Speeches by Hanna.
Every Hansard contribution by Claire Hanna this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.
Showing 81–100 of 504 contributions · most-recent first
| Date | Debate & contribution | Words |
|---|---|---|
| 4 Feb 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1193) “Which would be impacted by the triggering of article 16.” | 10 |
| 4 Feb 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1193) “Can you talk us through a board meeting? What would be the protocol? Do you have a conflict of interest policy, and how would you address disentangling your political pronouncements from interventions on behalf of Intertrade UK?” | 37 |
| 4 Feb 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1193) “You have spoken on a number of occasions about triggering article 16 and other disruptions. Is that a view of Intertrade UK or is it a personal view?” | 28 |
| 4 Feb 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1193) “For clarity, you don’t think it is part of the role of Intertrade UK to make the Windsor framework work?” | 20 |
| 4 Feb 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1193) “Do you see your role as making them work?” | 9 |
| 4 Feb 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1193) “Do you see your role as making the post-Brexit trading arrangements—the Windsor framework—work or as disrupting those arrangements?” | 18 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Troubles: Legacy and Reconciliation “The Social Democratic and Labour party welcomes this remedial order, which goes some way to restoring the rule of law to legacy processes and in turn to the present day. The introduction by the previous Government of an amnesty and the closure of processes was the very definition of the phrase, “Justice delayed is just…” defencesocial-care | 1,049 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Troubles: Legacy and Reconciliation “I think that many of those supporting the Omagh families would like to see a parallel and comprehensive inquiry. Does the hon. Member agree that the logical thing to do would have been to co-design that, and for both Governments to bring forward inquiries in parallel, rather than his Government acting unilaterally when…” defencesocial-care | 56 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “I think some legislation is coming through here around counter-terrorism and displaying—we have seen over the last couple of months paramilitaries and people being proscribed, and guns being taken off people. But I walk around my neighbourhood and see UDA flags and other paramilitary paraphernalia around, so there are …” | 52 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “And grey hair is involved.” | 5 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “That is still the case.” | 5 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “I share your scepticism about the group transition idea while trying to be constructive about the process, and also your frustration that the police do often police the political failures and the inability to deal with issues. There is a sense of, “Oh my goodness—nothing is working and we cannot get rid of these groups…” | 178 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “Sir Hugh, is Patten at 25 an appropriate time for a review?” | 12 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “With a view to trying to get things back on track, my party has called for a rule of law review and audit, not just of policing but of systemic issues such as the PPS and prosecution decisions of the police ombudsman. It is a fact that, 17 years after the devolution of policing, the political system has not seen fit to…” | 166 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “And are you confident that those powers are always deployed appropriately?” | 11 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “I agree entirely. The underfunding and, therefore, the inability of the service to provide the neighbourhood policing that you envisaged and that you both tried to deliver are enormous contributors. People are not engaging with the police in the way that you, the officers, and we as elected representatives would wish. …” | 81 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “An independent report in August found that Catholics and people from a Catholic nationalist background are twice as likely to be stopped and searched. Obviously, it suits dissident republicans down to the ground for people to experience police in a militarised way or in a way that they can frame as oppressive. Do you t…” | 89 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “Same question to you, Sir Hugh: do you think it is a problem if the police service is not representative? Do you think it is acknowledged across the political spectrum that that is a problem?” | 35 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “David laid out the current figures, and I think women and ethnic minorities are under-represented as well. Do you see it as a problem that the Police Service of Northern Ireland is unrepresentative, and do you see it acknowledged in the political system that a police service that does not reflect the make-up of society…” | 69 |
| 21 Jan 2026 | Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1341) “I will frame it in a different way, Sir Hugh, to ask you the same question: do you think that a different approach to disclosure and transparency—whether systemic or in policy terms—could contribute to a better recruitment environment?” | 38 |