The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,189 contributions

Speeches by Healey.

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

Showing 401420 of 1,189 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
7 Sept 2025Strategic Defence Review Recommendations: Timetable

The Government have accepted all 62 recommendations of the strategic defence review. Implementation of the review’s recommendations is already well under way.

defencehousing
22
7 Sept 2025Topical Questions

I pay tribute to my right hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool Garston (Maria Eagle). She served as a Minister in both this and the previous Labour Government with great commitment, and we thank her for her service. [Hon. Members: “Hear, hear.”] Last week I travelled to Norway to sign the biggest British warship deal e

defenceeconomy-jobslabour-market
178
7 Sept 2025Ukraine: Military Support

We have worked closely with Ukraine to develop new weapons systems to supply the air defence missiles it requires. While-ever Ukraine is fighting Putin’s invasion, we will stand alongside it and we will provide whatever military aid we can. Beyond that, for when we can reach a negotiated peace, we have been leading wor

defence
84
7 Sept 2025Ukraine: Military Support

I agree with my hon. Friend, and she is right that it was the biggest drone attack in the past three and a half years since Putin’s illegal invasion. These air attacks are directed at civilian areas with civilian targets. I saw for myself this week the damage that brings when I stood outside the bombed-out building of

defence
87
7 Sept 2025NATO Defence Spending Target

It should come as no surprise to anyone that the defence investment plan will be funded from the defence budget. That is exactly what will happen. It will be funded and supported by the record increase in defence spending since the end of the cold war—by the £5 billion extra in this year’s Budget—with an aim to spend 3

defenceeconomy-jobs
96
7 Sept 2025Topical Questions

I will indeed, and my hon. Friend will be encouraged, I hope, by the visit I paid to Turkey, and the initial agreement that I have signed with Turkey for a big new order of Typhoons, which will be built in Lancashire.

defenceeconomy-jobslabour-market
42
7 Sept 2025NATO Defence Spending Target

When we settle our defence investment plan and produce our annual report and accounts, the data that the hon. Gentleman seeks will be set out clearly and in the customary way to this House.

defenceeconomy-jobs
34
7 Sept 2025NATO Defence Spending Target

The response of NATO has produced results exactly to the contrary of those President Putin would have wanted when he invaded Ukraine three-and-a-half years ago. NATO is now bigger; it is 32 nations strong. The commitment that all 32 nations made in the June summit to increase national security spending to 5% by 2035 is

defenceeconomy-jobs
81
7 Sept 2025NATO Defence Spending Target

On the contrary, both the Foreign Secretary and I have been consistent that, taken across the range, the cost of the settlement with Mauritius for Diego Garcia is split between the Ministry of Defence and the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. For defence, our commitment is less than 0.2% of the defence budg

defenceeconomy-jobs
80
7 Sept 2025Topical Questions

I share with the right hon. Gentleman, and, I think, every Member of this House, the pleasure and honour of attending such breakfast clubs with veterans in my constituency. He is right about the range of concerns that veterans raise, which includes the pressures of homelessness. Recognising the forces’ service in local

defenceeconomy-jobslabour-market
79
7 Sept 2025NATO Defence Spending Target

At the Hague summit in June, all 32 NATO nations agreed to step up and increase spending on national security to 5% by 2035. I am proud that this Labour Government played a leading part in the discussions that led to that historic agreement.

defenceeconomy-jobs
44
7 Sept 2025Defence Sector: Innovation

The hon. Gentleman is right that this is the biggest British warship deal ever, and it is Norway’s biggest ever defence contract. When the Prime Minister of Norway announced the detail, he said, “We asked ourselves two questions: who is our best strategic partner, and who builds the best warships?” The answer to both w

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
83
7 Sept 2025Defence Sector: Innovation

I take my hat off to the firm in my hon. Friend’s constituency—it is exactly those sorts of businesses that are the backbone of a strong British defence industry. Small or medium-sized companies, often with the potential to grow, have not in the past seen support from Government. That is why we have set up an SME suppo

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
93
7 Sept 2025Defence Sector: Innovation

I am sure that the House will want to offer its sympathies to His Majesty and the royal family on the passing of the Duchess of Kent. The world is more dangerous and less predictable that ever, and as a result we need a strong British defence industry that is capable of innovating ahead of our adversaries. Our defence

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
106
7 Sept 2025Defence Sector: Innovation

I know that the Minister of State, my hon. Friend the Member for Plymouth Sutton and Devonport (Luke Pollard), will be pleased to meet my hon. Friend. She recognises the truth at the heart of the need for a strong British defence industry that is resilient and capable of supporting the businesses, jobs and innovation t

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
87
7 Sept 2025NATO Defence Spending Target

My hon. Friend is right. This is about not just how much the Government spend, but how well they spend. Mr Speaker, you will remember that under the previous Government, the Public Accounts Committee branded our defence procurement system as “broken”. We are reforming procurement, and that will be part of the statement

defenceeconomy-jobs
120
7 Sept 2025Topical Questions

We are always ready to take further steps on imposing economic sanctions, and to close any loopholes in those sanctions. We have a record, under both the last Government and this Government, of being at the forefront of imposing these sorts of economic measures on Putin’s regime.

defenceeconomy-jobslabour-market
47
7 Sept 2025NATO Defence Spending Target

The investment in Diego Garcia is a great investment in the defence and intelligence partnership with the United States. Together, we do things from Diego Garcia that cannot be done elsewhere; we do things together that we do not do with other nations. The deal is worth less than 0.2% of the annual defence budget. How

defenceeconomy-jobs
84
7 Sept 2025Defence Sector: Innovation

Far from being the reserve, the right hon. Gentleman is first up for the Opposition this afternoon, and I welcome that and the investment in Shropshire. I reassure him that the Government will continue to support that. I pay tribute, as he encouraged me to do, to the workforce in his area. When the defence industrial s

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
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31 Aug 2025 Ukraine

I do, indeed. If for a moment this House considers a situation in which Putin prevails in Ukraine, it is not hard to see how that makes Europe less secure. A strong Ukraine is essential for a secure UK and a secure Europe in the future. My hon. Friend urges us to do more to reinforce the British defence industrial base

defenceeconomy-jobs
104
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.