The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 358 contributions

Speeches by Smith.

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

Showing 181200 of 358 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
17 Jun 2025 Crime and Policing Bill

I am all in favour of public campaigns and I agree with the hon. Gentleman that it would be a very good idea for people to know that what they were buying was illegal. I suspect many of them already do so. That notwithstanding, if such a campaign could be backed up by a penalty for selling illegal bikes in shops, that

crime
220
17 Jun 2025 Crime and Policing Bill

Don’t get excited—it’s not that great! Motorcyclists have to be tested even more than car drivers. There are balancing tests and they have to know everything like that. This is absolutely critical, because it is a slightly more dangerous mode of transport—more exciting, yes, but more dangerous. Someone cannot buy a mot

crime
124
17 Jun 2025 Crime and Policing Bill

Not a toolmaker?

crime
3
17 Jun 2025 Crime and Policing Bill

I bow before my right hon. Friend’s greater knowledge in these matters, having headed up the Department. I simply say that for this particular purpose, I agree with her. I am urging the Government to take this matter away and look at it in the other place. Although I will not press my amendment, because legal bikes are

crime
217
17 Jun 2025 Crime and Policing Bill

These bikes often accelerate fast, and only someone who is used to riding something that can move quickly on two wheels can do that. If not, they will go off the back. In a car, they would be restrained by the seat, but that is not the case on a bike or motorcycle. Knowing that does take some instruction—being ready, l

crime
117
17 Jun 2025 Crime and Policing Bill

It is funny that my hon. Friend raises that point, because I was just about to get on to it. I am glad he has pinched my speech, but we are on the same side, so let me thank him for getting ahead of me. I reinforce that point: the Government now need to decide whether to do something about that issue in the other place

crime
259
17 Jun 2025 Crime and Policing Bill

My hon. Friend is right, and I hope the Government will respond to that. However, she will forgive me if I focus on the essence of new clause 5, which is e-bikes. The definition of a legal e-bike is one that uses pedals and also uses electricity to assist the cyclist. All the other ones are illegal. This brings me to t

crime
160
17 Jun 2025 Political Prisoners

I make this intervention with your indulgence, Mr Western, because I am engaged in another debate in the main Chamber, and I apologise to the hon. Lady because my intervention deals with another individual, although I fully support her and congratulate her on raising the Jimmy Lai case, which I have argued many times.

defenceculture-community
174
8 Jun 2025 Winter Fuel Payment

The politics of U-turns are not always bad; this is a welcome U-turn by the Government as people will benefit. It would have been helpful for the Minister to have said, “We made a mistake, but we are going to put it right”, but that is by the by. However, I have had many letters and communications, as I am sure have ma

cost-of-livingeconomy-jobssocial-care
143
8 Jun 2025Chinese Embassy Development

(Urgent Question): To ask the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government what assessment she has made of the United States Government’s national security concerns regarding the proposed Chinese embassy development at Royal Mint Court.

defencehousingtechnology
37
8 Jun 2025Chinese Embassy Development

The US Government, and today the Dutch Parliament, have expressed concerns about sensitive cables under Royal Mint Court. Beijing has a recent history of cutting cables and confirmed infrastructure hacks, including embedding malware capable of disabling all that infrastructure. Surprisingly, the Secretary of State for

defencehousingtechnology
293
4 Jun 2025 Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy

It is a privilege to rise to move this Adjournment debate about applications to the Afghan relocations and assistance policy, which has come to be known as the ARAP scheme. I intend to raise a deeply troubling case that highlights serious and systemic failings in the operation of ARAP. Those failings have very real and

defenceimmigration
222
4 Jun 2025 Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy

Thank you for that, Madam Deputy Speaker—that has given me a few more minutes. The ARAP scheme was introduced to provide a lifesaving path to safety for Afghan nationals who directly supported the UK’s mission in Afghanistan. At its core, it is a moral and strategic obligation. These individuals risked their lives work

defenceimmigration
124
4 Jun 2025 Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy

Indeed, we are. We are elected—that is what makes us different—to this Chamber to take that on and to change it. We are not bound by a bureaucratic process. We have the power here to change anything, and I simply ask: why not do that, when human lives and those who served us are at risk? We must recognise and remember

defenceimmigration
688
4 Jun 2025 Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy

We are close to running out of time, I understand that. If I may, I just stress that the failing I am referring relates to the fact that the officer who commanded the garrison met this man regularly and had him at meetings in which they discussed future operations. He was trusted. He fed them intelligence. He helped su

defenceimmigration
150
4 Jun 2025 Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy

Indeed. The hon. Lady is right in raising those points. The fact is that this scheme does not fit the requirement any longer, and I think it is, in many senses, quite brutal and inhumane. I will deal with a couple of the problems here, then I will deal with a personal case. First, the scheme is utterly slow and bureauc

defenceimmigration
102
4 Jun 2025 Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy

rose—

defenceimmigration
1
4 Jun 2025 Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy

It is powerful that my hon. and gallant Friend is here today to support this debate, given his service in Afghanistan. He will understand more than most the threats that were received by these people and how their lives would have been more difficult. He will also know that many would have lost their lives had this sor

defenceimmigration
480
4 Jun 2025 Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy

I agree with those words the Secretary of State for Defence said previously. I hope he was speaking to highlight problems with the Government, as those in opposition must do; I am afraid that my Government did not resolve that issue. At the end of my speech, as the Minister will know, I will pitch to him how things sho

defenceimmigration
394
4 Jun 2025 Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy

I hope I can give my right hon. Friend time to get to the Benches behind him, as he may wish to intervene on me. I am sure that he will not be noticed in that movement, swift and ghost-like as he. I am not going to stretch this out any longer. The individual I will refer to today worked alongside British forces in Afgh

defenceimmigration
342
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.