The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 90 contributions

Speeches by Lewis.

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

Showing 2140 of 90 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
22 Jun 2025Middle East

May I associate myself with the comments made across the House about the dire and despicable nature of the Iranian regime? That said, last week the Foreign Secretary told the House that attacks on Iran were not in our national interest. So does he believe that the strikes led by Trump and Netanyahu—two hard-right autho

defenceenergyeconomy-jobs
120
15 Jun 2025Windrush Day 2025

I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Dulwich and West Norwood (Helen Hayes) for opening this timely debate—she made a fantastic speech—and hon. Friends for their contributions. I want to touch on the story that Windrush tells of this country. Stories are important; the stories we tell ourselves define us as a country.

culture-communityimmigrationsocial-care
956
15 Jun 2025Windrush Day 2025

Does the shadow Minister believe that the Windrush scandal was an aberration—a few bad apples over a few decades—or was the cause structural racism?

culture-communityimmigrationsocial-care
24
15 Jun 2025Windrush Day 2025

I thank my hon. Friend for making a fantastic speech, and for securing this debate. It does seem sometimes quite unfashionable in this day and age to look at the discrimination that that community has endured for so many decades, and not to see it as structural racism. In other words, there is a thread from colonialism

culture-communityimmigrationsocial-care
80
8 Jun 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

Does the hon. Member agree that the problem with the Bill is misdiagnosis? The problem is not nature holding up house building, or local authorities—which have been starved of cash for the last 15 years— holding up housing, but developers that are sitting on 1.4 million homes with planning permission, because they are

housingenvironmentlocal-government
86
2 Jun 2025Thames Water

Let me begin by drawing Members’ attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests. Let us be clear that the collapse of KKR’s rescue deal is not a blip; it is a reckoning—a moment that exposes the complete bankruptcy of the privatised water model. This morning’s interim Cunliffe review of the water

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
183
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

I thank the hon. and learned Member for his contribution to the debate. Private water companies have invested less than nothing of their private equity in our water system since privatisation—in fact, we have £60 billion-worth of debt. I reiterate that taxpayers’ and bill payers’ money has gone into the investments in

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
96
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

With the leave of the House, I will not get back into a tit for tat over some of the comments that have been made at the Dispatch Box, because I would like to thank everyone who contributed to this fabulous debate on a critical issue. I think that most of us want to get to the same place: we want clean, drinkable, swim

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
331
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

Will my hon. Friend give way?

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
6
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

If I could sum up the hon. and learned Member’s argument, he seems to be telling the public, “You’ve never had it so good.” I think many members of the public would disagree with that. I would also make the point that all the investment that has gone into our water since privatisation has come from our bills. Private c

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
84
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

At the beginning of my now seemingly rather long speech, I think I referred to a failure of imagination. Ask what Margaret Thatcher would have done when she was faced with similar problems. She would have fought her way through it. She changed the very fabric of our economy, our democracy and our politics, and she made

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
75
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

People talk about whether something can be taken out of public control and put back into privatisation. Of course, Parliament is sovereign and that can always happen, but there is a point about giving control to the public. Let us take the NHS, which is a public service. Any Government in the post-war period could have

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
98
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

I thank my hon. Friend for making a powerful speech in this debate. There are a few things to say about the costs. First, we would control the assets. The assets would come off the balance sheet, which would be one mitigating factor. Secondly, throughout the post-war period, with British Leyland, Railtrack in 1945, coa

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
149
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

I thank my hon. Friend for giving way, and I will be very brief. There is a crisis of democracy, and as my hon. Friend the Member for North East Hertfordshire (Chris Hinchliff) has just mentioned, we are rejecting a citizens’ assembly. Such an assembly could have the technical support and technical capacity as well, bu

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
124
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

May I make a more general point? If the Bill went into Committee, we would look at this in far more detail, but a big part of the Bill is about a mission and our direction of travel. It is about tackling the crisis in democracy, and trusting our fellow citizens to give a point of view, with guidance from experts, so th

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
107
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

For how long does my hon. Friend think we should polish the turd—we can probably find that floating in most of our rivers—of privatised English water?

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
26
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

I thank my hon. Friend for an excellent speech. I have learned so much history; it has been very interesting. He might be surprised to learn that I do not believe in state ownership of our water assets either. The Bill gives the public the final say on that, along with the Secretary of State and the commission. There a

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
180
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

I will make some progress. Let us recap, because I do not want to go on too long; I want to conclude, if I can. That money from Thames Water—that half a billion pounds in interest payments—will keep a rotten system afloat for just a little longer. The myth of privatisation is that the private sector will act in the lon

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
289
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

Does my hon. Friend agree that the Government’s Water (Special Measures) Act 2025 could have instructed Ofwat to take a far more rigorous approach to the payment of bonuses? At the moment, bosses do not get their bonus if they have a one-star rating. In the last 15 years, every single water company, except one, has had

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
81
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

The cheapest borrowing in the country, without a doubt, is public sector borrowing. The private water industry, which has had 35 years to sort this mess out, is not going to find investment. It is up to its eyeballs in debt. It is relying on a 50% increase in our bills by 2030, if we include inflation, and that is in t

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
80
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.