The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 626 contributions

Speeches by Lewis.

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

Showing 541560 of 626 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
27 Nov 2024Stellantis Luton

I assure the Secretary of State that I would have put the question I am about to ask to a Conservative Minister equally. If all British car manufacturers came together and told the Government that they could not possibly meet this 2030 goal, would the Government nevertheless persevere in maintaining it as an immovable

economy-jobsenvironmenttransport
55
26 Nov 2024Tobacco and Vapes Bill

Can the Secretary of State tell us if there is any place for vapes as a step-down, in the context of the addictive aspects of tobacco? I seem to remember that when vaping first came along, it was heralded as a way to help wean people from their tobacco addictions. Sadly, it has turned into something else, as he describ

healtheconomy-jobsfiscal-policy
78
26 Nov 2024Topical Questions

Will the Foreign Secretary take every opportunity to impress on the incoming President the importance of the article 5 guarantee, whereby the United States will come to the aid of any NATO country that is attacked? Will he impress on President Trump that we will do everything that we can to encourage other NATO allies

defenceimmigrationother
63
26 Nov 2024Tobacco and Vapes Bill

rose—

healtheconomy-jobsfiscal-policy
1
21 Nov 2024 G20 and COP29 Summits

Given the Prime Minister’s unequivocal backing of Ukraine, and his admirable assertions that Putin must be seen to fail, will he rule out replacing, if she has to be replaced, our professional diplomatic ambassador in Washington with a party politician who has stated that Ukraine must lose the occupied territory to Rus

environmentenergydefence
69
21 Nov 2024Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation

In an ideal world, there would be a limitless supply of lawyers who would provide their services to victims and defendants alike, free of charge. Then, the issue of SLAPPs could never arise. We are not talking here about trying to restrict the right of individuals to seek the protection of a court and clear their name

culture-communitycrimeother
1,523
21 Nov 2024 Business of the House

I have been impressed by the courtesy and assiduousness with which the Leader of the House sends those of us who ask a business question in which we request a statement or debate a copy of the letter she sends to the appropriate Department. She would impress me even more if she instituted a requirement that the Ministe

fiscal-policyenergyeconomy-jobs
90
20 Nov 2024Defence Programmes Developments

This is a black day for the Royal Marines. I advise the Defence Secretary that he would do well to have a look at the report, “Sunset for the Royal Marines?”, which was published by the Defence Committee in February 2018, when the issue of scrapping our amphibious assault ships was described by the cross-party Committe

defencefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
156
20 Nov 2024 Asylum Seekers: Hotel Accommodation

I do not envy the hon. Lady in her job. Does she agree that no amount of hotel accommodation will ever suffice as long as there is no effective way of preventing large numbers of people from coming into this country without permission? As a form of interception near the French coast will probably be the only deterrent,

immigrationlocal-governmentfiscal-policy
80
20 Nov 2024Police Reform

Having worked with the right hon. Lady on Committees over a number of years, I am delighted to congratulate her on her appointment. In that spirit, I will make what I think is a helpful suggestion about non-crime hate incidents. Clearly, chief constables have huge discretion over how much effort they put into investiga

crimelocal-government
110
19 Nov 2024 Infected Blood Inquiry

I am sorry not to have been here for the opening speeches. Does the Minister recognise the fundamental similarity between the way in which the victims of this scandal and those of the Post Office scandal, and no doubt other terrible scandals, were treated by the state? Does the Government have any plan, possibly on a c

healthsocial-carefiscal-policy
87
19 Nov 2024Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2024-11-19)

I am very happy and willing to support Marsha in this initiative. Like you, Chairman, I have been in this House for a considerable time, and we have seen a change in the make-up of the body of MPs with whom we serve. There are, with this new election, some quite striking examples of people who have overcome disability

186
19 Nov 2024Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2024-11-19)

Thursday is the 12th.

4
19 Nov 2024Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2024-11-19)

The old system is the best.

6
18 Nov 2024Ukraine

Does the Secretary of State share my concern at the recent media interview given by a leading candidate to be Labour’s next ambassador to Washington DC? This supposedly clever negotiator declared that Ukraine should not expect to get its territory back, and should not expect to be put on the path to join NATO, but coul

defence
94
12 Nov 2024House of Lords (Hereditary Peers) Bill

My hon. Friend made a passing reference to a fear that what is going here is a form of gerrymandering. Does he agree that if generous provision were to be made for really active remaining hereditary Members, of whom there are probably quite a few, to be given life peerages on a one-off basis, and on the basis of merit,

local-government
68
12 Nov 2024House of Lords (Hereditary Peers) Bill

The hon. Gentleman is making a very reasonable speech. Would it be fair to say that he means this is almost a case of going for the low-hanging fruit on which everybody has a measure of agreement, while recognising that future steps may be a lot more complex and potentially dangerous if we get them wrong? There is one

local-government
166
12 Nov 2024House of Lords (Hereditary Peers) Bill

The elements that make up the House of Lords consist of different groups of people: some have got there by accident of birth and are now going to leave; some have got there as the result of political horse-trading of some sort, and perhaps should not have been put there in the first place; but a great many have got the

local-government
534
12 Nov 2024House of Lords (Hereditary Peers) Bill

The Government would find considerable sympathy for their position if they were to make provision for those hereditary peers currently in the House of Lords who have done good work and who have acquired a lot of experience by possibly introducing a phase-out or a generous allocation of life peerages to those who are co

local-government
65
12 Nov 2024House of Lords (Hereditary Peers) Bill

It was not my original intention to speak but, given the nature of the debate, and in view of the signal I have received that I might be given a little latitude to go slightly wider than the narrow terms of the Bill, I will make a single point to elaborate slightly on the intervention I made upon the Father of the Hous

local-government
273
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.