The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 2,695 contributions

Speeches by Starmer.

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

Showing 2,1012,120 of 2,695 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
8 Jan 2025Engagements

We had to deliver a Budget to wipe the slate clean, to deliver a stable basis for our economy and, at the same time, to repair our public services. That is why we invested £25.6 billion over two years in the NHS, including additional funding for GPs and hospices. We are taking measures to ensure that funding is there t

crimesocial-carehousing
64
8 Jan 2025Engagements

That case never crossed my desk.

crimesocial-carehousing
6
8 Jan 2025Engagements

There has been an appalling erosion of the rights of women and girls in Afghanistan. We should all condemn that suppression of freedoms in the strongest terms. That is why we have provided additional aid, at least 50% of which will go to women and girls. The Department for Culture, Media and Sport is in touch with our

crimesocial-carehousing
84
8 Jan 2025Engagements

The City Minister has acted appropriately by referring herself to the independent adviser. We brought in our new ministerial code to allow Ministers to ask to establish the facts, and I am not going to give a running commentary on that important exercise.

crimesocial-carehousing
43
8 Jan 2025Engagements

I thank my hon. Friend for raising this issue. I was pleased that the first increased payments to mineworkers’ pension scheme members were made at the end of November. I understand the strong feelings on the British coal staff superannuation scheme, which is why the Minister for industry met the trustees last year. We

crimesocial-carehousing
75
18 Dec 2024Engagements

I have just set out the factual background and the percentage who knew about the change. The simple fact of the matter is that in the current economic circumstances, the taxpayer cannot bear the burden of tens of billions of pounds in compensation. [Interruption.] Opposition Members are chuntering away, but, in 14 year

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
63
18 Dec 2024Engagements

I am grateful to my hon. Friend for raising that issue, because every single child deserves the best start in life and there are far too many shocking cases of children being let down. The Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill is being introduced today. That puts children’s interests at the heart of Government policy a

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
64
18 Dec 2024Engagements

I thank the hon. Lady for raising this important issue on behalf of her constituents. It underlines the critical nature of the NHS workforce plan that we will deliver next summer to ensure that the expert workforce is in place and get the NHS back on its feet. I am proud that we are investing an additional £22.6 billio

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
86
18 Dec 2024Engagements

The trains and all travel were in an appalling state under the previous Government, and we are clearing that up. We are fixing it, and the hon. Gentleman should welcome that.

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
31
18 Dec 2024Engagements

My hon. Friend is right that the SNP is letting down patients in Scotland. As the Scottish Auditor General says, “greater leadership” is needed in the Scottish NHS. Waiting list targets are being missed, spending on agency staff is skyrocketing, and delays to patient discharge are hitting record levels. [Interruption.]

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
75
18 Dec 2024Engagements

This is a serious issue. Between 2005 and 2007, there was a 28-month delay in letters to women born in 1950s about changes to pension age—that was unacceptable, and it was right that the Government apologised. In 2011, the former Chancellor George Osborne then accelerated those changes with very little notice. That, eq

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
134
18 Dec 2024Engagements

My hon. Friend is right about the appalling inheritance, which included record numbers sleeping rough and almost 160,000 children living in temporary accommodation. We are delivering nearly £1 billion to councils to tackle homelessness, including increasing funding in Bolton over the next year. That includes dedicated

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
88
18 Dec 2024Engagements

We should support these young people, and we continue to work across the sector to ensure that all schools identify, support and record data on young carers. We boosted the carer’s allowance in the Budget. I agree with the right hon. Gentleman on those young carers.

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
46
18 Dec 2024Engagements

I welcome the right hon. Gentleman’s comments. As he will know, today we are introducing the landmark Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill to enable all children to succeed, including young carers. We increased pupil premium funding to over £2.9 billion, which can be used to support pupils, including carers, with iden

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
129
18 Dec 2024Engagements

I thank my hon. Friend for her question. Jim Callaghan was a giant of the Labour movement and a great public servant. He left school at 17 and served in our Royal Navy before becoming Home Secretary, Foreign Secretary, Chancellor and, of course, finally Prime Minister. I am sure that he, as a proud son of Portsmouth, w

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
70
18 Dec 2024Engagements

A £22 billion black hole, record waiting lists in our NHS—Conservative Members should hang their heads in shame—and immigration completely out of control, with nearly a million net migration. The Leader of the Opposition was the cheerleader for all of that. She wants the truth—that is the truth. That is why the Conserv

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
132
18 Dec 2024Engagements

I will do it now. A £22 billion black hole left by the Conservatives, record numbers on the waiting lists—[Interruption.]

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
20
18 Dec 2024Engagements

We have put a record amount into the NHS in the Budget to deal with the problem that the Conservatives left. We will set out the funding arrangements for hospices in the new year. But it is the same old, same old: they want all the benefits from the Budget, as she has said herself, but she does not want to pay for any

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
78
18 Dec 2024Engagements

We are driving up productivity, prosperity and living standards. That is a pay rise for the 3 million lowest-paid—the Tories should welcome that—a pay rise for those working in the NHS, and better than expected wage growth just before Christmas. What unites all three is that they are delivered by Labour but opposed by

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
56
18 Dec 2024Engagements

The Leader of the Opposition has asked three questions about winter fuel—[Interruption.] I will come to that. She has changed her mind. She used to say that the payments were a “dead weight”. She said that she had constituents who did not need them. They all stood in 2017 on a Tory manifesto that committed to getting r

fiscal-policycost-of-livinghealth
84
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.