The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 307 contributions

Speeches by Slaughter.

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

Showing 101120 of 307 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
3 Nov 2025 Public Office (Accountability) Bill

I also mentioned the national oversight mechanism. Whether the Minister thinks it requires legislation or can be done by Government action, does she support having something that is shared, publicised and known about so that we are not constantly repeating things and we know where inquiries have got to? Will she do tha

crimesocial-caremp-performance
66
29 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

My hon. Friend is making an excellent speech. As she said, the chief inspector of prisons has found that rehabilitation in prisons is not working. This Bill presents an opportunity for a sea change in how that works, as well as in reoffending when people leave prison. As a member of the Select Committee, she will know

crime
82
29 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

My right hon. Friend makes a good point. Although commercial organisations may well be able to run community schemes, it is clear that the ambition of voluntary organisations is rehabilitation and the prevention of reoffending, and that really must be the goal of community sentencing, which is at the heart of the Bill.

crime
53
29 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

I congratulate the Minister on his Bill, which can undo the damage done to the prison system over the past 14 years of neglect and mismanagement, but while he is clearly in listening mode, let me say that it is capable of improvement. I tabled a number of amendments that were designed to improve the Bill in Committee l

crime
95
29 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

indicated dissent.

crime
2
27 Oct 2025Prisoner Release Checks

Given the pressure on prison front desks and the complexity of rules for release, this was an accident waiting to happen. One thing that might bring down the number of releases in error is the digitising of prisoner records. On visits to prisons, Justice Committee members are often horrified to find staff relying on ha

crimeimmigration
78
27 Oct 2025 Victims and Courts Bill

May I congratulate my hon. Friend on piloting the Bill through the House? It is an excellent piece of legislation that will make a real difference to victims. But, as she said, it is just a start. Will she and the Department rededicate themselves to bringing down that Crown court backlog? Speedy justice is what victims

crimesocial-care
57
22 Oct 2025Work of the County Court: Government Response

As I think I set out in the statement, there are problems all along the line. There are problems with representation. There are problems with access. There are problems with systems remaining on paper when they should have been put online long ago. It might therefore be thought that the physical state of the buildings

crimeeconomy-jobstechnology
183
22 Oct 2025Work of the County Court: Government Response

It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mrs Hobhouse. I thank the Backbench Business Committee for allocating time for me to make a statement on the Government’s response to the fourth report of the Justice Committee, “Work of the County Court”. Two independent reviews into the criminal justice system, those of David

crimeeconomy-jobstechnology
1,475
22 Oct 2025Work of the County Court: Government Response

First, I am delighted to see the hon. Gentleman in his place. I thank him for his interest in the subject and for his question, to which my response is yes. I hope our work is useful—the Government have said it is—within the jurisdiction of England and Wales, but, equally, many of the same points apply to Northern Irel

crimeeconomy-jobstechnology
124
22 Oct 2025Work of the County Court: Government Response

A fundamental review was attempted under the last Government, which involved closing many county courts around the country. We were told that the money released from the sale of those courts would go either into the maintenance of the rest of the estate or, more probably, into the reform programme, and so lead to digit

crimeeconomy-jobstechnology
176
22 Oct 2025Work of the County Court: Government Response

I thank my hon. and learned Friend the Minister for the fact that the Government have accepted the vast majority of the recommendations, as I have already put on the record. Without making this too cosy, it gives me confidence that my hon. and learned Friend, as the Courts Minister, is seized of this issue and understa

crimeeconomy-jobstechnology
238
21 Oct 2025Heathrow: National Airports Review

Can the Secretary of State confirm that this is not a done deal? As part of the ANPS review process, will there be a full and independent analysis of the economic costs and benefits, the environmental effects, and demand in London and the south-east, given airport expansion elsewhere? As she says, the world has changed

transporteconomy-jobsenvironment
83
20 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

It means that I will listen very carefully, not only to what the hon. Member says but to what the Government say. I know that the Government are unlikely to accept new clause 19, because they have made their position on resentencing clear. Nevertheless, I wanted to set out that that is the best option, but I am just ab

crime
278
20 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

I am not going to give way again, because I am taking too much time. I agree with the right hon. Gentleman that this is a difficult process to manage. That is why this Bill was presented on the same day that fixed-term recall 48 came into operation. FTR 48 is the recent provision mandating fixed-term recalls of 28 days

crime
855
20 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

I am delighted that my friend is still taking a strong interest in these matters and remains on the Justice Committee, even though he no longer has his Front-Bench responsibilities—we know that he has other responsibilities that he wishes to take on. I entirely agree with him; it is a point that we have made in Committ

crime
241
20 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

I have quite a lot to say about recall, which I will come to in a moment, but I have reflected on this question. Licence is an established part of the criminal justice system, as indeed is probation. Almost every prisoner, other than a handful of the most serious criminals, comes out of prison at some stage. The issue

crime
294
20 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

I do agree with that, and in a moment I will talk about a new clause that deals specifically with tagging. I am rattling through my speech because I have a lot to get through, but what I am specifically talking about in relation to domestic abuse is simply the need for there to be due process. That is something that I

crime
314
20 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

We have to do something about recall and do it now. The number of prisoners on recall has more than doubled over the seven-year period from March 2018 to 2025. It was 6,000 then and it is now 13,500. That is a significant part of the prison population.

crime
48
20 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

As I did at the start of my speech on Second Reading, I put on record the continuing crisis in our prisons. The prison population currently stands at 87,427, with usable operational capacity being 89,286. Prison population projections estimate that the population could rise to more than 100,000 by March 2029. That is a

crime
461
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.