The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 649 contributions

Speeches by Newbury.

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

Showing 101120 of 649 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
10 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

That is promising. Just to get a bit technical: BNG units can be created on land that is in agri-environment schemes, but only if they provide further habitat enhancements. We have heard it is extremely difficult to do that in practice, for example because the payments made under ELMS or countryside stewardship are not

104
10 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

Does it worry you that you cannot quantify those wider benefits, given that BNG is being looked at as something that could be stripped out of park planning reforms?

29
10 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

How is that being measured? How are you quantifying it, and how will it be published?

16
9 Mar 2026Middle East: Economic Update

The Chancellor has taken decisive action to bring down energy bills, but as she noted, those who rely on heating oil are often the most exposed to sudden price shocks. Even in my fairly urban constituency, there are hundreds of households in that position, and some of them have been on touch with me because the cost of

cost-of-livingeconomy-jobsdefence
105
9 Mar 2026Type 1 Diabetes: Infant Testing

It is a pleasure to contribute to this debate with you in the Chair, Sir Alec. I warmly welcome the Minister to her new role. Earlier this year, I was contacted by Michelle, the mum of a bright little boy called Toby who was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes when he was just 20 months old. Michelle told me that when she w

healthsocial-care
375
5 Mar 2026 Palliative Care

I pay tribute to my hon. Friend the Member for York Central (Rachael Maskell) for securing this debate and, more importantly, for her work and advocacy on palliative care throughout her time in the House. Last August, I visited St Giles hospice in Whittington, just over the border in the Lichfield constituency; I am hu

healthsocial-care
835
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

I want to raise the issue of the importation of illegal products, particularly those of animal origin. We have received data from the Ashford port health authority, which runs the Sevington SPS border control post, showing that in November last year, nearly a fifth of consignments that were told to make the journey fro

164
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

You mentioned that you are going to Dover. Are you going to visit Sevington as well?

16
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

It has not improved on animal origin; it has gone back up, so it is not a clear downward trend. That is what we are worried about.

27
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

I realise that I have taken up quite a bit of time, Chair, so lastly, we do not yet know whether there is data on what happens after non-attendances at Sevington. We know, as you said, that there is a process of speaking to the local authority about the consignment’s destination, but we do not know how successful that

103
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

Do you think it is a growing problem?

8
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

It is another publication that we are waiting for.

9
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

Absolutely. On that point, how effective do you feel DEFRA has been at influencing announcements from other Departments in the course of this Parliament so far? Do you think it is going well?

33
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

You have given some good examples, but there are some examples of rural interests perhaps not being well considered in otherwise well-intentioned policy announcements. I can give you an example: MHCLG’s Pride in Place funding is a massive part of local growth from the Government. It used the community needs index, whic

239
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

Obviously, we do not know exactly what the detail of the SPS deal is going to be, but can you give us assurances that, post the deal coming into force, our checks at the border will not be weaker than they are now?

43
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

DEFRA is responsible for 89% of commitments within the new environmental improvement plan, which Charlie referred to. Do you think that that is fair, given that every sector has an environmental impact?

32
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

Do you feel as though other Departments are willing to come on that journey? Have you had any resistance or difficulty in engaging with any Departments?

26
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

We have asked you quite a few questions already on the capacity of the Department, so in the light of the obvious pressures on DEFRA, what are you doing to work with other Departments to pool capacity and make sure that your priorities as a Department and those of the Government are being delivered?

54
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

There have been some areas in which concern has been raised about how well we are doing in cross-governmental efforts on the environment. The OEP flagged what it feels is inconsistent engagement from senior officials and Ministers across Government, not just DEFRA, with the environmental principles policy statement. Re

98
3 Mar 2026Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 415)

Most of these illegal imports are not coming through legitimate routes and they are not coming through commercial channels either; they are coming through personal import lanes. So how does a deal on commercial products with the EU mean that we can take our foot off the gas when it comes to checks at the border?

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