers to sit on a court martial board, or inefficiency on the court martial board?

defence
27
14 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Fourth sitting)

As someone goes across the single services and joint staff colleges, there will be different sections where they are trained on administering justice and the rights of a commanding officer. Importantly, there will be joint standing procedures produced around the clause, which everyone who becomes a commanding officer w

defence
91
14 Apr 2026Armed Forces Bill (Fourth sitting)

I thank the right hon. Member for Rayleigh and Wickford for tabling amendment 9, which seeks to add retired officers to those who are qualified for court martial membership. However, I believe that the amendment is unnecessary and most likely counterproductive. The first argument made was about capacity and the lack of

defence
237
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.