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 201220 of 358 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
4 Jun 2025Police Presence on High Streets

It is a privilege to be here with you in the Chair, Ms Furniss. I congratulate the hon. Member for Birmingham Erdington (Paulette Hamilton) on securing the debate. Some people might look at this debate and think that this is not really the most important thing in life, but our constituents want to be able to go down th

crimelocal-government
786
4 Jun 2025Police Presence on High Streets

Does the hon. Lady recognise that if we make that a criminal offence, those cases will go to the Crown courts, which are all completely blocked? That allows people more time and is more likely to incentivise them to plead not guilty, because they know that buys them time. With shoplifting, we want to get them in quickl

crimelocal-government
82
1 Jun 2025 Government Announcements

Further to that point of order, Mr Speaker. I have just seen the headline in The Telegraph that dropped at just after 10 o’clock this morning which says, “I’ve read the Defence Review”. This journalist must have been fully briefed and handed a copy of it, long before anybody else. Surely that is an abuse.

defencemp-performance
55
1 Jun 2025 Government Announcements

May I say to the right hon. Lady, whom I have known for a little while, that normally when a Speaker upbraids the Leader of the House, the first response of the Leader of the House is to grovel and apologise? That is standard, because she has to take it for the party that she represents in government. I simply suggest

defencemp-performance
187
1 Jun 2025Strategic Defence Review

Mark Rutte, the head of NATO, has said in the last few days that all NATO nations must achieve 3.5% of GDP on defence spending. I respect the Secretary of State a lot, and he has known me for a long time in this House. When he said on Saturday that there was “no doubt” that UK defence spending would rise to 3% by 2034,

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
167
13 May 2025 Great British Energy Bill

On a point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker. I just want to remind the House that the Deputy Speaker in the Chair today is also sanctioned by the Chinese Government for her bravery.

energyenvironment
33
13 May 2025 Great British Energy Bill

Lords amendment 2B resulted from the work of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, which includes cross-party membership from this House. I see some of its members in the Chamber now. Lord Alton and other members of the alliance, including me, who have been sanctioned by the Chinese Government have worked tireless

energyenvironment
713
13 May 2025 Great British Energy Bill

The question, however, is this: at the end of it all, how will we know that the supply chains have been correctly declared? If they have not been, it will become a matter of avoidance. America checks, tests and sanctions companies that have lied about their supply chains, and that has forced wholesale change to its sup

energyenvironment
88
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

He is not—what a pity.

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
5
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

One thing puzzles me slightly about the position taken by the Government, which is a bit like that on the Chagos islands: we already owned them, but we entered a negotiation to give them away and rent them back. In this instance, Europe threatens us that we cannot talk about other matters until we sign up to this defen

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
94
12 May 2025Consular Assistance: Statutory Right

18. What discussions he has had with Cabinet colleagues on introducing a statutory right to consular assistance.

defenceother
17
12 May 2025Consular Assistance: Statutory Right

I remind the Government that their manifesto promised a legal right to consular assistance in cases of human rights violations. The Government have now been in power for close on a year. This is not something that should take a big shove; surely, we should do it straight away. Surely such assistance should be a legal r

defenceother
123
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

On national insurance!

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
3
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

Of course, that argument was used in reverse on those of us who had had concerns about Europe for 40 years as we were told—exactly to my hon. Friend’s point—that a referendum was superior to continuous elections. We made a decision after the last referendum; that was a generational move. We have hardly had a generation

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
63
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

Will my hon. Friend give way?

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
6
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

I am pleased that my hon. Friend raises that point, which I want to elaborate further. The real point is that J. D. Vance, the vice president, came over to Munich and ripped a hole through the Europeans, including ourselves, for not having spent enough, although we were one of the top spenders. Since then, the American

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
133
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

It is good to follow the hon. Member for Bournemouth East (Tom Hayes) and to be reminded of how old he was when I first came here; I hope he stays here as long as well, or maybe I do not hope for that as it might mean we Conservative Members will be on the Opposition Benches forever. Today’s debate is on an important t

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
1,160
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

I just wanted to check on something. We can debate whether a trade deal can be improved—I am sure that all trade deals can be improved, whether it is the American one or what is an extensive one with Europe, and probably the greatest one negotiated in the past—but one area, as the Government go back into this discussio

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
124
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

rose—

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
1
12 May 2025UK-EU Summit

I want to make a couple of points on this issue before I give way. We know, and everybody else around the world outside the EU knows, that the EU puts up very hidden tariff barriers. America is right about that; it complained that Europe finds all sorts of little regulations and problems, so that it cannot break in wit

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
138
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.