The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 661 contributions

Speeches by Simmonds.

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

Showing 361380 of 661 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
28 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (Third sitting)

I have a lot of sympathy with the comments made by the hon. Members for Doncaster East and the Isle of Axholme and for North Herefordshire. I appreciate that the clause was tabled quite late, and the evidence that we heard last week was mixed. The National Infrastructure Commission gave us its views on the impact of pr

housingenergyenvironment
477
28 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (Fourth sitting)

This is a small “p” political point rather than a party political point, but it undermines confidence in devolution when we hear that a devolved body—a local authority, regional government or whatever it may be—has been given a power and has not used it, or central Government have said, “We have allocated additional fu

energyhousingenvironment
140
28 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (Fourth sitting)

I have a couple of questions. As my hon. Friend the Member for Hamble Valley has set out, we are broadly supportive of the direction of travel around energy in the Bill. One of the things we are all conscious of with the move to renewables being the main source of power in the grid—something that the UK has achieved fa

energyhousingenvironment
396
28 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (Third sitting)

It would be helpful if, when the Minister produces that response, he could also set out for the Committee how the processes in place will ensure consistency of decision making. As he described, some local authorities may be more pro in a particular area, or less so. There is a need to ensure transparency that a given n

housingenergyenvironment
203
28 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (Fourth sitting)

A general point arises here, which we also debated on the Renters’ Rights Bill Committee. The different systems in Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and England—most of the legislation we are dealing with here is for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland—give rise to a risk of inconsistency. The shadow Minister spoke of

energyhousingenvironment
161
23 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (Second sitting)

Q I would like to ask you both about the interaction between green-belt and farming areas. In a constituency such as mine, which is on the edge of London, as well as a lot of edge-of-city constituencies, there is land that is both in the green belt and farmland. That has significant implications for the landowner becau

housinglocal-governmentenvironment
772
23 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (Second sitting)

Q I have two connected questions. A lot has been said about the role of local authorities in decision making on planning. I am aware that councils are not short of planning guidance from central Government—every element of a local plan must already be in detailed conformity with 19 chapters of the national planning pol

housinglocal-governmentenvironment
944
23 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (First sitting)

Q I found the evidence you gave about the parliamentary process by which this might be streamlined really helpful, Mr Owen. My question is for you both. One challenge for the planning system element of this Bill is that the local authority has a quasi-judicial role in administering planning law, and then statutory cons

energylocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
466
23 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (Second sitting)

I think it covers both, but each of those things is addressed separately in the Bill. Jack Airey: It goes back to my initial point that community participation in the planning process is so low, and you often only hear about the negative parts. If we could boost that a bit—in truth, I am not sure how you do that in a w

housinglocal-governmentenvironment
317
23 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (Second sitting)

Q It is worth noting that less than one in 10 planning applications goes to committee at all, so it is hard to argue that it is a particularly heavy democratic burden. One of the things that we heard is burdensome in the evidence earlier today is the pre-application process. I would be interested in your view about wha

housinglocal-governmentenvironment
213
23 Apr 2025Planning and Infrastructure Bill (First sitting)

Q I have two specific questions about resourcing. The experience with section 106 agreements is often that, by the time the resource is aggregated to the point where it is spendable at scale, the cost of delivering what it was supposed to deliver has increased. You have described your expectation that the resource comi

energylocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
269
6 Apr 2025Town Centres: Population Growth

The Opposition broadly support the Government’s proposals in the plan for neighbourhoods, which carries on the excellent work started under the previous Government. However, how will the proposals to diversify the base of consultees to prioritise the voice of trade unions—which, by definition, are found mainly in large

housinglocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
67
6 Apr 2025Supporting Local Growth

I agree with the Minister that the Government have changed how growth is happening in local government, because apart from the massive growth in the numbers of people rough sleeping and the massive growth in piles of rubbish uncollected in Birmingham, there is little evidence of economic growth at the local level. Does

local-governmenteconomy-jobs
95
30 Mar 2025Political Donations

This is the second time in a few weeks that we have debated this issue. I am aware that we are likely to be interrupted shortly for multiple votes, but I will do my best to make some progress in responding to the many and varied points that have been made. The debate about political financing always feels like an equal

economy-jobsother
1,157
26 Mar 2025Local Authorities (Changes to Years of Ordinary Elections) (England) Order 2025

I beg to move, That the Committee has considered the Local Authorities (Changes to Years of Ordinary Elections) (England) Order 2025 (S.I. 2025, No.137). It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Ms Hobhouse. The postponement or cancellation of local elections in pursuit of local government reorganisation is a s

local-government
759
26 Mar 2025 Local Government Finances: London

I think I will probably avoid descending too much into parochial politics, but it is important to recognise that I will have to pay the garden tax—I do not know whether the hon. Gentleman will—because I live in the London borough of Hillingdon. All our local authorities are facing elements of those challenges, and are

local-governmenthousingsocial-care
239
26 Mar 2025 Local Government Finances: London

It is a pleasure to serve once again under your chairmanship, Ms Lewell. I add my congratulations to the hon. Member for Leyton and Wanstead (Mr Bailey) on securing, with cross-party support, a very wide-ranging debate. My starting point, having served 12 years as a London councillor under the last Labour Government an

local-governmenthousingsocial-care
1,300
26 Mar 2025Local Authorities (Changes to Years of Ordinary Elections) (England) Order 2025

I will not detain the Committee for long. There has been quite a rich debate—unusually so for a Delegated Legislation Committee—a lot of which has focused on some of the politics and the structures around local government reorganisation. I think the intervention from the right hon. Member for Oxford East was a good ill

local-government
665
25 Mar 2025 Construction Standards: New Build Homes

I would not describe that as a lost opportunity, but it is an opportunity that we need to consider. We recognise that we have a new Government with aspirations for housing. We had a Government who, despite all the challenges, set themselves a target of about 1 million homes and came very close to delivering on that dur

housinglocal-government
707
25 Mar 2025 Construction Standards: New Build Homes

It is a pleasure to serve with you once again, Ms Jardine. I, too, add my congratulations to the hon. Member for Sherwood Forest (Michelle Welsh) on securing the debate. I was reflecting, as we watched House staff go about their business, that Hansard will record all the words that have been spoken by Members in this d

housinglocal-government
439
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.