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 4160 of 90 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
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

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 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

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

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
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

I will just make some progress, and then I will give way. I am on a roll. Let me tell the House where the money has not come from for these past 35 years. It has not come from private shareholders or long-term thinking, and it certainly has not come from some mythical well of benevolent capitalism. The private companie

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
166
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

I did hear the intervention, but I wanted to make some progress. Take this one example. Under this Bill, if a water company breaches the terms of its licence with a major sewage discharge, it can forget shareholder payout and piling on more debt. If it does it twice, it is in the last chance saloon. After three strikes

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
247
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

Those are the reasons why I have brought forward this Bill. The Government’s Act does none of those things, but my Bill does. Take just one example—

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
27
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

Unfortunately, I do not, because again the elephant in the room—who owns our water—has been ruled out of the Cunliffe commission’s operational process. It cannot actually look at that issue. I have no issue with Sir Jon Cunliffe, but let us not forget that he originates from the Treasury—he probably has Treasury brain.

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
120
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

After 35 years of abject failure, it is too little, too late. My Bill would put the final nail in the coffin of this sorry chapter of our country’s water and water system.

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33
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

I thank my hon. Friend for his question. I agree with him wholeheartedly and I am just about to come to that point in relation to what the Water (Special Measures) Act does and does not do. It addresses some of those points, but as we have already discussed, privatisation is not just a problem, but the problem, and it

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
263
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

I can now—for my next trick, I can hear thinking! I can hear them thinking, “But we have just passed the Water (Special Measures) Act 2025, Clive, so what are you talking about?” Yes, we have, but I am afraid to say it has been watered down—[Interruption.] Sorry, I had to get that one in—it was all going so well. The A

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
96
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

One second. If scientists tell us the climate crisis is an existential threat to humanity and to this country, we must treat it as such: an existential conflict. In that context, the actions of these companies—selling off reservoirs, failing to invest, polluting our water—are not just negligent; they are acts that acti

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
709
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

My apologies, Madam Deputy Speaker; I should have said that my hon. Friend made his point. The clock is ticking. The climate crisis is no longer a distant warning. It is our lived reality. Rising droughts, creeping desertification, depleted aquifers, wildfires, systemic collapse—these are no longer projections; they ar

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
280
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

No, I am going to carry on and make some progress. You made your point. Let the public—

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
18
28 Mar 2025Water Bill

No, my hon. Friend has made his point.

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28 Mar 2025Water Bill

I beg to move, That the Bill be now read a Second time. I draw the House’s attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests. Around 50 years ago, Margaret Thatcher’s revolution tore up the rulebook on political and economic management. She rewrote it with a single unwavering principle: that the pur

utilitiesenvironmenteconomy-jobs
567
18 Mar 2025 Welfare Reform

When the Government made the decision to go down this route, did they understand the pain and difficulty that it will cause millions of our constituents who are using food banks and social supermarkets? These people are on the brink. This £5 billion cut is going to impact them more than her Department gives credence to

labour-marketsocial-carefiscal-policy
111
11 Feb 2025Topical Questions

I thank my hon. Friend the Minister for all the support he has given the University of East Anglia to set up its dental school, but he will be aware that all those shiny new dentists coming out in a few years’ time will be going into the private sector, not the NHS, unless we can sort out the NHS dental contract. Can h

healthsocial-care
83
5 Feb 2025 English Devolution and Local Government

I congratulate the Secretary of State and her Ministers on the work they have done on this matter, and on the exhaustive consultations that have taken place between MPs, local councillors and stakeholders—no one is being forced on this journey. We in Norwich and Norfolk are happy to be on the express elevator to devolu

local-governmenteconomy-jobshousing
122
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.