The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 296 contributions

Speeches by Cartlidge.

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

Showing 221240 of 296 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
31 Mar 2025 Royal British Legion

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Jeremy. In a debate that is really in itself a tribute to the RBL, I begin with a number of tributes, in particular to all colleagues who have spoken today. We have seen the House at its best with a strong cross-party consensus, commemorating our veterans as well a

defenceculture-communitysocial-care
254
24 Mar 2025Topical Questions

Of course not. The Secretary of State knows perfectly well that the Labour Government derogated from the ECHR after 9/11, and a country in Europe has derogated from the ECHR since 2015. That country is Ukraine, and that is because there is a war on. Surely he recognises that, even if it is a peacekeeping force, there w

defence
101
24 Mar 2025Topical Questions

If our forces go to Ukraine, it will be as part of a peacekeeping mission, but, as the Veterans Minister reminded us earlier, Operation Banner was also described as peacekeeping, yet decades later those who served are being hounded in our courts. Our soldiers in Iraq were subjected to hundreds of vexatious claims. If o

defence
83
24 Mar 2025Military Aid to Ukraine

I can assure the Secretary of State that I am full biftas behind our armed forces and the UK defence industry. Is not the point that we provide our nuclear deterrent unconditionally to European NATO countries 24/7, our Army is in Estonia defending Europe’s eastern flank, and we have done more than any other European na

defence
92
24 Mar 2025Military Aid to Ukraine

May I associate the Opposition with the Secretary of State’s remarks about Paddy Hemingway, the last of the few to whom we owe so much? On the potential peacekeeping force for Ukraine, we have heard from the Secretary of State that it is jointly British and French. In fact, in every one of his answers he stressed the a

defence
103
27 Feb 2025War in Ukraine: Third Anniversary

I respect the hon. Gentleman’s personal position, but can he explain why the leader of his party thought that the priority for President Zelensky should be to set a timetable for elections, given that Winston Churchill, when facing a dictator, did not hold elections because we were under martial law?

defencesocial-care
50
27 Feb 2025War in Ukraine: Third Anniversary

It is an honour to have the opportunity to mark the grim milestone that is the third anniversary of Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine. I am grateful to the Backbench Business Committee for calling this debate, and I pay tribute to all the brilliant speeches we have heard from Members on both sides of the House, parti

defencesocial-care
1,107
26 Feb 2025 British Indian Ocean Territory

Why?

defenceeconomy-jobs
1
26 Feb 2025 British Indian Ocean Territory

Will the Minister give way or tell us how much?

defenceeconomy-jobs
10
26 Feb 2025 British Indian Ocean Territory

I am grateful to all colleagues who have participated in today’s debate. In a week when the biggest domestic issue has been defence spending, there was one thing that we needed from the Government today: transparency. Every penny involved in this terrible Chagos deal will be public money, taken from the pockets of hard

defenceeconomy-jobs
495
26 Feb 2025 British Indian Ocean Territory

The hon. Gentleman is doing well on getting a role as a Parliamentary Private Secretary. This is Parliament. Ever since it started, Parliament’s constitutional role has been to approve money for the Executive, but it cannot carry out that role unless the Government tell Parliament the truth about how much money they ar

defenceeconomy-jobs
56
26 Feb 2025 British Indian Ocean Territory

My hon. Friend is right. Why can the Government not tell us whether the Chagos deal will come from the defence spending uplift? It is public money, not the Government’s money. It comes from taxpayers who are already overtaxed, so the Government could at least tell them where the money will come from. The Chagos deal ma

defenceeconomy-jobs
112
26 Feb 2025 British Indian Ocean Territory

My right hon. Friend puts it brilliantly. He put the question about the waiver and it was ignored, like all the other questions we have asked. We have asked point-blank questions repeatedly—UQs, oral questions and debates—and the Government never answer any of them. I conclude with this: “Surrendering sovereignty over

defenceeconomy-jobs
236
26 Feb 2025 British Indian Ocean Territory

My right hon. Friend is spot on. They know how much it will cost; they are just not being transparent with public money. I turn to the speeches made by my hon. Friends. My right hon. Friend the Member for Rayleigh and Wickford (Mr Francois) made an excellent point of order earlier, in which he made the point that the M

defenceeconomy-jobs
294
26 Feb 2025 British Indian Ocean Territory

On a point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker. Are there any rules whereby the amount of transparency from a Government should be determined according to the size of their majority?

defenceeconomy-jobs
30
13 Feb 2025 Ukraine

(Urgent Question): To ask the Secretary of State for Defence if he will make a statement on Ukraine.

defenceeconomy-jobs
18
13 Feb 2025 Ukraine

I am grateful to you, Mr Speaker, for granting this urgent question; we are in recess next week, and the day that we return will be the third anniversary of Putin’s unprovoked illegal invasion of Ukraine. In the past three years, Russia has inflicted unimaginable suffering on Ukraine. There has been military and civili

defenceeconomy-jobs
481
10 Feb 2025Topical Questions

I know all about the Unity deal because, as the Minister for Defence Procurement and Industry said, I negotiated it. This is extraordinary complacency on tax from the Secretary of State. The Government are taxing not just the defence industry but the education of defence people’s children and death-in-service payments.

defenceeconomy-jobs
78
10 Feb 2025Topical Questions

Surely, one of the most important lessons from the war in Ukraine for our own military base is the urgent need to fire up the defence industry and increase its capacity. However, today we learned from ADS that British defence manufacturers will be hit with a £600 million tax rise this Parliament from higher national in

defenceeconomy-jobs
70
10 Feb 2025Defence Spending

When the Prime Minister said that the base “cannot operate”, he was referring to operations. That implies that there must be some kind of direct threat to satellite communications on Diego Garcia. The world will have seen that the Secretary of State has not defended that position—he is not leaning into it in any way—wh

defencefiscal-policy
110
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.