The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 883 contributions

Speeches by Johnson.

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

Showing 181200 of 883 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
16 Jun 2025Crime and Policing Bill

Every jurisdiction has a democratic right to do as it chooses and I respect that, but it is a tragedy when we hear of cases where late-term abortions have not been supported by medical care or the law, and women and infants have suffered significant harm as a result. I want to raise the case of Stuart Worby. Some peopl

crime
246
16 Jun 2025Points of Order

On a point of order, Mr Speaker. During proceedings of the House on 2 June 2025, it became clear that some media organisations had been given access to the strategic defence review document before Parliament. We also became aware that the timing of such early access may have been different for different organisations.

defencemp-performance
205
16 Jun 2025Crime and Policing Bill

I agree with my right hon. Friend, and I shall come to coercion a little later. First, let me go back to new clause 1, which decriminalises the woman having an abortion in relation to her own pregnancy. It seems to me that what many wish to do is decriminalise abortion up until term. That is a legitimate position that

crime
63
16 Jun 2025Health of the Elderly

Many of those on waiting lists are elderly and have chronic conditions; rather than seeing consultants at regular intervals, which may coincide with them being relatively well, they are often kept on open appointments so that they can call when they are ill. This is efficient and responsive care. Is the Minister aware

healthsocial-care
138
12 Jun 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I do not have much time and I do not want Madam Deputy Speaker’s cough to return. [Laughter.] If one examines the litany of drugs involved in other jurisdictions where assisted dying is legal, it makes for troubling reading. It is often an ad hoc cocktail of lethal substances, including sedatives, analgesics, cardiotox

healthsocial-careother
495
12 Jun 2025 Flood Prevention: Sleaford and North Hykeham

The Minister is nodding—I do not know whether she has an update on what the Environment Agency means by “the summer”. We were expecting the health plan in the spring, and that has been and gone, so if she could help with that, that would be really great. There is some concern about the overall cost-benefit ratio, given

environmentagriculturelocal-government
1,260
12 Jun 2025 Flood Prevention: Sleaford and North Hykeham

When I went around looking at the different areas of flooding in my constituency, I got a consistent message: that the EA had not performed as well as the IDBs and that it was costing more money per activity. In her final few minutes, can the Minister touch on how the IDBs can do more of the work and engage more local

environmentagriculturelocal-government
68
12 Jun 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

The advocates of the Bill talk about the point of choice and autonomy in the decision about when and where a person will die. Can the Minister confirm whether we have enough doctors to provide a service for people to die at home at the time of their choosing?

healthsocial-careother
49
12 Jun 2025 Flood Prevention: Sleaford and North Hykeham

Before I start my remarks, I will make a declaration of interest: my husband is a farmer, and we have a small stipend to pay to the internal drainage board in relation to flood risk. My constituents in Sleaford and North Hykeham enjoy some of the most beautiful countryside that the United Kingdom has to offer. Our hard

environmentagriculturelocal-government
1,623
12 Jun 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I think one of the key problems with this form of intervention, compared with others, is that we cannot ask the patients afterwards how that felt. We cannot get their feedback, because they are dead. If we are going to give them things such as neuromuscular blockers or sedatives, we may not be able to tell what they fe

healthsocial-careother
129
12 Jun 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I refer right hon. and hon. Members to my entry on the Register of Members’ Financial Interests—I am an NHS consultant paediatrician. The debate so far has focused primarily on ethical considerations, legal frameworks and who will be eligible—the who, the when and the why—but I want to focus my remarks on the how. As a

healthsocial-careother
498
11 Jun 2025 Long-term Medical Conditions

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Efford. I congratulate the hon. Member for Bury St Edmunds and Stowmarket (Peter Prinsley) on securing this important debate. I declare an interest as an NHS consultant paediatrician. In my clinical work, I have seen at first hand the impact that chronic conditions

healthsocial-carelabour-market
1,354
11 Jun 2025 Long-term Medical Conditions

There is a question that I have been wondering about. Baroness Casey is doing a report for the Government on social care, but she is also doing a report on child abuse. We were told initially that those reports would run consecutively, but they appear now to be running concurrently. I do not necessarily expect the Mini

healthsocial-carelabour-market
105
10 Jun 2025 NHS Funding: South-west

I would need to look at that separately and come back to the hon. Member on it, although he should perhaps direct his question to the Minister, as she has control at the Department at the moment. The problem with cutting both the ICBs and NHS England is that it risks destabilising the very structures that are designed

healthlocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
440
10 Jun 2025 NHS Funding: South-west

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Dr Huq, and a privilege to contribute to this important debate. I congratulate the hon. Member for Torbay (Steve Darling) on securing the debate at such a timely point, following today’s spending review. The focus on NHS funding, particularly in underserved regions suc

healthlocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
293
9 Jun 2025Nuclear Power: Investment

Happy birthday, Mr Speaker. Energy security is important, so I welcome this investment in nuclear. One more small modular reactor can power a million homes using just two football pitches-worth of land, while solar needs 2,000 acres of good-quality farmland to power 50,000 homes. Will the right hon. Gentleman consider

energyeconomy-jobsenvironment
74
8 Jun 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

Does the hon. Lady agree that car parks and rooftops might be a good place for solar, but this country’s prime agricultural land is not?

housingenvironmentlocal-government
25
8 Jun 2025 Winter Fuel Payment

The Minister talks about the NHS, and I wonder whether he recognises the number of elderly people who had to use the NHS as a result of having been cold because of his policies. I want to ask him a very specific question. He said: “All pensioners with incomes up to and including £35,000 will benefit from support”. He a

cost-of-livingeconomy-jobssocial-care
115
8 Jun 2025Non-stun Slaughter of Animals

The Conservative Government had a consultation on food labelling, which was completed last May. The current Government said they would respond, but they have now had more than a year to do so. Does my hon. Friend agree that they need to get on with it and ensure they respond as quickly as possible?

agricultureculture-community
54
8 Jun 2025Non-stun Slaughter of Animals

When doing research for this debate, I found that the RSPCA states that 65% of all halal meat is pre-stunned; the rest of it, presumably, is not. Can the hon. Gentleman explain the difference, and why some meat would be classified as halal when it has been stunned and some would not?

agricultureculture-community
52
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.