The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,501 contributions

Speeches by Lammy.

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

Showing 541560 of 1,501 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 28 of 76Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

I stand by all the decisions we have made as a Government, which are numerous; I listed them in my statement. On the full arms embargo, I am content that we are not sending arms that could be used in Gaza. I ask the hon. Lady to look closely at the export licensing regime, because there are many things that are sent to

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
85
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

The hon. Gentleman would struggle to point to any Government of a major G7 or European state that have done as much as we have in office. We led the sanctioning of Smotrich and Ben-Gvir specifically because of their language and behaviours in relation to the west bank. We have said that we keep sanctions under review,

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
61
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

All action is under review at this time. We are pressing for a ceasefire, and our assessment is that we could see one shortly after the Knesset rises. My hon. Friend will understand that a ceasefire is our priority, as it is the single act that would stop the suffering that we are seeing in Gaza. She lists some of the

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
88
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

I will speak to my South African counterpart about that issue. However, I say to the right hon. Gentleman that we in the UK support the ICC—indeed, it receives funding from British taxpayers—and the ICJ, and we also stand against what we are seeing in the west bank and in Gaza, so I would say that much of what he has s

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
67
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

Again, I understand my hon. Friend’s strength of feeling. She knows that there will be a two-state conference on 28 July, and of course we will participate. But she will have also detected that at that conference our French and Saudi Arabian colleagues are talking not about recognition but about how we get to two state

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
84
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

I hear the strength of my hon. Friend’s conviction and views when she asks for more action. We are taking action—we have taken action every single day in office. British taxpayers are funding the alleviation of suffering. Is it enough? Have we brought this war to an end? We have not brought it to an end. I have to tell

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
129
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

Most licences are not for military use. Most do not go to Israeli authorities. Many are for civilian use, such as product testing or body armour for journalists and NGOs. I am quite sure that the hon. Member would not want us not to support those organisations. Some are for components going to Israeli companies that ar

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
65
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

Notwithstanding the huge humanitarian catastrophe that is taking place in Gaza, I am proud of the work of UK-Med, the funding we have been able to give it and the extra money that I have announced today, and that medical aid is getting through to relieve some suffering. However, the hon. Gentleman is absolutely right.

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
86
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

The hon. Member has heard what I have said about my commitment to two states. He knows that we have not yet got a ceasefire, and he knows that we are working with international partners to ensure that we get an enduring ceasefire. He knows the debate around recognition, because I have talked about it not just in Select

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
68
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

I say politely to my hon. Friend that when last year some countries took a step to recognition, it did not change things on the ground. She asks with passion, what is going on? My focus is what is going on and trying to alleviate the suffering. While I recognise the debate on recognition, and we must move to recognitio

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
91
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

Yes to that last bit. I want to see a ceasefire in the coming days, but of course we continue to consider what further steps we can take with allies to bring the war to an end, as the hon. Member would expect.

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
43
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

We are concerned about the statements made and the language used. We do believe that they are inflammatory and that, were that to take place, that would breach Israel’s obligations. We are looking closely at Israel’s behaviour.

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
37
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

I reassure the hon. Lady that the UK Government are not complicit in any actions that would breach international humanitarian law. I took that step back in September alongside restoring funding to UNRWA. She asked for a full embargo. She will note that there was a judicial review of that decision, and the Government’s

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
86
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

I cannot agree with what the right hon. Gentleman has said, save for his remarks that the hostages must be released.

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
21
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

Yes, yes, yes. My hon. Friend talks about the statements of Ehud Olmert. It is also right to say that others—Yair Golan, Yair Lapid, Benny Gantz and Ehud Barak, the former IDF chief—have all condemned what Minister Katz has suggested, and I too condemn it wholeheartedly.

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
46
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

I am grateful to my hon. Friend for raising the issue of aid workers. The widespread loss of life among aid workers is a travesty. It is unprecedented. I remind colleagues of chapter 2 of “The Conduct of Hostilities”, the handbook for legal practitioners in international humanitarian law, which says that distinctions l

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
97
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

I am grateful to my hon. Friend for his question; he is right to mention the hostages. I meet regularly with hostage families and did a few weeks ago in my office. He is absolutely right that the overwhelming majority of the Israeli people—83%—want a ceasefire so that the hostages can get out, and they want it to be a

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
73
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

In some senses, that is in the hands of those who continue to prosecute this conflict. My hon. Friend is absolutely right when she says that each life is of incalculable value. I think I have made more statements on this subject than any other Minister has made statements in this House over the past year—of course, the

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
118
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman for naming the Druze, who have seen awful atrocities visited on them in the last few days, and the positions of minorities in Syria. I saw that the Pope commented—unusually, in the strongest terms—on what he has seen. I reassure the hon. Gentleman that I raised these issues with the

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
120
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

I reassure my hon. Friend that British taxpayers are funding NGOs that work across communities. We are supporting that work on the west bank and in Gaza. We are supporting accountability, because that is No. 1 when we look at some of the injustice being wrought. We will continue to do that work, including with the inte

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
59
← PreviousPage 28 of 76 · click a debate to open the transcript with this MP’s speeches highlightedNext →
Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.