The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 226 contributions

Speeches by McDonald.

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

Showing 6180 of 226 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
8 Dec 2025 Employment Rights Bill

Absolutely, and no decent employer should fear any of these measures. Rogue employers were warned that exploitation and arbitrary dismissal would end, but under the compromise, a bad employer may still dismiss someone without reason or justification.

labour-marketeconomy-jobs
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8 Dec 2025 Employment Rights Bill

That is absolutely right, but under this compromise, a bad employer may still dismiss someone without reason or justification. A worker could leave secure employment in good faith, only to be summarily dismissed with no protection or explanation, months into a new role.

labour-marketeconomy-jobs
43
8 Dec 2025 Employment Rights Bill

No, I will carry on. This debate has been muddied by talk of probation. We never proposed abolishing probation periods—they are proper and necessary—but no system should allow dismissal without cause for blatantly unfair reasons. At present, workers can still be dismissed without cause nearly two years into a job. Unde

labour-marketeconomy-jobs
289
8 Dec 2025 Employment Rights Bill

I draw Members’ attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests in relation to support from trade unions, of which I am proud. I agree with my right hon. Friend the Member for Ashton-under-Lyne (Angela Rayner) that this is a transformational piece of legislation, but it has been weakened. My motio

labour-marketeconomy-jobs
192
2 Dec 2025Criminal Court Reform

Given that the Bar Council has said it has seen “no evidence” that removing the right to elect to have a jury trial will significantly reduce the Crown court backlog, and that both the Bar Council and the Criminal Bar Association have said that the real cause of delays is years of underfunding and reduced sitting days,

crimefiscal-policy
109
25 Nov 2025Immigration Reforms: Humanitarian Visa Routes

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Sir Edward, and I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Rushcliffe (James Naish) for securing this debate, which is important because it speaks to who we are as a country and how we uphold commitments to all people fleeing persecution. Earlier this month, the Prime Minister

immigration
310
25 Nov 2025Immigration Reforms: Humanitarian Visa Routes

Will the Minister reaffirm that the act of seeking asylum is not illegal or unlawful—in fact, it is lawful under the refugee convention? That appears to have become somewhat muddied and clouded in this debate. Would he like to clarify the Government’s reaffirmation of the principles of the convention?

immigration
49
25 Nov 2025Immigration Reforms: Humanitarian Visa Routes

I thank my hon. Friend for her excellent point. Indeed, that is one of the things the Red Cross highlighted. Narrow safe routes alone will not prevent dangerous journeys. The Public and Commercial Services Union report “Welcoming Growth” recommends processing claims within six months, and legal, English language and em

immigration
197
18 Nov 2025 Northern Ireland Troubles Bill

I rise to welcome the Bill, particularly its reversal of aspects of the Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Act 2023 and its effort to restore human rights compliance and public confidence. It resolves court-identified incompatibilities and makes changes to legacy cases. Alongside the remedial order,

defenceother
541
17 Nov 2025Topical Questions

The Government have tabled an amendment to the Crime and Policing Bill that would create sweeping powers to impose conditions on public protests based on cumulative disruption. Can the Minister set out to the House what that amendment means by serious disruption to a community? How will this be determined and measured,

crimeimmigrationlocal-government
63
13 Nov 2025 Police Reform

I thank the Minister for her statement. I whole- heartedly agree that the public have not bought into this model, but that does not mean there has not been some excellent work done by PCCs and their staff with great commitment and professionalism. Will she join me in thanking Matt Storey, the Cleveland police and crime

crimelocal-government
140
5 Nov 2025Employment Rights Bill

The concept is pretty simple. Conservative Members are conflating different issues around unfair dismissal and probationary contracts. They are scaremongering. There is nothing in the Bill that prevents the continuation of probation periods. The only thing we are saying is that it would be unfair to dismiss somebody fo

labour-marketeconomy-jobs
64
5 Nov 2025Employment Rights Bill

Would the Minister agree that the introduction of these rights and protections is absolutely critical, but equally important is the ability to enforce those rights? The Fair Work Agency has the potential to bring that to fruition and ensure that when people are in those circumstances and are the beneficiaries of an awa

labour-marketeconomy-jobs
73
5 Nov 2025Employment Rights Bill

I draw hon. Members’ attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests in relation to support from trade unions, of which I am most proud. The past four decades of structural decline in the share of the national income going to employees, decades marked by the erosion of trade union rights, has been

labour-marketeconomy-jobs
308
5 Nov 2025Employment Rights Bill

No, because I am conscious of time. There is no impact on retaining probationary periods—they remain intact. Having day one rights against unfair dismissal does not prevent an employer vetting and doing recruitment properly, and using probationary periods legitimately. Turning to Lords amendment 1B, the so-called guara

labour-marketeconomy-jobs
421
3 Nov 2025 Public Office (Accountability) Bill

I congratulate the Prime Minister and thank him for bringing forward this Bill, which represents an epic struggle by the Hillsborough families, who are to be much admired and praised, but this will extend beyond Hillsborough, as the Prime Minister has said. I thank him on behalf of the families of Christie Harnett, Nad

crimesocial-caremp-performance
110
30 Oct 2025Fair Pay Agreements

10. What assessment he has made of the potential merits of implementing fair pay agreements in a range of business sectors.

labour-marketsocial-carecost-of-living
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30 Oct 2025Fair Pay Agreements

I thank the Minister for her response, but with the cost of living pressures continuing, it is clear that delivering increased real incomes and better living standards is our No. 1 priority. Can the Minister say a little more about which further sectors are most ready for fair pay agreements, and what steps the Departm

labour-marketsocial-carecost-of-living
85
30 Oct 2025 Business of the House

Earlier this week, I was pleased to welcome health practitioners, charities and those with lived experience to the House when the all-party parliamentary group on spinal cord injury published its new report, “From Fragmented to Co-ordinated: Building a National Spinal Cord Injury Strategy”. The APPG officers look forwa

local-governmenteconomy-jobseducation
102
22 Oct 2025Public Procurement: Employment

With the Government’s welcome commitment to improving terms, conditions and career progression in adult social care, as demonstrated through the planned fair pay agreement and the care workforce pathway, will the Minister confirm that the Government’s response to the public procurement consultation will deliver a publi

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