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 241260 of 302 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
16 Dec 2024United Front Work Department

Just a few days ago, the head of MI5 talked about having to make “uncomfortable choices” and paring back counter-terrorism operations in order to deal with the huge rise in state threats. If the Government mean what they say about security being the first priority of Government, will the Minister undertake to ensure th

defencetechnologyimmigration
100
12 Dec 2024 Building Homes

Will the Minister reaffirm the principle of “infrastructure first” in order to get homes built? In Tendring and Colchester, we are planning to build a 9,000-home borders community project, but it can go ahead only if the A1331 is completed, and it has to be funded.

housinglocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
46
9 Dec 2024Planning Committees: Reform

This working paper smacks of having been thought up after a request for options to streamline the planning process. What is the evidence that what planning committees decide is the fundamental obstacle in the planning system? There is no evidence to suggest that these decisions are the problem. The problems are far wid

housinglocal-government
110
5 Dec 2024 Plan for Change: Milestones for Mission-led Government

I assure the right hon. Gentleman that I do not think anybody doubts the sincerity of the new Government in wanting to achieve these laudable aims. I remind him, however, of John Lennon’s line: “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans.” Notably absent from the priorities are ones such as reduci

economy-jobshealthhousing
114
5 Dec 2024 Business of the House

Will the Leader of the House provide time for a debate about free trade and how best to approach the incoming American Administration to secure a free trade agreement? Will she remind her right hon. and learned Friend the Prime Minister that we already have a free trade agreement with the European Union, but we do not

economy-jobsfiscal-policylocal-government
107
2 Dec 2024 Grenfell Tower Inquiry

I am very happy to agree with the hon. Gentleman and to welcome the Secretary of State’s announcements today about accelerating all of this and ensuring that action is taken much more quickly. I hope that that will result in much quicker action for his constituents. I was addressing the first major recommendation in ou

housingcrimelocal-government
432
2 Dec 2024 Grenfell Tower Inquiry

I will be as quick as I can, Madam Deputy Speaker, but I am extremely grateful for the hon. Gentleman’s question, because that was a failure of regulation. The crucial point is this. In other safety-critical industries, such as the civil aviation, rail and marine sectors, there is no ban on the private sector being sel

housingcrimelocal-government
133
2 Dec 2024 Grenfell Tower Inquiry

I will certainly give way, because this is a crucial point.

housingcrimelocal-government
11
2 Dec 2024 Grenfell Tower Inquiry

I am not in favour of taking building control away from local authorities, but if we go down the route recommended by the hon. Gentleman, we will not succeed in making buildings safer, not least because of the shortage of capacity in the sector. If it is decided that there cannot be any private sector building control

housingcrimelocal-government
456
2 Dec 2024 Grenfell Tower Inquiry

I will give way once more, but I have rather a lot to say and I do not want to take up too much time.

housingcrimelocal-government
25
2 Dec 2024 Grenfell Tower Inquiry

I completely agree. The record keeping of airlines, air engine manufacturers and aircraft maintenance companies has to be absolutely meticulous. It is inspected by the CAA, but the information originally comes from inspections conducted by people who are employed by the private sector. I think the hon. Gentleman agrees

housingcrimelocal-government
320
2 Dec 2024 Grenfell Tower Inquiry

No, because a regulator is a part of the system, whereas a safety investigation body stands above the system. It is very simple. If you are a regulator, you are a participant. You are capable of making mistakes, and you need to be independently investigated, or checked, to confirm that you are not breaching rules, or f

housingcrimelocal-government
85
2 Dec 2024 Grenfell Tower Inquiry

I have got the point. The problem with a public inquiry is that it starts from ground zero. It assembles a group of people who may be expert, but most of the lawyers will not be expert and will have to learn everything from scratch. The advantage of a standing capability is that there are experts who are permanently em

housingcrimelocal-government
293
2 Dec 2024 Grenfell Tower Inquiry

I am sure that may be a very good suggestion, but the point I am making is that we need an apex to our safety system. Whatever else the Government do to remediate the safety system as it exists at the moment, they need an independent safety investigator as the apex of the system, which is like a guardian angel over the

housingcrimelocal-government
331
2 Dec 2024Chagos Islands: UK-US Defence Relationship

First, may I ask, what is the rush? Why is the Minister in such a hurry to get this done? May I suggest that it would be to the Government’s advantage, if their case is so strong, to allow this House to debate the agreed text in public before it is signed? May I also suggest that it stretches incredulity for him to tel

defence
109
2 Dec 2024 Grenfell Tower Inquiry

I pay tribute to the hon. Members for Vauxhall and Camberwell Green (Florence Eshalomi) and for Kensington and Bayswater (Joe Powell), who both spoke very movingly on behalf of the victims of this tragedy who want to see justice done. I venture to suggest that what they want above everything is to know that nothing lik

housingcrimelocal-government
937
26 Nov 2024Electricity Grid Upgrades

Here we go.

energyenvironmenteconomy-jobs
3
26 Nov 2024Electricity Grid Upgrades

Very briefly, the ESO review of the east of England network demonstrated that there is a higher up-front cost for undergrounding of an extra £1 billion from Norwich to Tilbury, but in the longer term it saves money. It is just not correct to say that undergrounding is automatically much more expensive. That is a depart

energyenvironmenteconomy-jobs
67
26 Nov 2024Electricity Grid Upgrades

The hon. Member for East Thanet (Ms Billington) made the relevant point that there are balancing factors. First, once cables are undergrounded, they are maintenance free, but pylons require constant maintenance, which therefore adds to their carbon footprint. Everybody has seen that. Secondly, salt marshes are very oft

energyenvironmenteconomy-jobs
92
26 Nov 2024Electricity Grid Upgrades

Does the hon. Lady acknowledge it was the previous Government who commissioned the Banner report on streamlining the system? Let us approach this on a bipartisan basis—we are all on the same side, trying to achieve the great upgrade of our electricity grid—and stop scoring party political points, shall we?

energyenvironmenteconomy-jobs
50
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.