The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 481 contributions

Speeches by Atkinson.

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

Showing 101120 of 481 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
20 Oct 2025 Rape Gangs: National Statutory Inquiry

Victims must be at the heart of the grooming gangs inquiry. Does the Minister agree that getting the right chair is absolutely key to ensuring that that happens? Does she also agree that we have to avoid the scenes that we saw under the last Government, who appointed three chairs who then withdrew from the independent

crimelocal-government
68
20 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

Eighty per cent of offenders are reoffenders because of the 14 years of mess that this Government are having to clear up. The real travesty of justice is that there are no prison cells available for people who are convicted. The last Government failed to build the prison places that are needed; this Government will ens

crime
85
19 Oct 2025Topical Questions

T4. I was delighted to welcome the Education Secretary to St Mary’s Catholic primary school in Derby, the greenest school in the country, where every classroom looks out on to green spaces. We are also lucky to have the stunning River Derwent flowing through our city, which children can paddle, walk and row along. What

educationsocial-carecost-of-living
74
14 Oct 2025 Work for Serving Prisoners

It is not a bona fide Adjournment debate unless the hon. Member has intervened, so I thank him for his intervention and his insight. I fully agree with him. As well as having seen countless examples of prison having not worked, I have met former offenders who have escaped the revolving door, often through work. Many ha

crimeeconomy-jobssocial-care
91
14 Oct 2025 Work for Serving Prisoners

I thank my hon. Friend for her contribution. There is some really fantastic work being done, which I will come on to, and it is essential that we find ways of enabling even more of that, because time stuck in prisons does not improve behaviour; it makes it worse. In the last year of the Conservative Government, we saw

crimeeconomy-jobssocial-care
558
14 Oct 2025 Work for Serving Prisoners

I thank my hon. Friend for her contribution and for making that powerful point. That is why the Government are doing so much to reduce the backlog. Work in prison also comes with a host of second-order benefits, such as improving prisoner behaviour, filling skills gaps and boosting the economy. I do not underestimate t

crimeeconomy-jobssocial-care
191
14 Oct 2025 Work for Serving Prisoners

I agree, and I want to see work in prison start as early as possible—not just at the end of a prisoner’s sentence but during it. I was proud to stand on a manifesto pledge to get offenders into work. That offenders should work is a conclusion that is intuitively obvious to me, having been a barrister, and that is also

crimeeconomy-jobssocial-care
94
14 Oct 2025 Work for Serving Prisoners

My hon. Friend makes a powerful point. Investing in education and work is a key part of preventing reoffending. Frustratingly, without rehabilitation the alternative is a return to the easiest path—one of crime. We then see the revolving door of prison take another turn. Without intervention, one in two prison leavers

crimeeconomy-jobssocial-care
74
14 Oct 2025 Work for Serving Prisoners

I thank my hon. Friend for her intervention. Having a range of options for people is really important, but she also makes it clear that shorter sentences can prevent rehabilitative work being done, which is why it is so important that we are trying to move to a presumption against shorter sentences. A range of things c

crimeeconomy-jobssocial-care
366
14 Oct 2025 Work for Serving Prisoners

The hon. Lady makes an important point. That is one of the reasons that the RFA has created its tracking system: to have tangible evidence of the efficacy of the work that we intuitively know must be successful in preventing reoffending. The businesses that I have met that are utilising release on temporary licence sch

crimeeconomy-jobssocial-care
285
14 Oct 2025 Pride in Place

For years in Derby, we have been pushing for this kind of long-term investment—investment that the fantastic community of Chaddesden richly deserves. It will take time and hard work to recover from the 14 years of neglect that communities like Chaddesden experienced. I would like every Chadd resident with ideas of how

local-governmenteconomy-jobsculture-community
84
14 Oct 2025 Work for Serving Prisoners

That is another fantastic initiative. I thank my hon. Friend for his intervention. Impressively, some of the partner agents and partner charities working with the RFA have achieved reoffending rates of under 5%. I was told at HMP Ranby that the most popular work with prisoners was for the rail industry, though sometime

crimeeconomy-jobssocial-care
156
14 Oct 2025 Work for Serving Prisoners

In my early years as a barrister, I sometimes came across defendants who knew the criminal justice system better than me. Their antecedents—their list of previous convictions—was pages long, showing multiple stints in prison. I used to do both prosecution and defence, and I remember some defendants even sharing with me

crimeeconomy-jobssocial-care
159
15 Sept 2025 Sentencing Bill

Madam Deputy Speaker, put yourself in the place of a victim of crime. You want to go out for a walk with your family, out to the park or to the other side of town, but you are worried that the perpetrator might see you there. You want to go for a night out or to support your football team, but you are worried about wha

crimefiscal-policy
763
10 Sept 2025Regional Transport Inequality

I beg to move, That this House has considered regional transport inequality. I thank the Backbench Business Committee for granting this debate. It was originally due to take place on the first day back from the summer recess, but there was not time because so many people wanted to speak. I am grateful to those in atten

transportlocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
694
10 Sept 2025Regional Transport Inequality

I think we can all agree that the better the technology and the real-time information that is needed, the more people will be encouraged to use our buses. We absolutely need to encourage more people to use our buses. Over the 15 years up to 2023, we saw a massive loss of bus services. Where the cuts hit has varied, but

transportlocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
413
10 Sept 2025Regional Transport Inequality

I thank the Backbench Business Committee for granting the debate. I thank my many colleagues who spoke passionately and persuasively for better transport options for their regions, but also raised fantastic examples of new investment. The number of contributions shows how important transport equality is, and it is huge

transportlocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
135
10 Sept 2025Regional Transport Inequality

I am just about to finish. If the UK is a body, Derby is geographically at its heart and is asking to have the same chance as everywhere else to be connected. We need to maintain our change of direction to reduce the inequality in the spend per person on transport, stay on track towards the reduction, and ultimately th

transportlocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
71
10 Sept 2025Regional Transport Inequality

I am grateful for the support that my hon. Friend, alongside many colleagues, has shown for electrification and the benefits that it can bring. It would be a fitting celebration of 200 years of the modern railway to continue the electrification of the midland main line, which would bring jobs, skills and hundreds of mi

transportlocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
205
7 Sept 2025Defence Industrial Strategy

This morning, I was at the Nuclear Skills Academy in Derby. It is a partnership between Rolls-Royce and the University of Derby that teaches the skills needed to create the reactors that power our submarines, and it delivers 200 apprenticeships a year. The defence industrial strategy delivers the biggest investment in

defenceeconomy-jobs
77
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.