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.

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DateDebate & contributionWords
23 Feb 2026Leasehold Reform

According to the Government’s own statistics, 84% of respondents to their consultation said they felt that the system for challenging unfair charges for managing agents and other lease arrangements was not fit for purpose. The Conservatives agree—that is why we legislated to address this in the Leasehold and Freehold R

housingcost-of-living
101
23 Feb 2026Grey-belt Land

The Minister has set out clearly for the House the key plank of development strategy under the previous Secretary of State: re-designating large parts of our green belt as grey belt. Housing delivery is collapsing, but a recent report identified that London already has capacity for 460,000 additional homes on brownfiel

housingenvironmentlocal-government
100
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

My hon. Friend is absolutely spot on. The analysis produced by the County Councils Network makes a comparison between the funding pressure on statutory services facing the urban councils that are the beneficiaries of the Government’s largesse, which totals £180 million a year, and the budget gap facing rural areas as a

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
64
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

I hesitate to disagree with my right hon. Friend, but it was not ever thus. The rural services grant referred to by my hon. Friend the Member for Bridgwater (Sir Ashley Fox) was a measure to address those additional cost burdens, including direct costs arising from statutory duties. It was a funding stream that is bein

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
61
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

Madam Deputy Speaker, I am sure that you will be pleased to know that that prompts me to move on to the next part of what we need to say. Let us recall for those who cry austerity at Conservative Members that the last Labour Government spent on average 10% more in every year of its final decade in office than they rais

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
170
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

One of my tasks in the world of local government was to engage with that last Labour Government and the disastrous consequences of their overspending. They were completely clear with authorities such as mine that stopped work on BSF that they did not have the money to see through the promises that they were making to t

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
85
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

I will give way to my constituency neighbour.

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
8
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

I appreciate that he knows rather more about Camden council than he does about Hillingdon council, but let us reflect a little further on the history. Our constituents last had a Labour council in 1998. I went to that budget meeting at which our constituents were faced with an 18.7% council tax rise—£60 million of unfu

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
78
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

I will make a little progress, because I know that Madam Deputy Speaker will want others to have time. History is repeating itself. Let us not forget that this is a statement that leaves two thirds of councils in England worse off, from the analysis that has been done by the Local Government Association. That piles add

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
135
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

The Secretary of State and I will have had long experience of working with Morgan McSweeney during the many days he spent as head of the Labour group at the Local Government Association. I think that influence is reflected in the very political speech we have just heard from the Secretary of State. Despite its politica

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
272
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

My hon. Friend draws attention to another significant issue facing local authorities: the level of uncertainty. Money has been promised, then withdrawn. Budgets have been allocated, then reduced. In that context, I am sure that her constituents will be as concerned as I am that so much of this money is simply built int

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
623
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

I just want to ask the hon. Gentleman whether he agrees with the Labour leader of Sheffield council, who says: “Cost pressures continue to outstrip increases in funding, both specific inflationary pressures in major service areas, particularly for care, accommodation and construction, and the increasing volume of deman

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
59
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

The Prime Minister said that there would be no tax rises on working people. I imagine that the working people who are about to receive a £500-a-year increase in their council tax, the working people in Westminster expecting an 82% rise in their council tax, and those in Wandsworth expecting an 87% rise in their council

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
750
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

I will give way to my constituency neighbour.

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
8
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

Without wishing to be parochial, I am sure the hon. Member would also like to join in the apologies for the appalling level of corruption that had taken place under Labour in the London borough of Harrow. As has been covered extensively in the local and national media, it left an astonishing legacy of cost overruns in

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
91
11 Feb 2026 Local Government Finance

My right hon. Friend is absolutely correct. When Ministers talk about additional resources being provided to local government, we need to reflect on the fact that two thirds of the funding in this settlement comes from the maximum possible council tax rise across the country, and a large chunk of the rest comes from a

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
60
10 Feb 2026 Inner-London Local Authorities: Funding

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Dr Murrison. I draw hon. Members’ attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests. I am a parliamentary vice-president of London Councils and a vice-president of the Local Government Association. I would like to thank those organisations for the e

local-governmenthousingsocial-care
1,401
9 Feb 2026Topical Questions

My constituents are concerned about the imminent closure of volunteer-manned Pinner police station, as part of a programme of closure by the Mayor of London that leaves the whole London borough of Harrow with no in-person access to the police. Thus far, the volunteers who man the front desk and I have had no response a

immigrationcrimelocal-government
93
9 Feb 2026UK-India Free Trade Agreement

Will my hon. Friend reflect on the view, which I hear a good deal in a constituency, which contains very many entrepreneurs both of Indian heritage and with connections to business in India, that this deal shows a Government who are not listening to the voice of business that has that level of experience, because they

economy-jobslabour-market
75
9 Feb 2026UK-India Free Trade Agreement

My hon. Friend will recall that during the debates about post-Brexit trade agreements, the highest possible standards of animal welfare were raised frequently across the House on a cross-party basis. The matter my hon. Friend is talking about involves swapping prawns and other types of seafood caught in British waters

economy-jobslabour-market
135
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.