The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,421 contributions

Speeches by Falconer.

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

Showing 521540 of 1,421 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

With the greatest of respect to my predecessor, he will know that the Defence Secretary and the Attorney General do rather different roles. I do not think they are in disagreement, and in any case, collective responsibility would bind them both, and indeed me.

defencecrimeimmigration
44
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

I am happy to be clear that that level of enrichment has no obvious civilian purpose. We are told that it was for research and development, but I think many observers have drawn exactly the same conclusion as the right hon. Gentleman.

defencecrimeimmigration
42
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

My right hon. Friend asks vital questions. We do want serious negotiation with the Iranian Government about nuclear weapons and, indeed, many other things. The Foreign Secretary sought to play a full role in providing an opportunity for talks rather than conflict, but those talks cannot be spun out indefinitely. The de

defencecrimeimmigration
97
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

We have long had concerns over Iran’s malign activity. Iran’s continued support to aligned groups, like Hezbollah and Hamas, undermines regional stability. It supports Russia’s illegal war in Ukraine through the provision of unmanned aerial vehicles and ballistic missiles, and it poses a threat to UK nationals, Iranian

defencecrimeimmigration
204
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

I thank the right hon. Lady for her questions. I am afraid I will not provide a detailed commentary from the Dispatch Box on the extent of the damage from the strikes, for reasons that I am sure she and the rest of the House understand. I can confirm that we are in discussions about the snapback mechanism. As the Prime

defencecrimeimmigration
277
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

I do not want anyone in the House to be under any illusions about the seriousness with which we take the IRGC’s activities. That is why we commissioned the Jonathan Hall review. That is why it is on the enhanced tier of FIRS—the foreign influence registration scheme. That is why it is fully sanctioned. That is why we h

defencecrimeimmigration
158
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

I confirm for my hon. Friend that we are doing everything we can to try to see a diplomatic solution.

defencecrimeimmigration
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6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

I know of the right hon. Gentleman’s long commitment to these issues. So many right hon. and hon. Members have had encounters with the Iranian diaspora and, indeed, more moderate Iranians. The Iranian people are not the enemy of the UK. There is a broad, cultured, moderate population there who would like to live a bett

defencecrimeimmigration
86
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

I very much agree with my hon. Friend, on both the importance of diplomacy and the importance of BBC Persian, through which the UK makes an important contribution for Farsi speakers across the world. I have met many BBC Persian service journalists and they provide a vital service.

defencecrimeimmigration
48
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

Let me be absolutely clear. We will not tolerate any Iran-backed threats on UK soil: not against British Jewry; not against journalists; not against any British national or anyone who is resident here. As both the Foreign Secretary and I have made clear to our Iranian counterparts, we know the threat Iran poses to thos

defencecrimeimmigration
178
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

As I am sure the hon. Gentleman would expect, I will not comment on assessment at this stage, given the security and intelligence implications thereof.

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6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

The UK has been able to provide a very limited amount by way of consular support in Iran for some years, for exactly the reasons that my hon. Friend mentioned—it is frustrated by the Iranian Government—and our warnings and travel advice are clear. I am grateful to my hon. Friend for providing me with an opportunity to

defencecrimeimmigration
108
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

I thank the hon. Gentleman for his important question. I am sure I will receive complaints from his party’s Front Benchers, but he will understand that I will not be commenting on the assessment of the strike or on intelligence matters. But I will say that it is absolutely vital that IAEA inspectors are allowed back in

defencecrimeimmigration
86
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

I would be—[Interruption.] There is an amusing degree of lightness from the Opposition Benches about security matters. I would be delighted to discuss this matter further. The question at issue in the Jonathan Hall report is the state threats proscription-like tool. I accept that the name is rather clunky, but it is fo

defencecrimeimmigration
120
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

In my last answer, I tried to illustrate why proscription of the IRGC is a complicated question, given gaps in the existing legislation. That is one of the reasons why Jonathan Hall has done his review. We are committed to taking forward his recommendations.

defencecrimeimmigration
44
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

The Foreign Office—the whole ministerial team and our diplomats—are focused on the concrete steps that would be required. The hon. Member for Harrow East (Bob Blackman) asked an important question about the IAEA and there was an important question about snapback. There are a range of serious and impactful diplomatic me

defencecrimeimmigration
121
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

As ever, the hon. Gentleman asks an important question focused on those who are vulnerable. We have sustained an embassy in Tehran, and I am pleased to announce that it has reopened. One of the roles of the embassy is to maintain engagement that is as wide as possible with wider Iranian society. There are obvious const

defencecrimeimmigration
74
6 Jul 2025 Actions of Iranian Regime: UK Response

The right hon. Gentleman makes an important point about the pattern of Iranian detentions in Iran and some of the threats that we have already described that are sought to be prosecuted here. I will not say more about the state threat here, as I think I have probably laid out more than I would like to, but it is incred

defencecrimeimmigration
159
1 Jul 2025 West Bank: Forced Displacement

My hon. Friend asks an important question, which has been discussed much in the House. The questions of recognition are vexed. We want to do it; we want to make a contribution to improving the lives of the Palestinian people. In the short period I have been Minister, circumstances in the west bank have been particularl

defenceculture-communityhousing
793
1 Jul 2025 West Bank: Forced Displacement

The UK does not recognise the Occupied Palestinian Territories as part of Israel, so no goods should be sold in the UK as though they were Israeli or under Israeli privileges if they emanate from the Occupied Palestinian Territories. I know the hon. Gentleman pays close attention to these issues. There are complexities

defenceculture-communityhousing
226
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.