The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 709 contributions

Speeches by Stuart.

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

Showing 601620 of 709 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
29 Nov 2024Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

The case of Maria, and others, should give us all pause. Does the right hon. Lady agree, with two thirds of the Cabinet apparently supporting this measure in principle, that we should reject the Bill today, but that we should as a House commit not to go another 10 years ignoring this topic, but to come forward in a con

healthsocial-care
89
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

To take the hon. Gentleman back just a few months, he may remember that inflation was at 2% and down at target, and the level of employment was up by 4 million people on where it was in 2010. It would be fair for the hon. Gentleman, who is new to the House, to want to give a balanced picture, and he may want to reflect

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
97
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

In painting this stark picture, my hon. Friend has not mentioned the Employment Rights Bill, which is expected to impose particular burdens on hospitality businesses, including those on her high streets—a total of £5 billion in addition to the measures in this Budget.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
43
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

Will the Minister give way?

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
5
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

Will the hon. Gentleman give way?

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
6
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

It is tempting for Members to read out the rote stuff that is given to them—as some of the hon. Gentleman’s colleagues have been prepared to do, but are mostly not prepared to do today—but I just gently point out that there was never a reduction in NHS spending; in real terms it went up in every single year. If there i

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
105
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

The hon. Lady did not actually refer to the measure in front of us. I know it is the Liberal Democrats’ policy to have a windfall tax on anyone who does not sound popular—big banks, big tech, and oil and gas. That is their answer. If anyone says, “How would you do it?”, they trot that out and lose not a single vote, be

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
430
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

I will in a moment. This does not make the slightest difference to how much we consume, but it means that we import more from abroad, and, in the case of liquefied natural gas, those imports have embedded emissions four times higher than the emissions of what we produce domestically. We are going to bring this in from

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
130
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

I am extremely grateful to you for your guidance, Madam Deputy Speaker. I will try not to refer too much to the impact of national insurance contributions, because we will have that opportunity next Tuesday. None the less, my hon. Friend was right to talk about the impact of this Budget overall, and the effect on hospi

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
277
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

We are seeing a kind of socialist envy and attack on misguided targets. For instance, children with special educational needs in private schools will be pulled out of those schools mid-year because their families can no longer afford to send them there. That was not the intent; not only did Labour Members want to stand

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
188
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

I am grateful to the hon. Lady. I am happy to do so, although it is worth pointing out that we are supposed to reflect today on the actual proposals put forward by the Government of which she is now a member. But the hon. Lady is right to highlight the Conservative’s economic record. I have a criticism of those of us o

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
435
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

It would be entirely wrong of me, given how few Labour Members there are in the Chamber prepared to defend the Budget, if I did not now give way to one of them.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
33
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

They have been humiliated in the Budget debate, as one after another repeated their rote words. It was the most intellectually empty Budget debate I have ever taken part in. I listened to Labour Member after Labour Member trot out their “14 years of chaos” and their “£22 billion black hole”.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
51
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

It is a pleasure to take part in this debate. Let us travel back in time to those halcyon days for the Labour party: so confidently predicting victory in the election, so far ahead in the opinion polls and so clear on the prospectus they laid before the British people. It had a fully funded, fully costed programme. Whe

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
406
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

My right hon. Friend is painting an accurate but bleak picture, as reflected by the IFS, the OBR and all the independent analysts of what the impact of the Budget will be. However, I put it to him that he is understating the weakness that the Budget will create for this country. Look back at the last 14 years. We were

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
121
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

I am grateful to the Minister, who has shown his customary good humour and good will to the Chamber. He is unable to discuss the precise numbers for the devolved Governments, but can he confirm what the overall cost is to the Exchequer of compensating the public sector for the impact of NICs? I believe it is around £5.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
72
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

Will the Minister give way?

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
5
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

Does the Minister agree with Gary Smith? This was supposed to be a Budget for growth and jobs. The increased energy profits levy is driving investment out of the North sea and will not make the slightest difference to how much oil and gas we consume, yet it is estimated that it will lose £13 billion of much-needed reve

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
84
25 Nov 2024Speaker’s Statement

Further to that point of order, Mr Speaker. When I was elected for Beverley and Holderness in 2005, John Prescott, the MP for neighbouring Kingston upon Hull East, was of course already a legend. He was the word-mangling, fast-fisted former bar steward who had, for the last eight years, been Deputy Prime Minister of th

culture-communitymp-performance
442
25 Nov 2024 Non-Domestic Rating (Multipliers and Private Schools) Bill

The hon. Gentleman is giving a thoughtful and impassioned speech. Notwithstanding his support for the Government’s policy, I wonder whether he regrets the fact that it is being introduced midway through the year, so that children, including those with special educational needs, will find themselves struggling to get in

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobseducation
69
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.