The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 302 contributions

Speeches by Jenkin.

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

Showing 120 of 302 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
23 Apr 2026UK-EU Relations

Is the House right to understand that the Government believe that the economy has grown significantly less—measurably less—as a result of leaving the EU, and that this is one of the purposes behind the reset? [Hon. Members: “Yes!”] I hear Government Members saying yes. Could the Government then set that out, with all t

economy-jobsenergyagriculture
130
21 Apr 2026Peter Mandelson: Government Appointment

I am most grateful to the hon. Gentleman, whom I know as a friend across the House, as we have worked together positively on many things. I served on the Privileges Committee that studied the Boris case and reached a conclusion upon it. If the hon. Gentleman wants to help the Prime Minister, I would be rather wary, if

mp-performancedefenceeconomy-jobs
73
21 Apr 2026Peter Mandelson: Government Appointment

Will the hon. Member give way?

mp-performancedefenceeconomy-jobs
6
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

May I just point out that the developed vetting process has always been highly protected because otherwise it would not work? People would not give information to the developed vetting process if they thought that any detail of it was likely to be disclosed, or even if they thought that the result—the assessment of low

mp-performancedefence
123
13 Apr 2026Southport Inquiry

I thank the Home Secretary for her statement, and for the way in which she is promoting learning rather than blaming, because that is the best way to get the change we need. I also thank her for her robust response to the shadow Home Secretary, my right hon. Friend the Member for Croydon South (Chris Philp), about the

crimesocial-carehealth
182
13 Apr 2026Middle East

Will the Prime Minister remind some of his colleagues that the United States is a democracy and an ally, and Iran is an odious regime that could have ended the war this weekend had it agreed to give up its ambitions for nuclear weapons and to cease supporting its proxy terrorist organisations around the middle east? Wo

defenceenergycost-of-living
82
13 Apr 2026Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill

They are not illegal.

defencefiscal-policy
4
13 Apr 2026Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill

I congratulate the Minister on so valiantly trying to explain the inexplicable and reconcile the irreconcilable. I do not want to detain the House by quoting the whole Monty Python dead parrot sketch, but this is now an ex-treaty; it is no more; it has shuffled off its mortal coil. Coming back to the Chagossians, why c

defencefiscal-policy
189
13 Apr 2026 North Atlantic Submarine Activity

Can we be absolutely clear from this statement, which I very much commend for its candour and bluntness, that these two GUGI submarines have now left UK waters? They were carrying out hostile acts in UK waters, and I cannot believe that many people in the MOD are happy with the limp-wristed response of the rest of the

defenceenergy
181
26 Mar 2026Local Government Reorganisation

May I inform the Minister that the previous Conservative Government listened to the people of Essex, and the MPs and county and district councillors for Essex, and cancelled any plans for LGR? That is because county government in Essex predates the Norman conquest. It is more embedded in our history than almost anythin

local-governmenthousingeconomy-jobs
118
24 Mar 2026 Defence

Will my hon. Friend give way?

defencefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
6
24 Mar 2026 Defence

The fact is that the whole of the deterrent stance of all the NATO nations is very substantially—I will not say hopelessly—dependent on the good will that the United States shows towards us. That was the basis on which the SDR was written. George Robertson—the noble Lord Robertson of Port Ellen—has said in public that

defencefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
320
24 Mar 2026 Defence

I draw my hon. Friend’s attention and the attention of the House to the other fundamental structural flaw in the method the Government have adopted for planning defence: the aspiration after 2029 is only an aspiration. The Treasury has agreed to no spending line in its own forecasts and figures beyond 2029, and yet the

defencefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
88
24 Mar 2026 Defence

I listened to the Minister’s remarks with great care. Many of the things that he says, he says with great sincerity, but some of the things he says, I do not believe that he quite so fervently believes. I ask him, being the hon. and gallant Gentleman that he is, to consider whether criticising those who criticise Gover

defencefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
840
24 Mar 2026 Defence

Will my right hon. Friend give way?

defencefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
7
24 Mar 2026 Defence

I share the respect of my right hon. Friend the Member for Chingford and Woodford Green (Sir Iain Duncan Smith) for the Minister and his experience, but the two statements from the Leader of the Opposition that he read out are not incompatible. The fact is that we would not have joined in the military action that the A

defencefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
139
24 Mar 2026 Defence

I do not think many people in the House fully appreciate how utterly profound the drone revolution is. It means that in Ukraine, they do not have to mass troops to defend in the way they once did; they can mass drones. If we want to defend NATO, if we want to defend London and Akrotiri, we need to be able to mass very

defencefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
97
23 Mar 2026Liaison Committee (Commons) — Oral Evidence (HC 530)

This smacks of an enormous complacency.

6
23 Mar 2026Liaison Committee (Commons) — Oral Evidence (HC 530)

You have had 18 months to deal with that. The Prime Minister—copyright Ben Wallace, who was the First Secretary—

19
23 Mar 2026Liaison Committee (Commons) — Oral Evidence (HC 530)

Why do the Government not do what Professor Sir Dieter Helm recommends, which is to issue North sea licences for gas production on a conditional basis, on the basis that the gas is brought ashore, maybe against a contract for difference, but at a different price than we would buy it on the world stage? That is perfectl

75
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.