The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 654 contributions

Speeches by Murray.

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

Showing 141160 of 654 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
24 Nov 2025Gaza: Humanitarian Obligations

My hon. Friend is talking about the appalling impact of the lack of humanitarian aid in Gaza, especially on children. More than half the population of Gaza are children, and they have not only been missing food; they have missed two years of education. I recently met Save the Children and was told that 97% of Gaza’s sc

healthsocial-carecost-of-living
107
19 Nov 2025 Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill

Does the Minister agree that we have a very strong ecosystem of data on migration in this country? For example, the Home Office publishes enormous amounts of data every quarter. The ONS publishes a lot of data, and the independent chief inspector of borders and immigration publishes and analyses lots of the data that t

immigration
109
19 Nov 2025 Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill

I draw the attention of the House to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests, and to the support that my office receives from the Refugee, Asylum and Migration Policy Project. It is good to see us making progress on this really important Bill, which is utterly essential to what the Government are tryin

immigration
510
19 Nov 2025 Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill

Since we all served on the Committee for this Bill, the Government have announced a “one in, one out” deal with France, and this week, new safe routes were announced by the Home Secretary as part of the new package. Under the “one in, one out” deal, the “one in” will arrive by a safe route, so will the hon. Gentleman w

immigration
79
19 Nov 2025Myalgic Encephalomyelitis

The experience of the hon. Lady’s constituent mirrors that of my constituent Emily in Edinburgh. Even though health is devolved, we face the same situation. Does the hon. Lady agree that even though Edinburgh is leading the way in research—as the right hon. Member for Godalming and Ash (Sir Jeremy Hunt) said—we need to

healthsocial-care
63
18 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 986)

Do you all agree with that? Do you have confidence in the public procurement process in securing those efficiencies?

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18 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 986)

Are you saying that the capacity to record-keep with digital ID would be a switch that the Government can turn on or off at will?

25
18 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 986)

I want to follow up on the role of the private sector. You touched on this a little bit, but could the private sector introduce efficiencies that the Government could not, if you wanted to roll this out more broadly? My other question is more on the security side. One of the arguments that proponents of ID cards make i

146
18 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 986)

As a citizen, if all I am asked to do is show a QR code, for example, I have to trust the Government, and I have to trust that it is a bona fide machine and that it is not storing the data somewhere.

44
18 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 986)

Thank you. That is useful. May I test an argument on you to see what you think? In many ways, the advantages of digital ID that you have set out are basically stuff we can already do, just more efficiently and faster. Is someone a British national? Is someone over 18? Potentially, however, the real thing that would hap

167
18 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 986)

Yes, and as it is rolled out, how many times would I show my QR code over the course of a week? I would not be checking what machines I have used—the average person is not going to do that. You are asking the citizen to trust that these machines are not storing data.

54
18 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 986)

Thank you for coming in. In response to Peter’s questions, you talked about the benefits in mitigating fraud or immigration offences. Do you think there is any scope, in how this is designed, for it to end up creating opportunities for fraud or immigration offences? Do you think that, by making digital ID our line of d

80
17 Nov 2025Asylum Policy

I draw the House’s attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests. Over the past few years, three times as many people have come to this country from Ukraine and Hong Kong, fleeing war or persecution, as have come in small boats, and there has been no public outcry about that. The lesson is that

immigrationcost-of-livingcrime
141
17 Nov 2025Asylum Hotels

I draw the House’s attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests. I thank the Home Secretary for that response. The Home Affairs Committee report on asylum accommodation shows that private companies have made millions from the taxpayer, while communities and asylum seekers have suffered. What is

immigrationcost-of-livinglocal-government
77
17 Nov 2025Asylum Hotels

15. What steps her Department is taking to close asylum hotels.

immigrationcost-of-livinglocal-government
11
11 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 505)

There were no metrics that they were being judged on? That has not happened until now?

16
11 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 505)

We have had a lot of Home Secretaries over the last 10 years. How much does political churn impact the officials’ ability to do their jobs?

26
11 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 505)

I just want to come back to the point that Robbie was making around targets and having clear, identifiable targets. One really frustrating thing when you read National Audit Office reports—or even our own inquiry reports—into the Home Office is that sort of catchphrase, “Lessons will be learned.” That is like the defin

127
11 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 505)

Going back to the one in, one out deal very briefly for one second, one of my concerns is that two of the big interventions that we need to crack the small boats issue are the maritime law change in France and the one in, one out deal being scaled up. There are obviously political challenges in France at the moment. Ho

87
11 Nov 2025Home Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 505)

Are you saying that, up until now, nobody at DG level was held accountable for asylum accommodation in hotels?

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