The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 91 contributions

Speeches by Costa.

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

Showing 4160 of 91 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
15 Jun 2025Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme

May I begin by welcoming the Government’s motion to put the assurance board on a proper footing, and to introduce a clear policy framework under which the ICGS will operate? As some colleagues have said, the ICGS is an extremely important parliamentary workplace scheme, covering all members of the parliamentary communi

mp-performanceculture-community
918
8 Jun 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

I rise to speak to new clause 74 in my name. First, I thank all Members from parties across the House who signed up to my new clause. I also thank Mr Speaker and his team for the novel offer he made this morning on how we might have dealt with new clause 74. New clause 74 is very simple. It seeks to ensure that promise

housingenvironmentlocal-government
186
8 Jun 2025Social Housing Supply

When a developer pledges to build 40% minimum of affordable housing and obtains outline planning permission on the basis of that pledge, and then, less than 20 months later, seeks to reduce the 40% to 0%, is that acceptable?

housinglocal-governmentfiscal-policy
39
8 Jun 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

I would welcome that. The Government need to take into account Lutterworth East and to ask themselves why a Labour parliamentarian and a Conservative parliamentarian have had to go begging to the Government to look into the matter. The Government purport to want to see more social housing, more affordable housing and m

housingenvironmentlocal-government
126
8 Jun 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

I welcome the hon. Lady’s suggestion, and I would welcome more resources going into local planning teams, but what we have here is a problem, which she may well encounter in her own constituency. Hon. Members should be very careful indeed when developers promise X, Y and Z affordable, social and accessible homes, even

housingenvironmentlocal-government
77
29 Apr 2025 Parthenon Marbles: British Museum Act 1963

I thank the hon. Gentleman for his very valued view. I reiterate that this debate has nothing to do with how the marbles came to be acquired by the British Museum. The hon. Gentleman may well be right to quote that individual. My only interest in this debate is to find out whether, in the 21st century, there is a deal

culture-community
229
29 Apr 2025 Parthenon Marbles: British Museum Act 1963

I thank the hon. Member for citing the welcome example of those artefacts, which I have enjoyed viewing on a number of occasions. I want to ensure that every Member of Parliament and, most importantly, our constituents are able to access and see at first hand some of Greece’s most valued treasures. Let me give some exa

culture-community
176
29 Apr 2025 Parthenon Marbles: British Museum Act 1963

Or in Spalding, or any other principal museum across the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Indeed, the National Museum of Wales in Cardiff would be a prime candidate, as I am sure the Minister for Creative Industries, Arts and Tourism, and many of his Rhondda constituents, would agree. The North Lin

culture-community
770
29 Apr 2025 Parthenon Marbles: British Museum Act 1963

I welcome the contribution of the hon. Member for St Ives (Andrew George), just as I welcome the contributions of the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon) and my right hon. Friend the Member for South Holland and The Deepings (Sir John Hayes). It is not so much about making a gracious gesture. My argument is about

culture-community
154
29 Apr 2025 Parthenon Marbles: British Museum Act 1963

I beg to move, That this House has considered the Parthenon marbles and the British Museum Act 1963. It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Vickers. I declare at the outset that I am the chair of the all-party parliamentary group for Greece, and yesterday I attended a lunch with parliamentarians at the G

culture-community
318
29 Apr 2025 Parthenon Marbles: British Museum Act 1963

I will make a further point first. Let me be clear: this is not a debate about returning all the treasures in the British Museum. If it were, we might be here for another century. I put on record that I collect antiquities, so the idea that they should all be returned to their countries of origin is not one that I shar

culture-community
136
29 Apr 2025 Parthenon Marbles: British Museum Act 1963

Most certainly not. I thank my right hon. Friend for his valued contribution. That is precisely the issue that I do not wish to debate. He may well be absolutely correct to say that these sculptures are of such western significance, and that the way in which they were acquired by the British Museum may have been entire

culture-community
88
29 Apr 2025Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2025-04-29)

Thank you Chair, and thanks to the Committee.

8
29 Apr 2025Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2025-04-29)

The answering Department would be the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government, as it is responsible for planning policy for minerals, which is set out in the national planning policy framework.

32
29 Apr 2025Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2025-04-29)

Good afternoon, Chair, and good afternoon to all the Committee members. Thank you for inviting me and Matt to make a few short submissions before you about this issue. I am applying for this debate because of serious and growing concerns about how quarry developments in England are planned and regulated, particularly r

614
29 Apr 2025Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2025-04-29)

Might I add a connected comment? I have noticed two things: Tarmac is one of the largest companies, certainly in the UK, and one of the challenges that communities have and MPs have faced is trying to find mineral experts who are willing to support the MP or campaign groups about this information. They are frightened o

120
29 Apr 2025Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2025-04-29)

Yes is the answer. As I touched upon, some quarries are converted into landfill sites, which in itself can generate further particulates. The issue of swimming in quarries is one I long remember. For those old enough, in the 1970s there were public broadcasts about the dangers of swimming in quarries, which people like

93
22 Apr 2025 Hair and Beauty Sector: Government Policy

I thank my hon. Friend for securing this important debate. Only a few weeks ago, I visited Sue Davis’s hair salon in Blaby in my constituency, and she introduced me to two of the young people my hon. Friend has in mind, Tegan and Poppy. Does she agree that the measures the Government have brought in not only damage the

economy-jobsfiscal-policylabour-market
91
1 Apr 2025Engagements

Double child rapist and murderer Colin Pitchfork is up for parole for the fifth time. I know the Prime Minister does not have direct control—nor should he—over the Parole Board, but he does have a view. I have asked this of all his predecessors, and I will now put the question to him: does he agree that men who brutall

economy-jobsfiscal-policycost-of-living
82
26 Mar 2025Spring Statement

The Chancellor rightly reminded the House that the British public are watching. Among them are tens of thousands of the most vulnerable pensioners in our society. Will she please explain what is Labour about removing the winter fuel payment from those on £13,500 a year?

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