The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 282 contributions

Speeches by Griffith.

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

Showing 181200 of 282 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

I am not surprised that the hon. Lady is a little confused; as I said, the Government have failed to lay out their plan and to afford this House the opportunity to debate it. Everything that we have heard this morning says that the Government have not really thought this through. Steelmaking is complex, intense and hig

economy-jobsenergydefence
90
11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

I will make some progress. It did not need to be this way. My hon. Friend the Member for Brigg and Immingham (Martin Vickers) has been warning of a growing threat since last September. The Mayor of Tees Valley has been asking the Government to present their plan for steel for months. Rob Waltham, the leader of North Li

economy-jobsenergydefence
253
11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

My right hon. Friend the Leader of the Opposition has made it extremely clear that the deal was being negotiated, and the point about it being negotiated is that it would have been concluded after the election.

economy-jobsenergydefence
37
11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

I will make some progress. Millions of other businesses are also struggling with their energy bills, which is why the Chancellor’s tax choices have been so devastating. Steel may be the first domino to topple, but glass, chemicals, cars and concrete are other industries at risk. Does the Prime Minister envisage a whole

economy-jobsenergydefence
79
11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

My right hon. Friend is absolutely right. It is sad to say that Scunthorpe is the victim of exactly that policy: putting ideology before British interests.

economy-jobsenergydefence
26
2 Apr 2025 UK-US Trade and Tariffs

I thank the Secretary of State for advance sight of his statement. Businesses, workers and their families woke up this morning with greater fear and more uncertainty about their future. Tariffs make us all poorer by pushing up costs, suppressing demand and making the pound in our pocket buy less of the things we need.

economy-jobsdefence
935
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

My right hon. Friend makes a serious and important point. I take the Secretary of State in good faith when he says that he desires for his Government to grow the economy—every Government should, and I believe that this Government should as well—but he must recognise that every single action he takes will take us furthe

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
119
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

Let me move on. The biggest flaw of many in this Bill is that, as the hon. Member for Blackley and Middleton South (Graham Stringer) and my right hon. Friend the Member for Beverley and Holderness (Graham Stuart) have both identified, it hands over too much power with too little accountability. There is “a real need to

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
234
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

My right hon. Friend has great wisdom on these matters.

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
10
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

Once again, the Secretary of State has failed to engage on the key issue, which is that British businesses—[Interruption.] It is not funny. British businesses are bleeding out, business confidence is at a record low, unemployment is rising, and all the Government have to talk about is the past, not what they are curren

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
55
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

I am happy to give way if the right hon. Gentleman talks about what he will do to repeal the Employment Rights Bill.

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
23
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

No, I will make some progress. The anti-pub, anti-hospitality agenda goes far beyond this Bill. The jobs tax, the threshold change, the attack on seasonal and flexible working, the more than doubling of business rates, the war on pub banter and the garden smoking ban are all from this Government. Our hospitality indust

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
65
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

The Labour motive is all too plain to see. This is a Labour party that voted 48 times to reject the will of the British people, led by the Prime Minister, who sought a second referendum to overturn that will. I accept that the hon. Member for Birmingham Northfield was not in the House at the time, but he might want to

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
77
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

I will give way to the hon. Member for Birmingham Northfield (Laurence Turner).

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
13
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

I will not, but before I get into further—[Interruption.] I will say something nice about the right hon. Gentleman in a minute. Before I get into detail, let me welcome the Government’s U-turn on their plan to scrap the great British pint. Let us hope that that is the first of many. When I raised that on 26 February, L

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
190
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

I beg to move an amendment, to leave out from “That” to the end of the Question and add: “this House declines to give a Second Reading to the Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords] because it will provide for regulatory alignment with the European Union, and it has been condemned three times by the House of Lord

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
209
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

Of course, Madam Deputy Speaker. I am nearing a conclusion in any case. However, I do think that the issue of product safety—the rules and regulations that govern our economy, as the Secretary of State himself said—is intrinsically linked with trade, mutual recognition and growing the economy by removing trade friction

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
73
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

My right hon. Friend makes an important point. I hope, as the Secretary of State slightly alluded to in his remarks about the ability of a country to make its own rules and regulations, that we will soon be back in the House with a Government statement at which we can celebrate the mother of all Brexit benefits: securi

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
87
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

We will not accept any lessons from the Liberal Democrats about what it takes to Brexit successfully and go back to being an independent nation, but if that is what the hon. Lady will speak about, I look forward to hearing it. To conclude, the Bill is flawed in so many ways. With the best will in the world, Ministers s

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158
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

With the very best will in the world, I think the hon. Lady can do a great deal better than that. As hon. Members have said, this House can legislate. If there are dangerous products, bring those use cases here, and I believe that across the House we will legislate rapidly to protect our constituents’ safety. However,

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
90
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.