The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 2,665 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 101120 of 2,665 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

I do not agree with the hon. Member’s point about vetting in relation to political appointments, but I do agree that the due diligence for direct ministerial appointments should be the same as for any other appointments. It clearly was not, and that is why in September I ordered that it be changed to make sure that it

mp-performancedefence
108
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

I thank the right hon. Gentleman for his question. [Laughter.] I have laid out the relevant facts. It is absolutely clear that nobody is suggesting that this information was made available to me. It clearly was not made available. It should have been made available, and I would not have made the appointment had it been

mp-performancedefence
84
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

The right hon. Member reads out the passage from Mr Case’s advice. The process that was followed was what I understood to be the usual process—in other words, the appointment was subject to security vetting. It is why, when Sir Chris Wormald looked at it in September, he addressed the question by reference back to Simo

mp-performancedefence
113
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

In September it became clear to me that in relation to the due diligence that had been carried out by the Cabinet Office, Peter Mandelson had been asked questions by my staff and given answers which were not truthful. That was exposed by the Bloomberg emails. At that point, I became concerned about the entire process.

mp-performancedefence
143
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

That is precisely why I have asked for a review of the security vetting to be carried out. I have no reason to believe that to be the case, but I want to be assured about the security vetting process, and that is why I have asked Sir Adrian Fulford to look at it, so that he can give me that further reassurance. I will

mp-performancedefence
74
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

That is why last week the Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister suspended the power of the FCDO to make a recommendation or to take a decision contrary to the recommendation of UKSV.

mp-performancedefence
33
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

Yes, it was my decision. It was an error of judgment, and that is why I have apologised to the victims of Epstein. I have done that again today, and it is right to do so. In relation to the second point of the hon. Member’s question and any other political appointments, I will have to check on that and get back to him,

mp-performancedefence
86
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

I assure the hon. Lady that I have ordered a review of any national security issues arising in relation to what I found out last Tuesday. I will obviously update the House when that review is complete.

mp-performancedefence
37
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

In relation to the right hon. Lady’s question, let me be clear: I should not have appointed Peter Mandelson. As soon as the further revelations came to light, I did ask the Cabinet Secretary to review the process, so that I could be assured about the process. He wrote to me on 16 September, setting out the conclusions

mp-performancedefence
71
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

May I address that head-on? What happened was that the information came to the attention of senior civil servants who were, in fact, doing the compliance work on the Humble Address. When they saw the information about developed vetting they took legal advice straight away, asking whether it was legal to disclose that t

mp-performancedefence
95
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

It was at that point that I ordered the review of the security vetting, because I was concerned that it had failed. In fact, because of information I was not given, it had not failed; it had actually given the recommendation that clearance should be denied. The fact that when I ordered a review of UKSV, senior official

mp-performancedefence
110
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

Let me answer that in relation to Sir Olly, and let me start by saying he has had a distinguished career. I must say that, and I do say that. Still, notwithstanding that, he should have provided this information to me, and he could have provided it to me. He is giving evidence tomorrow, but I can say to the House that,

mp-performancedefence
236
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

We have taken a number of measures in relation to crypto—

mp-performancedefence
11
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

I say again that Sir Olly Robbins has had a distinguished career, and I have worked with him over a number of years. None the less, he could and should have shared this crucially relevant information with me before Peter Mandelson took up his post, and he should have done at various points after that. It was because of

mp-performancedefence
83
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

I understand that to be the case. Obviously—[Interruption.] No, I am only saying that it was not my decision to withhold it. I understand, if I have understood Sir Olly’s position correctly, that his argument is that he cannot share it, or he could not share it, with anyone. That is as I understand it. It certainly was

mp-performancedefence
102
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

I have read that evidence, and it remains my strong view that the recommendation of UKSV could and should have been shared with me, and could and should have been shared with the Foreign Secretary and thus with the Select Committee—and it should have been.

mp-performancedefence
45
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

I was dealing with a very serious issue. I asked my team to establish urgently the facts on Tuesday night. I spoke to the former permanent secretary on Thursday night. As a result of the information I had and the exchanges I had, I made it clear that I no longer had confidence in him.

mp-performancedefence
55
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

In many instances, it is the recommendation of UKSV that is effectively the final decision, so of course it is known. In the Foreign Office, there is the additional part of the process in which the final decision is, in fact, taken by Foreign Office officials rather than the recommendation of UKSV. That is what has now

mp-performancedefence
74
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

I did ask him, and I did not accept his explanation. That is why I sacked him.

mp-performancedefence
17
20 Apr 2026Security Vetting

I understood the procedure to be that the appointment was made subject to the security vetting. [Interruption.] That is what I was told. The question the hon. Lady raises is the question I raised in September, which is why I asked Sir Chris Wormald to look at the process, and in particular at the advice in the letter f

mp-performancedefence
87
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.