The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 610 contributions

Speeches by McMahon.

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

Showing 81100 of 610 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
21 Jul 2025 Birmingham Bin Strikes

I thank the Chair of the Select Committee for her comments—we agree on much. She speaks to why a resolution on this issue is so important. At the heart of this, there are working people with rent and mortgages to pay, who want a resolution. To be clear, the council has been in negotiations over many months and has made

local-governmentlabour-marketcost-of-living
171
21 Jul 2025 Birmingham Bin Strikes

I hear the hon. Member’s charac-terisation of the issue, but it bears no relationship at all to the reality of the situation. The council is an independent employer. It is not for the Government to go council by council negotiating trade union disputes or terms and condition changes. It is for the councils themselves a

local-governmentlabour-marketcost-of-living
285
21 Jul 2025 Birmingham Bin Strikes

That is a fair point. I forgot that the hon. Member for Birmingham Perry Barr (Ayoub Khan) had a brief stint as a Liberal Democrat councillor. Actually, the people of Birmingham want us to put the party politics to one side. I think what matters to local people is, first, that they are treated fairly when it comes to l

local-governmentlabour-marketcost-of-living
200
21 Jul 2025 Birmingham Bin Strikes

The hon. Gentleman makes fair observations about the funding crisis in local government, but it would be remiss of me not to take him back to the coalition years, which started austerity in local government. The Liberal Democrats were not just casual observers of the demise of local government but active participants i

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21 Jul 2025 Birmingham Bin Strikes

Members will be aware of the continuing disruption caused by industrial action in Birmingham. I want to be clear that Birmingham city council is an independent employer and that this dispute is between the council and Unite the trade union. The Government are rightly not a party to it, but of course we have an interest

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21 Jul 2025 Birmingham Bin Strikes

We have to accept that there are some issues here that are unique to Birmingham. For instance, many councils across England dealt with equal pay over a decade ago, and Birmingham did not, which is why the liabilities have escalated in the way they have. On the hon. Member’s fundamental point about fair funding and ensu

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21 Jul 2025 Birmingham Bin Strikes

Whoever is negotiating in this environment will have the same guardrails as the local authority does. The local authority has to be mindful of the equal pay package that it has agreed with all the trade unions, and it cannot do anything in this very narrow dispute—however impactful it is on the workers and local reside

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116
21 Jul 2025 Birmingham Bin Strikes

Our starting point, of course, is that we want all parties to negotiate in good faith, and we want the local authority to do its best to table a deal that goes as far as it can go, but the red line has to be that it cannot compromise and completely unravel the equal pay negotiations that have taken place, to which all

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197
21 Jul 2025 Birmingham Bin Strikes

The way the right hon. Member starts is where I would hope most local authorities do when looking at equal pay, but the reality is that there will always be winners and losers in equal pay where women have been underpaid for a long time. Councils have options here: they can either compensate and pay upwards for all the

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201
21 Jul 2025 Birmingham Bin Strikes

I thank the right hon. Member for taking my advice and not making this party political—a bit more refining and we will get there in the end. Surely the right hon. Member would expect that the local authority would enter a trade union negotiation in good faith and would go as far as it can lawfully go in making a settle

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173
16 Jul 2025 Future of the Church of England

I believe that very strongly, actually. Even Members who are not church attenders will take part in civic life at a local level that is closely linked to their local parish church. I think about Remembrance Sunday and the role parish churches play in those reflections. I think about our own Mayoral Sunday, which is cel

culture-communitysocial-careother
178
16 Jul 2025 Future of the Church of England

I thank the hon. Member for East Wiltshire (Danny Kruger) for securing this important debate on the future of the Church of England. I am grateful for the opportunity to respond on behalf of the Government. The hon. Member has often spoken very powerfully about the importance of faith, its role in public life and the b

culture-communitysocial-careother
782
13 Jul 2025Topical Questions

My hon. Friend will know that, for the right reasons, we have put a significant amount of energy and time into meeting parliamentarians from across the House to discuss those local issues. Absolutely, we will meet; that will probably be the sixth meeting that we have had with Cornish MPs on this issue. We understand, r

housinglocal-governmentculture-community
98
13 Jul 2025Topical Questions

We are now in a statutory process for local government reorganisation, and Devon will submit its final proposals to us by the end of November. We do not want to pre-empt those or say anything that will direct them, but I assure the hon. Member that there will be a consultation on the proposals that meet the threshold,

housinglocal-governmentculture-community
68
13 Jul 2025Topical Questions

The real issue for most councils is that the Liberal Democrats did not make hay when the sun was shining in their coalition years. Let nobody in local government forget that the seeds of the erosion of local neighbourhood services started in those coalition years, when the Liberal Democrats more than ably abetted the C

housinglocal-governmentculture-community
59
13 Jul 2025Topical Questions

I thank my hon. Friend for the work she has done to champion fair funding across local government, particularly for York. I absolutely understand the issues. The fair funding review is meant to do two things. It takes into account the need—the cost pressures driving local authorities—set against the resource, which is

housinglocal-governmentculture-community
93
13 Jul 2025Topical Questions

We are in the consultation period for the fair funding review 2.0 until 15 August. The issue of housing costs being taken into account when we judge deprivation has been raised by Members previously, but I encourage all Members of the House and people beyond it to submit their responses to the consultation.

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13 Jul 2025Topical Questions

The hon. Gentleman will know that it is Labour councils that are leading the charge at a local level to regenerate local communities and invest in local businesses—the evidence is there. They are supported by the plan for communities and the community right to buy; there is a real effort in this area. He did not give p

housinglocal-governmentculture-community
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13 Jul 2025Deprived Areas: Funding

We are in a consultation now, so we are willing and ready to hear representations, but many people—I am not accusing the hon. Member of this—have jumped to conclusions based on headlines that are not supported by the evidence when we track where money ultimately goes. All the matters that she rightly said need to be ta

local-governmenteconomy-jobssocial-care
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13 Jul 2025Deprived Areas: Funding

I thank the former Minister for those representations. On the point about fair funding and unpicking where money is needed, there is a lot of commonality on this issue in the Chamber. We absolutely accept that in rural areas the cost of service delivery is higher in some cases, such as for refuse collection and adult s

local-governmenteconomy-jobssocial-care
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.