The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 989 contributions

Speeches by Benn.

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

Showing 881900 of 989 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 45 of 50Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

That is a very interesting question. I met a victim. His brother had been murdered. He looked at me and said, “This legislation says I have to be reconciled to my brother’s killers”. My reply to him was, “No legislation can make anybody be reconciled to anyone. Reconciliation has to come from within”. Frankly, I am not

399
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

That is also a really pertinent question because there was scepticism about Kenova when it came into being. The thing that Kenova did was to take the families on the journey as it did its work. I can think of one person I have met who said, “I was part of the Kenova process and I can tell you that it gave me what I hav

387
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

The Northern Ireland Executive have had the objective of building Casement Park since 2011. It is a shared Executive commitment. The prospect of the Euros slightly complicated matters, because it was an extraordinary opportunity. When the Euros were awarded to the United Kingdom and Ireland, everyone thought, “Casement

498
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

It is a great sadness to everyone. What an opportunity this was for football in Northern Ireland. It was great that we were awarded the Euros. There were all the stadia that were built, apart from one that was not built. If you had said, “Yes, we are going to go ahead with it”, you might think that in 18 months you wou

90
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

I would be very happy to meet the GAA again, definitely, having met Jarlath Burns, albeit by video.

18
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

First of all, I read your predecessor Select Committee’s report and all of the recommendations you had made. What is the truth here? The truth is that the power-sharing arrangement contained in the Good Friday agreement and amended subsequently enabled power-sharing Government to come to Northern Ireland. That was an e

540
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

It is a really fair question to ask, but it needs to be directed above all to those who have collapsed the institutions. When we seek elected office, and if we are lucky enough to be elected, we take on a responsibility. Being in Government, taking decisions, is tough. It is difficult. You get a lot of criticism and ag

464
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

It is an addition to it and a very welcome one because, let us be frank, relations between the last UK Government and the Irish Government were pretty bad, to put it mildly. We have been through a torrid time, not least when the last Government signed agreements and apparently had absolutely no intention of honouring t

215
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

I hope what we have said today suggests that we are focusing on all of them.

16
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

I know Fleur has looked at this. Can I just make a broader observation? This is a great opportunity for all parts of the United Kingdom and for businesses. Let us take an example. Roughly 70% of home heating in Northern Ireland is oil based. A net zero transition means moving away from that to one based on electricity.

168
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

You may call it a bargain, and who am I to disagree?

12
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

There is a defence review taking place. There are two particular issues that are very close to your heart, in relation to Spirit and Harland & Wolff. It is really important that we achieve an outcome in which both of those continue to contribute to aircraft manufacture and to the building of ships. I do not know if it

66
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

You were going to ask about that anyway.

8
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

Yes, of course. As you will be well aware, Boeing is buying back Spirit, because it has had some problems with Spirit’s quality control—I think that would be a fair way of describing it—in the United States. That is not a reflection on any work that has been done at Spirit in Belfast, but it has indicated that it does

357
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

I am worried about Mark, who has not been able to say anything. He is probably sitting there thinking, “That’s fine by me”.

23
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

I agree with you that there is an opportunity. To take advantage of that opportunity, you have to have the capacity to make the things that those who are engaging in defence procurement want to buy. You also need to have stability to encourage investment in Northern Ireland. One observation I would make, going back to

164
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

The recruitment process was launched on 16 October. Applications closed on 1 November. The interviews were held—not undertaken by me, but by others—on 14 November. I am currently awaiting a report and recommendations from the interview panel. Following Danny Kinahan’s resignation, I met him and thanked him for the work

86
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

I would very much hope so.

6
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

That depends on when the report appears on my desk and the speed at which I take a decision. I am not bad in the latter. Fleur and I have the privilege of working with the wonderful NAO and civil servants. One of the things that we have found, since we have taken up the posts, is that there are fabulous civil servants

77
19 Nov 2024Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 359)

We have a commitment from the Permanent Secretary. What more could you want?

13
← PreviousPage 45 of 50 · click a debate to open the transcript with this MP’s speeches highlightedNext →
Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.