The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 497 contributions

Speeches by Mayer.

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

Showing 461480 of 497 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
5 Feb 2025 Gambling Harms

Will my hon. Friend give way?

healthcrimesocial-care
6
5 Feb 2025 Gambling Harms

What does my hon. Friend think about online games that are not gambling, but in which, when someone loses a turn, they are immediately presented with something like an online app roulette wheel to win an extra game? Is that normalising gambling?

healthcrimesocial-care
42
30 Jan 2025 Local Post Offices

I commend the hon. Member for Taunton and Wellington (Gideon Amos) on securing this important debate. I think that most Members and most people are pro-post office. After all, post offices are part of the fabric of our nation. Many Members of my age were brought up on Postman Pat and his black and white cat. It would n

local-governmenteconomy-jobsculture-community
723
29 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 555)

You were talking about focus groups and about how you are the media for your organisation. I was wondering about the name of the organisation, Active Travel England. Do you get the impression that people out there have the faintest idea what active travel is? What do you do to try to explain what it is? Would it be bet

76
29 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 555)

How does your approach to increasing cycling and walking differ between, say, cities, market towns and more rural areas?

19
29 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 555)

Obviously, there is very different physical geography in different places. It is flat in East Anglia and hilly in the west country. Does that have a big impact on the interventions that you think need to be taken?

38
29 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 555)

Finally, presumably across the country, there are a lot of similarities. In my constituency we have a canal towpath. It is the Grand Union Canal; it goes all the way up the country. To what extent do you look at how walking and cycling have worked in one place like that, particularly when it is a piece of infrastructur

73
29 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 555)

Sticking with the devolution theme, generically, we would all be interested in what impact you think the additional devolution is going to have potentially on cycling and walking. You alluded to the fact that highways and local transport powers are split when there is an MCA at the moment, with them residing still in l

213
29 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 555)

With this changed landscape, presumably you are working through how you as an organisation are going to have to work differently. Have you thought about whether you might need any additional resources and powers? Maybe you need fewer; I don’t know. What is your thinking on that at the moment?

50
27 Jan 2025 Creative Industries

South Side Studios in Leighton Buzzard repurposes vacant spaces on the high street, which brings people to the high street. We also have the Peppercorn team, who want a cultural and heritage centre, which would bring people into the town centre. Does my hon. Friend agree that cultural industries can bring growth to not

culture-communityeconomy-jobseducation
62
22 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 554)

Following on from that, in terms of the structure of GBR, are you suggesting, therefore, that it would be structured around MCAs that exist at the moment and further bits of devolution? At the moment, if you look at a Network Rail region, it is very different. There are triangles that go into London, whereas Mayors hav

116
22 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 554)

In light of this Government’s key interest in regional devolution, are there plans to regionalise the structure of GBR. If so, how will that work?

25
22 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 554)

Unsurprisingly, we have been talking about railways and a lot of railway stakeholders. What stakeholders from other forms of transport are you engaging with at the moment, particularly buses? Rail replacement services, one day, will be a big issue; and ticketing is an issue of real concern to passengers who want to go

67
22 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 554)

Laura, do you have a role in the development of the Department’s wider rail strategy?

15
15 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 608)

You spoke before, and in your report, about CRSTS money that has gone to MCAs. You have also been talking a lot today about the need for clear leadership, proper delegation, accountability and perhaps removing things from everyday politics. Do you see any contradiction? Obviously, a pot of money like CRSTS is going to

394
15 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 608)

To what extent is it your assessment that for a lot of these projects the budget is set incorrectly at the outset, and they cost what they were going to cost? To what extent is money being wasted on projects because of poor management or changing your mind midway through?

50
15 Jan 2025 Local Government Reorganisation

One effect of creating more strategic authorities appears to be the splitting of transport and highways powers in more areas. Will the Minister provide assurances that this will not slow down the delivery of capital projects that are necessary to achieve economic growth?

local-governmenteconomy-jobsfiscal-policy
43
15 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 608)

Sir John, you have spoken quite a bit about the opportunities with devolving more budgets and powers to regional and local authorities when it comes to transport infrastructure. I wonder if you might expand on some of the opportunities, but also perhaps highlight some of the risks of taking that approach. Sir John Armi

540
15 Jan 2025Transport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 608)

It has, yes, but we will go on to that anyway. What is the National Infrastructure Commission assessment of the DFT’s ability to control costs on big infrastructure projects? Sir John Armitt: You come back to the point that Julia was just making at the end. The most important person in any project is the client. It is

131
18 Dec 2024 BBC: Funding

My area has excellent regional news coverage, including BBC Three Counties Radio and “Look East”. However, back in 2022, a decision was taken that has meant that my regional politics programme is now recorded more than 100 miles away from my constituency. Given that all news is local, would my hon. Friend care to comme

culture-communityeconomy-jobsfiscal-policy
80
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.