The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,227 contributions

Speeches by Jones.

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

Showing 1,0811,100 of 1,227 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
21 Jan 2025Topical Questions

I thank my hon. Friend, who is an important champion for the Welsh economy. Wales can and will play a vital part in our growth mission. Our two Labour Governments continue to work together as we review the position inherited from the Conservative Government, including on rail infrastructure, and decisions will be set o

economy-jobscost-of-livinglocal-government
60
21 Jan 2025Official Development Assistance

The Government remain committed to restoring ODA spending to 0.7% of GNI as soon as fiscal circumstances allow. The latest OBR forecasts show that the ODA fiscal tests are not due to be met within this Parliament, but we will continue to monitor future forecasts closely and each year we will review and confirm, in acco

economy-jobsimmigrationdefence
79
21 Jan 2025Official Development Assistance

I thank my hon. Friend for her question on a topic that I know she has great expertise in. She will know that it is important that spending across Departments, whether on military, humanitarian or economic support, is aligned with our ODA spending. The multi-year spending review is under way, and we will confirm budget

economy-jobsimmigrationdefence
90
21 Jan 2025Official Development Assistance

One of the issues, to which the hon. Lady alludes, is that under the last Administration, when they lost control of the borders and the asylum system, the cost of hotels to house asylum seekers waiting for their decision was included in the ODA definition of spending. That is why the Home Secretary is working at pace t

economy-jobsimmigrationdefence
81
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

You will correctly tell me, Mr Speaker, that it would not be right for me to comment on legal proceedings, but I am happy to say that one of the huge lessons for the country, for the British voting public and perhaps, one day, for the Conservative party is that the actions that the Conservative party took were not just

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
126
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

It might have been legitimate for the Conservatives to say that their economic policy was to borrow for day-to-day costs—as they did. That could be a decision that they took. What is not forgivable is the fact that they reached a point at which they were making promises to the British people that they knew they did not

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
93
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

The right hon. Gentleman may not wish to reflect on his party’s performance in government, but I am afraid he has to. Although this is a new Government—we have been in office for six months—the reality is that we are having to clear up the mess that the last Government left us. That is why we have to talk about it, and

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
111
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

Yes, I can. There is no denying that the economic inheritance that we were given by the Conservative party makes life very difficult for us: it means that we have to take difficult decisions. The fiscal rules are non-negotiable and public services have to live within their means because that is that the bedrock of any

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
107
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

One of the issues was that the Conservative party made a whole list of unfunded spending commitments. They promised hospitals and train stations, they had unsettled pay disputes with public sector workers— I could go on and on. That is why the Chancellor took the decision at the Budget to wipe the slate clean, to deal

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
102
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

Restoring economic and political stability is important. When the markets observed the behaviour of the Conservative party in government, it is no wonder they did not want to invest in the UK, and that is why the market crashed, to the detriment of working people across the country. It is very clear that under this Lab

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
111
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

The fiscal rules are non-negotiable, and they will be met.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
10
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

The Office for Value for Money is an important part of our spending review process, as we undertake for the first time in 17 years a zero-based review of every single pound of public spending. We should focus on that for a moment: not once under the last Conservative Government was there a zero-based review. Not once d

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
104
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I think the hon. Member might want to ask his constituents whether they appreciated their doctors and nurses being on strike for so long or whether they wanted them to be able to see their patients. He may want to ask his constituents whether they were grateful to have the trains not working for so many months because

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
108
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

Thank you, Mr Speaker. It is important, when you are paid by the House, to act responsibly; I agree with you. My hon. Friend the Member for Rugby (John Slinger) makes a really important point, and Conservative Members who have their head in their hands may wish to listen to him. It will be important for the Conservativ

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
98
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I did not realise that the hon. Member knew my mum and that I am apparently the future. It is very kind of him to say so; very few have that in their thoughts. He talks about lefty experiments. Fiscal responsibility is not a lefty ideology. Economic responsibility is not a lefty ideological and political experiment; it

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
145
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I am very happy to set out the Government’s plan, as I have done repeatedly today. The hon. Member will have seen in the Chancellor’s Budget last autumn a clear plan to wipe the slate clean, to deal with the mess that we inherited, to protect working people, and to invest in our public services. He will have seen it in

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
176
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

The Chancellor meets the Governor of the Bank of England on a regular basis and will continue to do so.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
20
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I am pleased that the hon. Member can afford the subscription to Bloomberg News; I cannot, unfortunately, so I could not read the article to which he refers. He inadvertently asks me a question about the process of the spending review. [Interruption.] That was the question. We are embedding mission-led government, whic

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
134
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I lead for the Treasury on inter-ministerial relationships with Finance Ministers in the devolved Governments. I regularly meet my counterparts, and I will meet them in Wales in the coming weeks to talk about our spending plans for the future.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
40
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I am always grateful to the hon. Gentleman for thinking that I am making such substantive interventions, and for his continued support in that respect. This is not austerity, as he will know full well. Austerity was ideological cuts to public financing and the size of the state. It was 3% cuts, irrespective of what tha

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
98
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.