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 101120 of 282 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

I am enormously concerned. I was concerned when I woke up this morning, and I am even more concerned after hearing the intervention from our Chancellor: no certainty, confidence plummeting, and the promise of more taxes to follow.

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38
4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

I agree with the hon. Gentleman. There is so much that we in this House and those in the Government—if they are minded to do so—can do to alleviate the burden on business. It is hard to run a business at the best of times, and it is even harder when the Government seek to be a headwind, rather than a tailwind.

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62
4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

To coin a phrase, we are not going to balance the books of local government on the back of entrepreneurial businesses that are keeping our high streets alive, providing services for the community and allowing our economy to grow.

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39
4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

I am not sure that we were in charge in the particular area that the hon. Gentleman has mentioned, but I am pleased to know that, like so many of us, he had his first experience of work—his first leg-up, his first work opportunity—in the retail and hospitality sector. It is hugely important, and gives people great oppo

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4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

I will, but I suspect that I should then make a bit more progress.

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4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

I absolutely agree. We are all here individually today representing our fantastic constituencies, our wonderful high streets and our entrepreneurial businesses—those residents and constituents who seek to be employed and contribute to a growing part of our economy. That is why we in the Opposition are here to talk abou

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4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

So many family businesses will be devastated by the family business death tax introduced by the Labour party. We often hear about the plight of farmers and food producers, but family businesses are even more numerous. If you have survived Labour’s job tax, if you have survived Labour’s more than doubling of business ra

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4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

I hope that the hon. Lady is rising to commit herself to repealing them too.

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30 Oct 2025Topical Questions

I will save time, Mr Speaker, by not mentioning the 13 leading business organisations that have all called for certainty now—not well-intentioned future consultations on implementation, but certainty now, because jobs and the economy are bleeding out. The Secretary of State will know that even the Resolution Foundation

economy-jobslabour-marketenergy
70
30 Oct 2025Topical Questions

I welcome the team to their significant roles for the United Kingdom. This week, the other place voted for five reasonable amendments to the Employment Rights Bill, representing a meaningful compromise with cross-party support to mitigate some of the worst of the damage caused by the Bill. As the Office for Budget Resp

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102
14 Sept 2025 Employment Rights Bill

I welcome the new Secretary of State to his place, and congratulate him as well as the hon. Members for Halifax (Kate Dearden) and for Rhondda and Ogmore (Chris Bryant) on their appointments. His is a vital role in Government, and it will surely be a delight and a privilege for him to champion our hard-working, innovat

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14 Sept 2025 Employment Rights Bill

I will happily give way if the hon. Gentleman will talk about the other organisations that will do a brilliant job of representing employees.

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14 Sept 2025 Employment Rights Bill

The shadow Minister absolutely understands that. He does so and understands the implication of clause 23 from having spoken to Make UK, the CBI, the Institute of Directors, the British Chambers of Commerce and the Federation of Small Businesses, all of whom urge the Government to rethink on this clause. Business does n

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91
14 Sept 2025 Employment Rights Bill

Of course not all dismissals are unfair, but if it was not a process that ended up in court or in a tribunal, we would not be facing a backlog of 491,000 individuals with current open cases—by the Government’s own figures—and business organisations would not be citing legal fees in that order of magnitude.

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54
14 Sept 2025 Employment Rights Bill

My right hon. Friend, with his experience, is exactly right. Just think about the impact on a small business of a fee of that magnitude and the length of time it takes to get justice. What is going to happen? This is a really important point. Those on the Government Benches will be living this reality over the remainde

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14 Sept 2025 Employment Rights Bill

The hon. Member has probably wilfully misinterpreted what I said. I am talking about the right for individuals to be represented by a trade union or by a qualified professional from another domain, such as a qualified lawyer.

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14 Sept 2025 Employment Rights Bill

Of course I will give way to the hon. Gentleman—we are missing him already.

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14 Sept 2025 Employment Rights Bill

The hon. Member has done a great deal of work on the Bill, and it is a great shame that he was cut short in his prime, but with respect the point is about choice for the individual. In many cases, the long-standing right will be to be represented by a trade union, but it could also be a mediator or a qualified professi

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2 Sept 2025 Hospitality Sector

I do agree. My hon. Friend puts it extremely well. It has been an enormously difficult summer. The weather should have been a tailwind, but the tailwind was not significant enough to offset the headwind of the impact of that jobs tax. And who does it hit? Labour Members say that they stand up for opportunities for youn

economy-jobscost-of-livinglocal-government
269
2 Sept 2025 Hospitality Sector

As it happens, I was in Edinburgh yesterday, talking to representatives of the hospitality sector and the hard-pressed tourist sector, and they made exactly the same point to me. This is unnecessary. It did not need to be this way. And to what end? An increase in the jobs tax to fund tax cuts for Mauritians and cookery

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