Speeches by Lam.
Every Hansard contribution by Katie Lam this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.
Showing 161–180 of 305 contributions · most-recent first
| Date | Debate & contribution | Words |
|---|---|---|
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “In that case, I am happy to reassure him that I wrote every word. The short answer to the question about Albania is yes. We think that would be completely appropriate. Why would Albania refuse to accept one of its own citizens that should, by our rules and our laws, be returned to that country? If it refuses to do so, …” immigration | 199 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “I will happily come to the second question in a second, but I am a little confused. Is the hon Gentleman suggesting that I did not write my speech myself?” immigration | 30 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “The new clause maintains the Home Secretary’s ability to judge whether or not a country is being unco-operative. If it is unable to help, that is different from being unco-operative in the way that we would define it here.” immigration | 39 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “New clause 34 prevents any foreign national who is convicted of any offence from remaining in the UK. It should be a fundamental principle of our system that immigration never makes the British public any less safe. Unfortunately, however, many of those who have come to the UK in recent years have broken our laws. Acco…” immigration | 755 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “My hon. Friend clearly said that judges are doing the best they can with the rules and precedents that they have been set. I have described our judges as unaccountable to the public. That is not a criticism: it is a fact.” immigration | 42 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “I hope it was clear in my remarks, but for the avoidance of doubt or ambiguity I want to say that the Opposition do not criticise our judges. Indeed, as my hon. Friend the Member for Stockton West said, they are doing the best they can with the rules and precedents under which they operate. That is why the new clause s…” immigration | 66 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “I will make a little progress. The concept of universal rights is clearly a good one. It is one of the great gifts to humanity of the Judeo-Christian tradition to recognise that every human life has inherent worth, and every human being should be treated with the dignity that that inherent worth confers. But any set of…” immigration | 339 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “I thank the hon. Gentleman for his question—yes, I think it is fundamentally important that decisions about who can be and remain in our country are made by people who are accountable to the public.” immigration | 35 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “In November 2024, a Congolese paedophile who sexually assaulted his own stepdaughter was allowed to remain in the UK despite the Government’s attempts to deport him, out of concern that forcing him to leave the country would interfere with his right to a family life. In December 2024, a Turkish heroin peddler was allow…” immigration | 342 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “I welcome the Minister’s response, particularly her words about the importance of settlement and citizenship being earned. The Opposition are excited to see the immigration White Paper, and particularly any data and fiscal impact analyses that it may contain. I apologise if this information is already publicly availabl…” immigration | 109 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “The Minister might be anticipating what I am about to say: we would very much appreciate, in that case, if she could instead provide an evidential basis from the Government on which we could make some of these decisions.” immigration | 39 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Twelfth sitting) “Will the Minister give way?” immigration | 5 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Eleventh sitting) “It was a privilege to hear about Thomas Roberts’s life. The hon. Member for Bournemouth East did himself great credit in telling us about him so movingly. Thomas’s mother, Dolores, whose pain is impossible for us to imagine, has also done his memory great credit by finding a way in her grief to talk about her son to he…” immigration | 129 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Eleventh sitting) “I will come on to precision and the ways of determining age slightly later in my remarks. Ahmed Hassan, an Iraqi asylum seeker, claimed to be a 16-year-old when he arrived in the UK. In 2017, he set off a bomb at Parsons Green tube station, injuring 23 people. His real age is still not a matter of public record. In 201…” immigration | 692 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Eleventh sitting) “On 23 January 2023, Lawangeen Abdulrahimzai was sentenced to life imprisonment at Salisbury Crown court. Nearly a year earlier, Abdulrahimzai had murdered 21-year-old Thomas Roberts in Bournemouth town centre by stabbing him to death in the street following a dispute over an e-scooter. Abdulrahimzai was an Afghan asylu…” immigration | 200 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Eleventh sitting) “I totally take the hon. Gentleman’s point, but I think he is answering a slightly different point. What we are saying is that the combination of the extension of time and the change in criteria would lead to lower applications. It is not so much about a choice on the part of the individual migrant, but a structural cha…” immigration | 62 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Eleventh sitting) “He is nodding. Part of what we are trying to say by extending the time is that we feel that a person’s commitment to the UK before they apply for settlement should be longer than five years. If application numbers go down because people feel that they do not want to commit for 10 years before getting settlement, that i…” immigration | 149 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Eleventh sitting) “I will come back briefly. If I have properly understood the hon. Member’s question, he is asking what we think the impact will be on the number of people who would still apply for ILR after 10 years.” immigration | 38 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Eleventh sitting) “I think the hon. Gentleman is eliding two different routes. At the moment there is a five-year route, which is for people on eligible visas, and a 10-year route. The 10-year route has LLR requirements that have to be applied for every two and a half years, and is the route that generates the fees that he is talking abo…” immigration | 122 |
| 18 Mar 2025 | Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill (Eleventh sitting) “I have already acknowledged that the margin for error is massive—that is clearly true. If everything that the hon. Member is saying is correct, I would like to see Government figures to replace the CPS figures. I think that is a reasonable request. The £234 billion cost is equivalent to £8,200 per household, or around …” immigration | 427 |