The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 458 contributions

Speeches by Obese-Jecty.

Every Hansard contribution by Ben Obese-Jecty this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

Showing 6180 of 458 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
23 Feb 2026Labour Together and APCO Worldwide: Cabinet Office Review

Far be it for me to insert myself into the internecine warfare fast breaking out on the Government Benches, but the Minister pushed back when it was suggested that he had received donations from Labour Together. His entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests shows £63,000-plus of donations in kind with regar

mp-performanceculture-community
91
12 Feb 2026 Lord Mandelson: Government Response to Humble Address Motion

The issues surrounding Lord Mandelson and Lord Doyle and their proximity to paedophiles are now intertwined. On 2 January 2026, I tabled a written question, asking the Cabinet Office to publish the findings of the internal investigation that took place prior to the granting of the peerage for Lord Doyle. That investiga

crimemp-performanceother
108
12 Feb 2026 Business of the House

The town of Huntingdon in my constituency has a rich cultural and historical heritage and is the birthplace of Oliver Cromwell—one of my predecessors in this House. It is the former home of the diarist Samuel Pepys, it is the first place in the UK where chocolate ice cream appeared on these shores, and it is also the b

mp-performanceeconomy-jobssocial-care
147
12 Feb 2026 Lord Mandelson: Government Response to Humble Address Motion

Whose fault is that?

crimemp-performanceother
4
11 Feb 2026 Police Grant Report

Madam Deputy Speaker, “The current funding system is complex, outdated and the product of legacy decisions rather than strategic design”— not my words but those of the Government in last month’s police reform White Paper. I agree, which is why I do not approve of the “Police Grant Report (England and Wales) 2026-27”. T

crimefiscal-policylocal-government
871
11 Feb 2026 Police Grant Report

The police are required to pick up the slack in so many different aspects of this, and I do not think that that is factored into or reflected in the way we are looking at the force structures. I hope that it will be factored into the review of the forces. Coming back to rural crime, in my constituency of Huntingdon, Ca

crimefiscal-policylocal-government
505
11 Feb 2026 Police Grant Report

I agree with my right hon. Friend, and I hope that that will clarified by the Minister who winds up, or through further clarification of the White Paper. I have read the White Paper, and it currently is not explained. We have also received little explanation about how the independent review of force structures will wor

crimefiscal-policylocal-government
230
11 Feb 2026 Police Grant Report

Smoke and mirrors, indeed. Last month’s police reform White Paper does little to clear up any confusion. The Association of Police and Crime Commissioners said: “We are aware the cost of police reform has been estimated at around £500 million. While the Government has announced that £119 million will be allocated to th

crimefiscal-policylocal-government
112
11 Feb 2026 Police Grant Report

I appreciate the Minister’s intervention. I understood that point, but my point was that those 2,400 officers do not even make up the 2,611 by which the Government have already reduced the number of neighbourhood police officers by recounting the officers that we have.

crimefiscal-policylocal-government
44
11 Feb 2026 Police Grant Report

To be honest, looking at the police and crime commissioners, it has not been clarified exactly how that responsibility is going to work across the country. The point I was trying to make is that we are saying that the authority for policing locally is going to go to strategic mayors. That is fine, but if we are also go

crimefiscal-policylocal-government
121
11 Feb 2026 Police Grant Report

I concur with the hon. Gentleman’s point on what the Minister has just said. In Cambridgeshire, our named neighbourhood officers—it is a little difficult to pin down exactly how many there are and how big an area they cover—cover a vast area. For example, the officer who covers the town of St Ives—that is the whole tow

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100
11 Feb 2026 Police Grant Report

No, they will have multiple wards.

crimefiscal-policylocal-government
6
11 Feb 2026 Police Grant Report

The Minister mentions the factors that will go into the police allocation formula. That formula is currently based on the 2014 population size, and density and sparsity figures from 2001. However, since that formula first came into effect, an additional 300,000 people now live in Cambridgeshire. Will that be factored i

crimefiscal-policylocal-government
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11 Feb 2026 Police Grant Report

On that point, will the Minister give way?

crimefiscal-policylocal-government
8
10 Feb 2026 Local Power Plan

The Secretary of State talked about British people having a stake in our energy system, and generating returns for local communities and people. He then went on to say that he was on the side of local communities. I appreciate that he was talking about auction round 7, not nationally significant infrastructure projects

energyeconomy-jobsenvironment
127
10 Feb 2026Ministry of Defence: Palantir Contracts

I want to return to a question that was initially asked by the Opposition spokesperson, my hon. Friend the Member for South Suffolk (James Cartlidge). When the Prime Minister met Palantir and Peter Mandelson in February 2025 in Washington DC, was he aware that Palantir was a client of Peter Mandelson’s firm Global Coun

defencetechnology
54
9 Feb 2026Topical Questions

Rasheed Afrin, co-director of the al-Roj camp in Syria, recently commented that several ISIS-linked individuals have been repatriated from that camp to the UK. Can the Home Secretary say how many ISIS-linked individuals have been repatriated to the UK, and whether they were held in custody on their return?

immigrationcrimelocal-government
49
9 Feb 2026 Standards in Public Life

The Chief Secretary keeps making reference to, “If we had known then what we know now,” with regard to Peter Mandelson’s appointment. The key fact is that we already knew of Peter Mandelson’s ongoing relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, as the Prime Minister spoke about at PMQs last week, just as the Government knew abou

mp-performancecrimeother
111
9 Feb 2026Jimmy Lai: Prison Sentence

The Minister appears to have come to the Chamber today with absolutely nothing to say. The recent visit to China was an absolute disaster, with people taking burner phones and a burner plane—we even appear to have taken a burner Prime Minister. The Minister referred earlier to progress being made in these discussions,

defenceculture-community
85
3 Feb 2026Separation Centres Review

I wholeheartedly agree that our most dangerous prisoners should be dealt with appropriately, but I will touch on an adjacent point around prison capacity. We are aware that the Government are in the process of rolling out more prison places—around 14,000—but we are also aware that none of those prison places are curren

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