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 741760 of 1,189 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 38 of 60Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
18 May 2025UK-EU Defence and Security Agreement

Quite simply, the answer to both the hon. Gentleman’s first question and his second question is exactly the partnership deal that we have signed this afternoon.

defenceeconomy-jobs
26
18 May 2025UK-EU Defence and Security Agreement

This is a Government delivering for defence. Today we have agreed a new bespoke and ambitious security and defence partnership between the United Kingdom and the European Union. The SDP will strengthen NATO, the cornerstone of the UK’s defence, and it will grow the economy. It allows us to step up more effectively toge

defenceeconomy-jobs
68
18 May 2025Defence Procurement: SMEs

As a former procurement Minister, the shadow Secretary of State will know that the replacement of our jet trainer is long overdue. He will have heard me say earlier that, for the first time, this is a Government who will look to direct British taxpayers’ defence investment to British-based firms, British-based jobs, Br

defenceeconomy-jobs
57
18 May 2025Defence Procurement: SMEs

First, the new SME support centre, which we have announced and will set up shortly, will help with exactly those sorts of challenges. Secondly, the hon. Member is right to point to that low 4% level of direct defence spending into SMEs. That was the level under the last Government, and it went down for every one of the

defenceeconomy-jobs
65
18 May 2025Defence Procurement: SMEs

If the hon. Lady alerts her local small firms to the commitment I have made that next month we will set a target for direct defence investment in SMEs, she will then get confirmation of our commitment to boosting this important area of our economy. She will also recognise that every 1% more of defence spending we put i

defenceeconomy-jobs
69
18 May 2025Defence Procurement: SMEs

There may be a competition for the title of the biggest Armed Forces Day event in the country—I refer the hon. Gentleman to my hon. Friend the Member for Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes (Melanie Onn). I am not sure whether his question was about SMEs or Armed Forces Day events, but I welcome the support that his small fi

defenceeconomy-jobs
112
18 May 2025Defence Procurement: SMEs

I am grateful to the right hon. Gentleman for that question. We will always work across parties in the national interest and in the interests of defence— I hope he is wrong that doing so may ruin my career. Nevertheless, I am grateful to him for noticing the £400 million investment in its Telford factory that Rheinmeta

defenceeconomy-jobs
89
18 May 2025Defence Procurement: SMEs

My hon. Friend makes an important point. The access of SMEs to defence is very often through primes and subcontracting, rather than directly with the Ministry of Defence itself. It is the certainty of long-term relationships and long-term contracts for the primes that allow them to pass those benefits on to smaller fir

defenceeconomy-jobs
92
18 May 2025Defence Procurement: SMEs

My hon. Friend knows better than most the challenge for small firms entering into the supply chain in defence, and she does more than most to champion their case. We want defence to do business differently, and making it easier for small firms and newer entrants to start doing their business with defence a big part of

defenceeconomy-jobs
97
18 May 2025Defence Procurement: SMEs

I congratulate and thank my hon. Friend, as well as my hon. Friend the Member for Aldershot (Alex Baker), for the work that they are doing on innovative finance, which will help SMEs in future. I look forward to the publication of their Royal United Services Institute report shortly. I can confirm that SME involvement

defenceeconomy-jobs
94
18 May 2025Defence Procurement: SMEs

My hon. Friend is quite right about the fact that capabilities are now changing in weeks, not months or even years. He is also right about finance. That is why I went to the London stock exchange last week and closed the markets—I think it was the first time a Defence Secretary has ever done that. I wanted to signal th

defenceeconomy-jobs
87
18 May 2025Defence Procurement: SMEs

The House will note that this afternoon we are without the Minister for Veterans and People, my hon. Friend the Member for Birmingham Selly Oak (Al Carns). He is halfway up Everest with a group of soldiers, raising funds for armed forces charities and raising the profile of veterans, and I am sure that the whole House

defenceeconomy-jobs
169
29 Apr 2025UK Airstrike: Houthi Military Facility

I am confident that my right hon. Friend the Foreign Secretary has that in mind. He will be conscious, as is the right hon. Gentleman, that the UK acts not just as the third-largest donor to the Yemen humanitarian programme, but as the penholder for Yemen at the United Nations.

defenceeconomy-jobs
50
29 Apr 2025UK Airstrike: Houthi Military Facility

I gently urge my hon. Friend not necessarily to believe everything he reads in the newspapers. He is very experienced and has a very good insight into the political world. Just to reassure him, we are pulling out all the stops behind the scenes to try to settle a trade deal with the US, just as we are to reinforce the

defenceeconomy-jobs
77
29 Apr 2025UK Airstrike: Houthi Military Facility

I am confident. We handle secure communications in secure ways, and we do that consistently here in the UK.

defenceeconomy-jobs
19
29 Apr 2025UK Airstrike: Houthi Military Facility

My hon. Friend puts the argument very well. This is a matter of freedom of navigation and a matter of international law, but it is also a matter of economic self-interest for Britain, because the price for the disruption to world shipping on this essential trade route through the Red sea is paid by ordinary people in t

defenceeconomy-jobs
75
29 Apr 2025UK Airstrike: Houthi Military Facility

The right hon. Gentleman, who I think served as a Defence Minister under two Administrations, will know that Defence Ministers and Secretaries, including me, give the highest priority to our forces’ protection. My hon. Friend the Armed Forces Minister and I went over that matter in detail with military planners and chi

defenceeconomy-jobs
110
29 Apr 2025UK Airstrike: Houthi Military Facility

I do indeed. It is part of a longer-term programme to degrade the ability of the Houthis to hit international shipping, to defend and protect freedom of navigation, and to recognise that conflicts in the middle east have a big impact on business and prosperity in this country. The British Chambers of Commerce recently

defenceeconomy-jobs
77
29 Apr 2025UK Airstrike: Houthi Military Facility

Well said. The hon. Gentleman is absolutely right to say that standing behind our armed forces and the ultimate professionalism that they display is a large cadre of civilian and military personnel who make operations successful and possible. He would be wrong to say that this is a sustained campaign. This is the first

defenceeconomy-jobs
79
29 Apr 2025UK Airstrike: Houthi Military Facility

It will indeed. The AUKUS programme is a good example of how big defence commitments provide not just long-term deterrent commitments to our own security and that of our allies but an important economic boost, showing how defence can be a driver of economic growth. My hon. Friend, who has the privilege of representing

defenceeconomy-jobs
82
← PreviousPage 38 of 60 · 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.