The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 510 contributions

Speeches by Cross.

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

Showing 301320 of 510 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
7 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Eighth sitting)

I beg to move amendment 43, clause 45, page 50, line 8, leave out subsection (7). This amendment would keep an individual under the duty to report child abuse despite the belief that someone else may have reported the abuse to the relevant authority.

crime
44
7 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Eighth sitting)

Yes, absolutely. I do not think any Member present wants to act unlawfully or be seen to do so in any way. We want to ensure that if someone is deported, it is done properly and efficiently so that the deportation works as planned. Every image represents a real child who has been subject to abuse, and the act of posses

crime
249
7 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Eighth sitting)

Clause 44 provides Border Force officers with a new power to scan electronic devices for child sexual abuse images at UK borders under specific conditions. The measure addresses the documented issue of certain offenders transporting indecent images of children on various devices when entering or leaving the country. Cu

crime
195
7 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Eighth sitting)

I thank the hon. Member for that. We will press amendment 42 to a vote. Although I heard what the Minister said on the matter, we feel that the wording of the clause is not conclusive. It refers to “offender” in the singular, not to “offenders” in the plural, and we want to make sure that anything involving a gang or g

crime
74
7 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Eighth sitting)

I will keep my comments brief. I thank everyone who has contributed; I appreciate that this issue raises tensions. I know that no matter what side of the House we are on and no matter what angle we come at this from, everyone wants what is best for children and to prevent any sort of gang-based grooming or sexual viole

crime
121
2 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Sixth sitting)

Of course. In all cases, it is a balance between getting an interim order in place to protect children in the immediate term, and ensuring that we get true justice through the system. It is something that we need more information on, but we also need a balance, and, on balance, the interim orders seem reasonable. Anoth

crime
501
2 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Sixth sitting)

Clause 18 creates a new regime for child criminal exploitation prevention orders. A CCEPO is a new civil order that enables prohibitions or requirements to be imposed by courts on individuals involved in CCE to protect children from harm from criminal exploitation by preventing future offending. A CCEPO will be obtaine

crime
865
2 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Sixth sitting)

Clause 17 creates a new stand-alone offence to prosecute adults committing child criminal exploitation, to prevent exploitative conduct committed by adults against children from occurring or re-occurring. Child criminal exploitation is a heinous crime targeting young, vulnerable and impressionable children in a range o

crime
590
2 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Sixth sitting)

Amendment 1, tabled by the hon. Member for Neath and Swansea East (Carolyn Harris), seeks to increase the increase the penalty on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for life. That would bring the punishment for child criminal exploitation in line with the maximum sentences for crimes such as murder, hostage takin

crime
233
2 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Sixth sitting)

At the evidence session last Thursday, the witnesses that we spoke to about this issue said that the magistrates court was the most appropriate place for these cases to be heard. Given they are the people who know the system best, we should certainly take that evidence onboard.

crime
48
2 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Fifth sitting)

Does my hon. Friend agree that that sort of approach is important in tackling repeat offenders with whom retail workers will be very familiar? They know who the offenders are in their area, because they see them every day. That sort of approach would help tackle those offenders and give reassurance to retail workers th

crime
65
2 Apr 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Fifth sitting)

It is obviously the case that retail workers have to stop the sale of certain products at times, whether it is because the customer is under age or for other reasons. Of course, delivery drivers have to do exactly the same thing if they get to a house and, for example, an under-18-year-old would be in receipt of alcoho

crime
84
2 Apr 2025Scottish Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 459)

Thank you all for coming. My question is about the workings of Project Willow and how contingent it is on the other operations ongoing at Grangemouth. You have the petrochemical side and also the Forties pipeline. How important in the planning of Project Willow and the feasibility of the nine projects within Project Wi

97
1 Apr 2025 Onshore Wind and Solar Generation

The supply chain is important for the roll-out of onshore and offshore wind, and the oil and gas sector supply chain will be crucial, but it is being worn away by the rush to end our use of North sea oil and gas. Does the hon. Member agree that preserving that supply chain, and ensuring a managed transition from North

energyenvironmentagriculture
75
1 Apr 2025 Onshore Wind and Solar Generation

In my constituency of Gordon and Buchan, the Suie and Correen hills are subject to a planning application for a new onshore wind farm. There is also concern that, because of that, there will be new pop-up infrastructure next to it, whether substations or batteries and so on. One project leads to another and then to ano

energyenvironmentagriculture
112
31 Mar 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Fourth sitting)

If one way to help reduce the likelihood that someone in their private house with the windows closed would not have to listen to these vehicles—as no one should—was to have powers to seize them from inside someone’s house, would the hon. Member support that?

crimelocal-governmentenvironment
45
31 Mar 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Fourth sitting)

I completely agree that it is time to get serious about this issue. Will the hon. Member support our new clause that would give police the power to confiscate these vehicles from people’s houses?

crimelocal-governmentenvironment
34
31 Mar 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Fourth sitting)

Earlier, we considered extending timelines from 48 hours to 72 hours to take in, for example, weekends and bank holidays. The new clause fits quite nicely with that, and would make sure that wherever we are in the week or year we are tackling this issue effectively.

crimelocal-governmentenvironment
47
31 Mar 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Fourth sitting)

This is about the impact on not just communities and individuals but on farmers, livestock and rural businesses. In many cases people are seeing their livelihoods disrupted and their livestock injured or, at worst, killed by these bikes. What are the shadow Minister’s views on the need to tackle that?

crimelocal-governmentenvironment
50
31 Mar 2025Crime and Policing Bill (Third sitting)

Although I completely agree with the need to extend the power, why was 72 hours chosen? Was there work or analysis behind that figure?

crime
24
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.