The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 426 contributions

Speeches by Wild.

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

Showing 281300 of 426 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 15 of 22Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
24 Feb 2025 Crown Estate Bill [Lords]

I thank hon. Members from across the House, and my noble Friends, who have worked hard to scrutinise this important legislation. I also thank the Exchequer Secretary for the constructive approach he has taken throughout these proceedings, as did the Financial Secretary, particularly on seabed protections, as well as th

energyeconomy-jobslocal-government
227
24 Feb 2025 Crown Estate Bill [Lords]

We are dealing with the Bill in front of us today. To do so at the moment would be too complex for the licensing reasons and other reasons set out in Committee, which could undermine the returns that would be made for taxpayers, whether in Wales or other parts of the country. The hon. Member for Mid and South Pembrokes

energyeconomy-jobslocal-government
1,286
13 Feb 2025 Ukraine

Given Putin’s illegal invasion and declared intent, do the Government agree that any negotiations must result in a sovereign Ukraine, and that the UK will play its part in providing security guarantees that are meaningful, unlike those of the past, because that is crucial to securing a lasting peace?

defenceeconomy-jobs
49
11 Feb 2025 US Steel Import Tariffs

It is no secret that President Trump loves tariffs and intended to use them, and the Minister is coming across as a little complacent in his approach. Can he clarify whether any discussions have taken place with the Administration about continuing tariff-free quotas for British steel since the inauguration? Presumably,

economy-jobsdefence
86
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (First sitting)

I beg to move amendment 4, in clause 1, page 1, line 26, at end insert— “(3) The Chancellor of the Exchequer must limit borrowing by the Crown Estate under this section by regulations made by statutory instrument, and these regulations may not be made unless a draft of the instrument has been laid before and approved b

fiscal-policyenvironmentenergy
113
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (Second sitting)

I am grateful, Mr Mundell, for your chairing this afternoon, and I am grateful to Ms Furniss for chairing the first session this morning. I am grateful for the support, help and advice of the Clerks and for the contributions and responses provided by the Crown Estate during the passage of the Bill. I look forward to re

energylocal-governmentfiscal-policy
112
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (Second sitting)

I am up now. I will not detain the Committee long. We did not support new clause 5, so it follows that we do not support new clause 6, although it raises a thought in my mind. The east of England, which is home to the largest offshore wind sites in Europe, is perhaps not getting its fair dibs. That is probably somethin

energylocal-governmentfiscal-policy
71
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (Second sitting)

Well—

energylocal-governmentfiscal-policy
1
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (Second sitting)

The Minister talked about flexibility, but the Crown Estate would not suddenly decide tomorrow to sell some asset; it will have a business case and a process. That business case will go to the Chancellor, who will get advice rapidly—within a matter of hours or a day—either approve it or not, and report to the House. I

energylocal-governmentfiscal-policy
65
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (Second sitting)

I will respond to Government new clause 2 and to new clause 3, which was tabled in my name. As we heard from the Minister, Government new clause 2 will require the Crown Estate commissioners to obtain consent from the Treasury before they permanently dispose of any of the Crown Estate’s interest in, or rights or privil

energylocal-governmentfiscal-policy
700
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (First sitting)

I am grateful for the contributions on this point and for the Minister’s response. I have read the framework agreement closely. At the moment, the Crown Estate will notify the Treasury of changes and ultimately the Treasury will come to Parliament through the estimates process to approve the pay, based on that policy.

fiscal-policyenvironmentenergy
120
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (First sitting)

The clause amends schedule 1 to the Crown Estate Act 1961. Specifically, it will increase the number of commissioners from eight to 12 and require them to be paid out of the returns generated by the Crown Estate, rather than out of money provided by Parliament, as is the case currently. Clause 2 is intended to bring th

fiscal-policyenvironmentenergy
704
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (Second sitting)

Thank you for calling me to speak again, Mr Mundell—it is good to get the exercise. There is not much to add on this very straightforward clause and amendment, other than that the commencement date, which brings the legislation into force automatically within two years, could usefully be applied to other legislation fr

energylocal-governmentfiscal-policy
309
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (Second sitting)

This is a pretty straightforward clause. It is one of those that were added to the Bill in the other place to improve it, and I hope the Minister might learn the lesson of those clauses as we come to consider the new clauses shortly. Question put and agreed to. Clause 6 accordingly ordered to stand part of the Bill. Cl

energylocal-governmentfiscal-policy
67
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (Second sitting)

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship again so soon, Mr Mundell. As the Minister noted, the clause was added in the other place, particularly following the efforts of my noble Friend Lord Forsyth of Drumlean. It was backed by peers from across the parties, and Labour peers may have supported it as well. The

energylocal-governmentfiscal-policy
127
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (First sitting)

My point about the new clause is trying to get some transparency about what those proceeds might be. I do not whether the hon. Member can enlighten me as to from where they might be coming and which projects will be invested in, or how many jobs will be created. He might apply for the job of the chairman of GB Energy,

fiscal-policyenvironmentenergy
1,191
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (First sitting)

As the Minister said, clause 4 was added on Report in the House of Lords to require the Crown Estate’s annual report to include activities under the partnership between the Crown Estate and GB Energy. I will also speak to new clause 4, which is in my name. Clause 4 does introduce an important layer of transparency, as

fiscal-policyenvironmentenergy
307
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (First sitting)

I will briefly speak to new clause 11. On Second Reading, we heard a lot of debate and discussion about the role of community benefits. As I mentioned, I represent a coastal area where there are existing community benefit schemes through the operators of the offshore wind projects that operate on the East Anglian coast

fiscal-policyenvironmentenergy
149
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (First sitting)

I rise briefly to speak to amendment 9, not least because I represent North West Norfolk, which is next door to North Norfolk where I grew up. It is sometimes quite difficult to get the local names correct, but Happisburgh is actually pronounced “Haysborough”, rather than “Happisberg”. I wanted to get that on the recor

fiscal-policyenvironmentenergy
134
6 Feb 2025Crown Estate Bill [ Lords ] (First sitting)

Okay. Amendment 1 would require the Crown Estate commissioners to have regard to net zero targets, regional economic growth and ensuring resilience in various areas. Instinctively, I am a bit sceptical about putting more obligations on the Crown Estate, given that its primary purpose is to generate a return for the nat

fiscal-policyenvironmentenergy
98
← PreviousPage 15 of 22 · 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.