The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 532 contributions

Speeches by Snell.

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

Showing 381400 of 532 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
27 Jan 2025 Creative Industries

The Minister has stolen my thunder! As always, he has pre-empted what I was going to say. I was going to say that Stoke-on-Trent is a city that is steeped in history, but fizzing for the future of creativity. We are home to nine Arts Council England national portfolio organisations; we have a burgeoning CreaTech cluste

culture-communityeconomy-jobseducation
492
27 Jan 2025 Creative Industries

Madam Deputy Speaker, if I were to ask you to name a city in the UK that is a hotbed of creativity—

culture-communityeconomy-jobseducation
22
27 Jan 2025 Creative Industries

I am enjoying the right hon. Gentleman’s speech, but while he is talking about the last Government’s record, could he tell me how their plan to defund dozens of creative BTecs and their denigration of creative subjects as Mickey Mouse degrees gives people seeking to study those subjects any confidence that they can go

culture-communityeconomy-jobseducation
63
27 Jan 2025SEND Provision

I draw the House’s attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial Interests. One of the biggest pressures on SEND funding in Stoke-on-Trent are the independent alternative providers that charge tens of thousands of pounds for single places, often with huge profit margins for themselves. We are subject to a

educationsocial-carefiscal-policy
93
27 Jan 2025 Creative Industries

I agree with my hon. Friend. Our city has children in school who are unaware of our cultural heritage, which is their cultural heritage, and who do not play with clay in the way they should. We have schools that decommissioned their kilns, despite the fact that the children’s parents and grandparents would have trained

culture-communityeconomy-jobseducation
418
21 Jan 2025 Environmental Protection

I am sorry; I was being quiet and shy, which I am well known for in this place. The Minister rightly points out that some of the responsibility will now fall to trading standards and local authorities. Can she give an undertaking to the House that, with that new responsibility, there may be some element of new burden f

environmenteconomy-jobslocal-government
74
20 Jan 2025 Crewe Railway Station

The Minister is making an excellent speech. While she is looking at the future connectivity plans, may I make a pitch that she should consider connectivity between Stoke-on-Trent and Manchester airport? We do not currently have a direct service, but business leaders in Staffordshire tell me that it would be huge for ou

transporteconomy-jobsenvironment
55
16 Jan 2025Business of the House

The Minton tiles in our Central Lobby, the plates in our Tea Room, and even the chandelier in the Pugin guest room are all wonderful examples of Staffordshire craftsmanship, yet at the moment in this place, we are seeing creeping numbers of foreign ceramic imports in place of British products. Can the Leader of the Hou

economy-jobshealthhousing
98
15 Jan 2025 Town Centres: Stoke-on-Trent

On the point about funding, we got £8 million in the recovery fund, and I am reliably informed by the Minister’s Department that this was the second largest recovery fund settlement anywhere in the country. I thank the Department for that, because it is a huge recognition of the financial challenges we have had in the

housinglocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
80
15 Jan 2025 Town Centres: Stoke-on-Trent

My hon. Friend has basically stolen one part of my speech, because I was going to congratulate Longton Exchange on the mini-renaissance that is taking place in that town, and in particular the work it does on the Longton carnival and the pig walk—unfortunately, I was unable to make it last year, but I very much intend

housinglocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
105
15 Jan 2025Higher Education Regulatory Approach

I congratulate the shadow Secretary of State on the sheer audacity of coming to this place and pretending that hers is the party of free speech. It was her party that introduced the Transparency of Lobbying, Non-Party Campaigning and Trade Union Administration Act 2014, the single largest restriction on free speech in

education
159
15 Jan 2025 Town Centres: Stoke-on-Trent

What the Minister has just said is music to my ears, because this is not just about compiling the land that we know is available for development; it is about the consequential impact of that. If we can bring that land together in Stoke-on-Trent, we will be able to protect our greenfield sites from unnecessary developme

housinglocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
89
15 Jan 2025 Town Centres: Stoke-on-Trent

I hear what my hon. Friend is saying, but in a half-hour debate I do not have time to address all his points. He is right that reduction in crime in the town centre helps people feel safe and brings in more people to spend money there. There is a virtuous circle of activity that is not just about getting more shops on

housinglocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
894
15 Jan 2025 Town Centres: Stoke-on-Trent

The hon. Gentleman, as always, is absolutely right. He has hit the nail on the head. Whether it is Strangford or Stoke-on-Trent, the town centres and small and medium-sized enterprises, whether they are a service, a community organisation or retail, are sometimes the places that people have most affinity with because t

housinglocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
1,050
15 Jan 2025 Town Centres: Stoke-on-Trent

I beg to move, That this House has considered Government support for town centres in Stoke-on-Trent. It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship for this debate, Mr Turner, and to see Mr Dowd offering you a skilled hand. This year is the centenary of Stoke-on-Trent, which was founded as a city in 1925, following

housinglocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
313
14 Jan 2025Committee on Standards — Oral Evidence (HC 620)

I think we will get to that later in the session.

11
14 Jan 2025Committee on Standards — Oral Evidence (HC 620)

The Modernisation Committee has had several discussions about interests and employment, and what that might look like in further tightening. I want to start this session by asking: why do the Government feel that further tightening of rules is necessary? What is the in-principle objection to MPs having outside interest

78
14 Jan 2025Committee on Standards — Oral Evidence (HC 620)

My question was slightly different. I understand the manifesto commitment on which the Government were elected, and I understand the high-profile cases. I am not entirely sure of the rules about who we can and cannot mention from previous cases, but obviously the most famous one was Owen Paterson. Those cases exposed p

178
14 Jan 2025Committee on Standards — Oral Evidence (HC 620)

Do you have any evidence? That is what I am asking.

11
14 Jan 2025Committee on Standards — Oral Evidence (HC 620)

I am interested in how you would define that, though, because we will have our own discussions—

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