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 161180 of 282 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
20 May 2025Business and the Economy

My hon. Friend makes an incredibly important point. I believe that all of us come to this House to try to do our best and to grow the economy, but any Government faced with that terrible metric about the failure rate and formation rate of businesses would be acting immediately, with haste, and reversing so many of the

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74
20 May 2025Business and the Economy

How tragic is it that from Gosport to Gloucester and everywhere between, businesses on our high streets are closing? This Government do not understand that. If they do understand, they do not care, and if they care, they have not acted. The message from this Government to anyone willing to put their capital, time and e

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72
20 May 2025Business and the Economy

I will give way.

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20 May 2025Business and the Economy

I beg to move, That this House regrets that unemployment is rising and causing misery for young people in particular, that this Government has displayed a negligible understanding of business and that investors and entrepreneurs are being driven overseas; further regrets that over 200,000 businesses have closed since L

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463
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

We have had a strong debate this afternoon, with many contributions on both sides. I thank so many of my hon. and right hon. Friends, including my hon. Friends the Members for East Wiltshire (Danny Kruger) and for Beaconsfield (Joy Morrissey), my right hon. Friends the Members for Chingford and Woodford Green (Sir Iain

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
924
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

I am afraid the Minister is as talkative as a haddock when it comes to clarifying his objectives, but perhaps he will confound our expectations when he sums up the debate. Just as the Prime Minister pretends to talk tough on immigration, by the same token he plans to open our borders to an EU youth mobility scheme. Per

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
593
7 May 2025 Trade Negotiations

Thank you for ensuring that the House had the opportunity to hear this statement today, Mr Speaker. Free trade betters us all. It has lifted billions from poverty and has made us the country we are today, and the country that had the ability to join the fight for Europe’s freedom 80 years ago. Unfortunately, this is no

economy-jobsagriculture
664
30 Apr 2025Hospitality Industry

In a grave and exceptionally rare step, five major business groups, including the Confederation of British Industry, Make UK, the Institute of Directors, and the Federation of Small Businesses, have all written to condemn the Employment Rights Bill, and their views are shared by UKHospitality and many others. They say

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114
30 Apr 2025Topical Questions

The Secretary of State says that all the funding required for the nationalisation of British Steel will come out of existing budgets. We have seen his Department’s budget—we had an estimates day debate in the House not long ago—and there was no unallocated pot. Could he be a little more specific about exactly which bud

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60
30 Apr 2025Topical Questions

I thank the Secretary of State for his answer. I think it is widely agreed that the cost of nationalising British Steel could run into the billions. Is he really saying that he plans to raid the previously allocated £2.5 billion green steel fund from the national wealth fund, and how is he doing that given that the nat

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23 Apr 2025 EU Trading Relationship

I will not give way, as everyone has been very good on timing. I will get through my speech to give the Minister as much time as possible to deal with all of the points raised. In all seriousness, across all western European economies, we face a real crisis of trust in politics and a rise in extremism among people who

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916
23 Apr 2025 EU Trading Relationship

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Jeremy. I congratulate the hon. Member for Welwyn Hatfield (Andrew Lewin) on securing this debate. I thank the many colleagues who contributed, and commend your chairmanship, Sir Jeremy, in giving so many colleagues the chance to do so. I also commend the efforts o

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260
21 Apr 2025 British Steel

I thank the Minister for advance sight of her statement, and I join her in thanking the Scunthorpe workers for their efforts over the last few weeks. We are here once again because the Government had no plan—they failed to prepare, they bungled negotiations, and they took too long to listen to the warnings. What do we

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543
11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

I will talk about the difficulties facing steel around the world, but let us just be clear what is happening today: the British people must not have lost their winter fuel allowance and their disability benefits in order that China can walk away from its liabilities, leaving British taxpayers to pick up the bills. Stee

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133
11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

I thank the Secretary of State for taking the time to brief me last night ahead of today’s sitting, and for advance sight of his speech. To fail to prepare is to prepare to fail. What a way to proceed: recalling Parliament for only the sixth occasion since the end of the second world war to debate a Bill published only

economy-jobsenergydefence
259
11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

Disappointingly, there was no answer to my important question about the ONS and whether this asset will sit on the Government’s balance sheet. Perhaps when the Minister winds up, he will provide an answer to that important question that affects the nation’s finances. The markets know, the world knows and we know that t

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202
11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

That is a bit slow. [Interruption.] Go on then.

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11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

I will take an intervention if someone wants to answer this question: has anyone in Government asked the ONS whether, as a result of the powers that are being taken in this Bill, from today British Steel will be classified as publicly owned, whether it has been formally nationalised or not? No answers.

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11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

If they sit down, they might learn something.

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11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

Sit down. From midnight, the Chancellor will be standing behind the payroll, settling every bill with every supplier, even if they are in arrears. If these decisions no longer sit with the plant owner, where does the buck stop? Old Admiralty Building? The Treasury? No. 10? How can other steel providers have any confide

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