The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 972 contributions

Speeches by Murray.

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

Showing 381400 of 972 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
3 Mar 2025Finance Bill

I was hoping that the hon. Gentleman would again leap to the defence of Liz Truss, as he did just last week. Sadly, that was not to be the case in his intervention. I will come on to the new clauses in a moment; I am only halfway through thanking people on his side of the House for intervening, so I would be grateful i

fiscal-policyeducationenergy
128
3 Mar 2025Finance Bill

The debate on this Finance Bill has to focus on matters that are within the Bill and in the new clauses and amendments. As the hon. Gentleman will know, and as Madam Deputy Speaker reminded him, he strayed rather outside the ambit of the Finance Bill by referring to important changes to agricultural property relief tha

fiscal-policyeducationenergy
111
3 Mar 2025Finance Bill

As the right hon. Gentleman will be aware, in the coming financial year 2025-26 the personal allowance will be above the level of the new state pension, so what he said should not apply when it is people’s sole income. However, there are already cases of individual pensioners who do owe tax; indeed, around two thirds o

fiscal-policyeducationenergy
245
3 Mar 2025Finance Bill

One more time.

fiscal-policyeducationenergy
3
3 Mar 2025Finance Bill

I have been in routine contact with people from the wine industry throughout my time as Exchequer Secretary, and my officials are also in touch with the industry. As I said, the end of the wine easement happened at the beginning of February, and our early indications are that firms, warehouse keepers and HMRC have adap

fiscal-policyeducationenergy
142
3 Mar 2025Finance Bill

I beg to move, That the Bill be now read the Third time. At the autumn Budget, my right hon. Friend the Chancellor laid the essential foundations for boosting investment and growth to put more money in people’s pockets, the No. 1 mission of the Government under the Prime Minister’s plan for change. The Budget was built

fiscal-policyeducationenergy
363
3 Mar 2025Finance Bill

The impacts of the changes to the alcohol duty and the energy profits levy have already been set out in the tax information and impact note that was published alongside the autumn Budget, so that information is already in the public domain. Information on the impact on households was also published alongside the autumn

fiscal-policyeducationenergy
510
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

I think I was following the hon. Lady point that in many cases no one knows when inheritance tax will be due, because people cannot predict the sad events that may happen in their lives. But it is clear that, in trying to work out the impact of changes to tax policy, the best source of data is the actual claims data fo

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
110
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

My hon. Friend is absolutely right to point out that, under the previous Government, there was a series of cliff edges and one-year extensions that provided no stability whatsoever to businesses trying to plan investment, hiring or expansion decisions. That is why we have decided to extend the relief that the previous

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
72
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

Data is being set out by the Valuation Office Agency, which should give the right hon. Gentleman the details that he requests, but I am happy to write to him with the details that are available. In order to sustainably fund a permanent cut for retail, hospitality and leisure properties below £500,000, we have to ensure

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
92
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

What I accept, as I said earlier, is that our difficult decision on employer national insurance contributions will have impacts on different businesses across the country. But the hon. Member should welcome—businesses across the country will welcome this—the extra support that we have provided through draught relief to

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
466
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

I am going to make some progress. Let me move on to the changes to employer national insurance contributions, which is another of the difficult decisions that we had to take at the Budget. I recognise that the changes will have impacts, but asking employers to contribute more is the fairest way to restore fiscal stabil

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
440
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

I return to the point that I have made several times today: the way to understand how the policy on agricultural property relief and business property relief will work is to look at actual claims data—the claims as they relate to individual estates. The overall value of farms or businesses does not tell us exactly what

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
73
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

The hon. Lady referred to meetings that I held last week, both with representatives of UK-wide organisations and those that represent other nations within the UK. There is a difference between listening to people and having to agree, because sometimes we listen and we disagree. That is the situation we found ourselves

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
80
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

The data that I refer to is based on claims data. This is an important point that comes up frequently when we have debates on agricultural property relief and business property relief. If one were to consider assets owned by farmers or other business owners, the actual value of the asset does not give a guide to what c

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
180
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

I will make some progress, because I have given way many times on this particular point. I have plenty more to get through and I am sure that other Members would like to contribute. Depending on people’s individual circumstances, a couple will be able to pass on up to £3 million to their children or grandchildren free

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
150
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

I return to my point that three quarters of estates claiming agricultural property relief, or agricultural property relief and business property relief, will not pay any more inheritance tax in 2026-27 as a result of these changes. In terms of the extra inheritance tax liability, which is what the data about claims poi

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
366
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

It is important to emphasise that the correct data to work out the impact of these changes is the claims data. That is what is available to HMRC, and it is the basis on which we have established how many farm estates are likely to be affected by the changes.

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
50
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

To correct the hon. Gentleman, I did not say that only 4% will be affected. We have set out that up to 520 estates claiming agricultural property relief, including those that also claim business property relief, are expected to be affected in 2026-27. That means that about three quarters of estates will be unaffected a

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
101
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

I will make some progress as I have been very generous in giving way to the hon. Gentleman. He will know that his colleagues who were in government were aware of the in-year spending pressures and they chose not to share that with the Office for Budget Responsibility and thereby not to share it with the British people.

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
408
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.