The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 221 contributions

Speeches by Davis.

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

Showing 141160 of 221 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
18 May 2025Topical Questions

On a point of order, Mr Speaker.

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
7
18 May 2025Support for Veterans

I take it that the meeting will not be on Everest. The Secretary of State knows as well as I do that one of the most distressing experiences for our veterans today is the fear of being dragged into court in the face of politically motivated prosecutions after the Clonoe and Coagh inquiries, which opened a month ago. So

defencesocial-carehealth
91
14 May 2025Solar Farms

I am listening with interest to what the hon. Member has to say, and I have some sympathy with it, but does he have any specific proposal for how we deal with the nationally significant infrastructure projects approach, which completely overrules what he is talking about?

energyagricultureenvironment
46
14 May 2025Solar Farms

Unless the hon. Lady is talking about the suntans of the criminals, I am not quite sure what the relevance of that was. She was one of the ones who were picking numbers out of the air, with this small percentage and that small percentage. I am pointing out the actual effect on ordinary citizens, and it is not the bland

energyagricultureenvironment
415
14 May 2025Solar Farms

May I congratulate the hon. Member for South West Norfolk (Terry Jermy) on what he had to say? He was at least responsive to local interest in this. We have heard a number of rather glib comments about this and that percentage of land. Let us just look at it from an individual point of view. Last Monday the East Yorksh

energyagricultureenvironment
219
14 May 2025Solar Farms

My right hon. Friend makes a brilliant point. Does he also recognise that the way that this Government have set up the arrangements—they are guaranteeing 10% to 20% returns on investment on these farms—is in effect bribing farmers to move away from farming?

energyagricultureenvironment
43
6 May 2025 Data (Use and Access) Bill [Lords]

My right hon. Friend makes a formidably important point. The amendment highlights one of the extraordinary weaknesses of the Bill, which is that it in effect reverses GDPR on a large number of citizen protections. To reiterate the point he gently made, that enormous fine will not stop TikTok, because it operates under

technologyeconomy-jobsculture-community
76
6 May 2025 Data (Use and Access) Bill [Lords]

The hon. Gentleman is making an excellent speech and some very perceptive points. I remind him that previous attempts by the NHS to create a single data standard have all failed, because the GPs did not believe that the security levels were sufficient. It is not just the Information Commissioner; the GPs refused to co-

technologyeconomy-jobsculture-community
66
6 May 2025 Data (Use and Access) Bill [Lords]

On this issue of Luddites, surely one of the problems for English language creators is that what they create is of more value because of the reach of the English language over others. Therefore, they are more likely to have their product scraped and have more damage done to them.

technologyeconomy-jobsculture-community
50
6 May 2025 Data (Use and Access) Bill [Lords]

I am emphatically on the hon. Lady’s side in her intent to protect British creativity, but how does she respond to the implicit threat from artificial intelligence providers to this and other elements of the Bill to effectively deny AI to the UK if they find the regulations too difficult to deal with?

technologyeconomy-jobsculture-community
53
6 May 2025 Data (Use and Access) Bill [Lords]

Before the hon. Lady moves on from Palantir, I think the House should know that it is an organisation with its origins in the American security state—the National Security Agency and the Central Intelligence Agency—and I cannot understand for the life of me why we are willing to commit the data of our citizens to an or

technologyeconomy-jobsculture-community
59
29 Apr 2025 UK-USA Trade Agreements (Parliamentary Scrutiny)

On a point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker. Today’s Daily Telegraph says that it has been reprimanded by the Independent Press Standards Organisation for reporting on remarks made in this Chamber by the then Communities Secretary Michael Gove. IPSO asserted that the Telegraph should not have reported without having firs

economy-jobstechnologyagriculture
172
28 Apr 2025 Public Authorities (Fraud, Error and Recovery) Bill

The right hon. Gentleman goes right to the point I tried to make with the Minister. There are 25 NGOs supporting amendment 11. It is almost certain that if we go down this route, it will end up in court. I think the Government will lose on article 8, on the question of individual privacy.

fiscal-policycrimetechnology
55
28 Apr 2025 Public Authorities (Fraud, Error and Recovery) Bill

I am a signatory to amendment 11. In answer to the point that has just been made to the hon. Gentleman, if the banks use algorithms, they will have an error rate of at least 1%. That means 10,000 or more innocent people will be dragged through the system by this proposal.

fiscal-policycrimetechnology
52
28 Apr 2025 Public Authorities (Fraud, Error and Recovery) Bill

Does the Minister recognise that the Government’s own assessment of the effectiveness of the Bill is that it will recover a tiny 1.8% of losses?

fiscal-policycrimetechnology
25
28 Apr 2025 Public Authorities (Fraud, Error and Recovery) Bill

I thank the Minister for giving way, and I hope he will forgive me for waiting till what appears to be the end of his list. When the hon. Member for Blyth and Ashington (Ian Lavery) asked him about the application of the Human Rights Act in this context, he said that the Bill did not breach it, in effect. My advice is

fiscal-policycrimetechnology
135
28 Apr 2025 Public Authorities (Fraud, Error and Recovery) Bill

The hon. Gentleman has got to a point on which I wholeheartedly agree with him. Something like 9.8 million people will fall directly under the reach of this Bill; if we include their carers, landlords and a variety of other people, it is more than 10 million people. I would think that the number of fraudsters in that n

fiscal-policycrimetechnology
86
22 Apr 2025Engagements

Q11. British Governments of all political persuasions have long taken pride in reducing the carbon footprint of the British manufacturing industry. Unfortunately, in too many cases, too much of that so-called reduction has been achieved by driving British industry abroad to countries such as China and India that actual

economy-jobshealthsocial-care
112
21 Apr 2025Topical Questions

May I press the Secretary of State on transcripts? When I asked recently for a transcript of a major trial, Manchester Crown court told me that the cost would be £100,000; when pressed, that went down to £9,000, but that is still way beyond the reach of most people. This is a travesty of justice. Other countries, inclu

crimeimmigration
72
11 Apr 2025Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill

From what the Secretary of State has described, it is beginning to sound as though Jingye is trying to manoeuvre the Government into a recompensed nationalisation. Will he make it plain that if it tries to manoeuvre us into nationalisation, we will pay not more than a penny for the business?

economy-jobsenergydefence
51
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.