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 341360 of 426 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
15 Jan 2025 Local Government Reorganisation

The Government’s timetable is wholly inadequate. Given that the previous deal that Norfolk negotiated was scrapped without any consultation, how will the public be consulted on any changes going forward, and does the Minister accept that a minimum population of half a million may not be appropriate in rural areas, to a

local-governmenteconomy-jobsfiscal-policy
61
14 Jan 2025Drones: High-security Prisons

Two months ago in the House, I raised concerns that HMP Garth had been likened to an airport because of the number of drones illegally flying drugs into the prison. In response, the Lord Chancellor told me that the Prisons Minister was meeting the governor and thinking “about how to deal with those problems”.—[Official

crimedefence
87
9 Jan 2025Topical Questions

Upgrading Ely junction would deliver more passenger services to King’s Lynn in my constituency, boost freight and unlock benefits of £5 for every £1 invested. Will the Secretary of State confirm whether that is a priority in the Department’s bid for the spending review?

transportlocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
44
8 Jan 2025Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill

The Secretary of State has spoken about her focus on standards. The free schools programme has driven up standards across the country, so why was one of her first actions to threaten 44 free school projects developed by parents, pupils and communities? Will she lift the veil of uncertainty over them?

educationsocial-care
51
7 Jan 2025Crown Estate Bill [Lords]

My right hon. Friend is absolutely right to highlight the potential risk. There is no one-way bet in life, and there is no guarantee that the Crown Estate will successfully invest in projects that go well. I will come on to the point about the energy side of things later in my speech. It is perfectly reasonable, as we

energyeconomy-jobsenvironment
1,254
7 Jan 2025Crown Estate Bill [Lords]

The work on reforming the Crown Estate was developed by the previous Government. I am pleased to be debating the Bill today, and I thank my noble Friends for the scrutiny they have already provided. We support the objective to increase the Crown Estate’s ability to compete and invest, so that it maintains and enhances

energyeconomy-jobsenvironment
487
7 Jan 2025Crown Estate Bill [Lords]

Like me, the right hon. Gentleman will have read the Hansard reports of the debates in the other place where this issue was covered at some great length, so I defer to the points made by Lord Forsyth there. Regulation is obviously in place, but this addition would simply raise awareness of the issues in the Bill. The G

energyeconomy-jobsenvironment
184
7 Jan 2025Crown Estate Bill [Lords]

With the leave of the House, it is a pleasure to respond briefly on behalf of His Majesty’s loyal Opposition. [Interruption.] I do not know whether there is a party going on to which I have not been invited, but I am personally very happy to be here to take part in the debate. This has been a good debate, with more tha

energyeconomy-jobsenvironment
733
18 Dec 2024 Provisional Local Government Finance Settlement

Large rural counties such as Norfolk face higher costs in delivering their services, and the Government’s jobs tax adds £14 million to the pressures that Norfolk county council is facing. Can the Minister clarify whether the NICs funding he referred to in his statement, which will go to Norfolk county council and other

local-governmentsocial-carehousing
63
17 Dec 2024Women’s State Pension Age Communication: PHSO Report

When the Secretary of State was in opposition, she said she was a “long-standing supporter” of WASPI women. Given that, what would she say to the WASPI women in my constituency, the 3,300 in her constituency and those across the country who will be disappointed at her rejection of any compensation, even if not at the l

fiscal-policysocial-carecost-of-living
60
17 Dec 2024Mineworkers’ Pension Scheme: Living Standards

I am sure that any of my constituents who stand to benefit from this increase will welcome it, but how many members of the mineworkers’ pension scheme will be losing out on winter fuel payments worth up to £300 due to the decisions that this Government have taken?

cost-of-livingsocial-carefiscal-policy
48
12 Dec 2024 Building Homes

In an earlier answer, the Minister confirmed that the Government support an infrastructure-first approach. Will he work with colleagues in the Treasury and the Department for Transport to ensure approval of A10 West Winch housing access road funding, which is essential to unlock thousands of homes that are in the local

housinglocal-governmenteconomy-jobs
58
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

My right hon. Friend makes a powerful point, which reflects the rash nature of the policy and the inadequacy of the impact assessment, which does not address those issues.

educationfiscal-policy
29
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman. If he checks the record, he will see that the level of per pupil funding actually increased over the last 14 years. I congratulate the schools in my constituency that have just received good ratings from Ofsted—a number of them have done so.

educationfiscal-policy
50
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

I am sure that Stoke-on-Trent is a great place, but not everyone lives there. As I said, a number of such cases have gone to the first-tier tribunal, so the hon. Member can probably look that information up or ask the House of Commons Library. The point is that none of that information is in the impact note that the Go

educationfiscal-policy
195
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

My hon. Friend draws attention to the unintended consequences of the stamp duty measure. I wonder how much involvement the Deputy Prime Minister and her Department had in drawing it up, or whether it was drawn up in the Treasury just to get a line into the Red Book and fill out the Government’s spending plans. New clau

educationfiscal-policy
716
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

We can but hope that the hon. Member will join us in the Lobby tonight, and also that he will one day develop the attuned knowledge that my right hon. Friend has of the tax system and the changes that were introduced in the last Parliament. Let me add that the Association of School and College Leaders has said that the

educationfiscal-policy
170
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

I do not doubt the figures. I simply note that King’s Lynn and West Norfolk borough council, which is the council for my constituency, has met the housing need target it was set. Thousands of homes are being built in and around King’s Lynn, which will be a mixture of tenures—to rent and to buy. One of the big blockers

educationfiscal-policy
194
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

I am grateful for the hon. Member’s interest in my constituency. He intervened on me earlier to talk about education in North West Norfolk.

educationfiscal-policy
24
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

My right hon. Friend makes an interesting point, and I bow to his knowledge of the situation in London, which is far greater than mine. Our new clauses are about reviewing the impact of the measure, partly so that if we saw such activity, which would go against the Government’s objectives and weaken the rental market,

educationfiscal-policy
191
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.