The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 512 contributions

Speeches by Badenoch.

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

Showing 261280 of 512 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
2 Sept 2025Engagements

It is a terrible record. I stand by every single thing that I have said. The Prime Minister cannot say why borrowing is higher under him. I will tell him why it is higher: it is because the Chancellor changed the fiscal rules so that she could borrow record amounts. She maxed out the country’s credit card, and that has

economy-jobsfiscal-policydefence
100
2 Sept 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister is dragging down the country. He is dragging it down. How can he stand there and say that he is creating jobs? Unemployment has gone up in every single month under this Labour Government. He does not know why borrowing costs are going up. Another reason is that the markets can see that he is too weak

economy-jobsfiscal-policydefence
90
2 Sept 2025Engagements

Perhaps he should have a read of the—[Interruption.]

economy-jobsfiscal-policydefence
8
2 Sept 2025Engagements

Labour Members can do the fake cheers as much as they like. The whole country knows what a mess of the economy they are making. It is clear that taxes are going up for everyone—except, perhaps, the Deputy Prime Minister. I warned before the summer that we would face weeks of speculation about which taxes would be going

economy-jobsfiscal-policydefence
110
2 Sept 2025Engagements

This is desperate stuff from the Prime Minister. This week, he had another reset. This morning, the Prime Minister scrapped his five missions. After scrapping his three foundations, his six first steps for change and his seven pillars for growth, the truth is that this man has got no clue—zero clue. But this is serious

economy-jobsfiscal-policydefence
113
15 Jul 2025Engagements

Yesterday, the head of the Office for Budget Responsibility warned the Government that higher and higher levels of taxes are bad for growth. Does the Prime Minister agree?

economy-jobsfiscal-policycost-of-living
28
15 Jul 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister is not planning to do anything this summer to fix the economy. The shadow of the last Budget is hanging over the entire country. Just yesterday, only the Conservatives supported the two-child benefit cap, because only the Conservatives believe in living within our means—not Labour, not the Liberal De

economy-jobsfiscal-policycost-of-living
188
15 Jul 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister says that he is not going to write the Budget, but his Chancellor is on the front of the Daily Mirror talking about what she is going to do on taxes, so why can he not do the same in the Chamber? I asked him about pension contributions. The truth is that he does not want to talk about pension contrib

economy-jobsfiscal-policycost-of-living
183
15 Jul 2025Engagements

I do not know where these 3,000 jobs are coming from. Unemployment has gone up every month under his Government. Perhaps the Prime Minister should speak to farmers and small business people and find out what those working people think about his Government. But that is not all, because we know that the Chancellor is lau

economy-jobsfiscal-policycost-of-living
98
15 Jul 2025Engagements

I am not talking of the country down; I am talking the Prime Minister down. I asked him what a modest income was. He answered with what a working person is. He does not know what a modest income is, and they cannot even define who working people are. The Chief Secretary to the Treasury said that working people are peop

economy-jobsfiscal-policycost-of-living
87
15 Jul 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister is talking about what he has achieved, but we have just heard that inflation is up again—the worst in the G7. We left him with 2% inflation. We have borrowing up, unemployment up and taxes up under his Government. The fact is that the Prime Minister does not get it, so let me tell him. His Budget las

economy-jobsfiscal-policycost-of-living
119
8 Jul 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister still does not understand, so I am going to make it very simple for him: this is a mess of his own making—he should not be asking how we would clean it up. The fact is this Government raised national insurance through the jobs tax, and that is why they have to put up council tax. The truth is that hi

healtheconomy-jobsimmigration
193
8 Jul 2025Engagements

I echo the Prime Minister’s sentiments about the horrific terrorist attack of 7 July. I was pleased to be at the commemoration service on Monday. In particular, our thoughts are with the families of those who lost their lives, those who had to go on without their loved ones. I would like to pay tribute to Lord Tebbit,

healtheconomy-jobsimmigration
127
8 Jul 2025Engagements

It is rare—[Interruption.] It is rare that the Prime Minister is able to give a clear answer, but I am glad that he has done so now. He also promised—in fact, he boasted—that he had solved the doctors strike. Only a Prime Minister who was so weak would give doctors a 28% pay rise—only for us now to see them vote to str

healtheconomy-jobsimmigration
115
8 Jul 2025Engagements

There was no clear answer there. The whole House will have heard the Prime Minister fail to rule out freezing tax thresholds. He could say yes to the first question—he could promise—but could not this time. What does this mean? He is talking about record investment and more jobs. We know that people are losing their jo

healtheconomy-jobsimmigration
114
8 Jul 2025Engagements

Investors are fleeing the country. The Prime Minister says he will stick to his manifesto promises, but Labour promised not to put a tax on working people and then we got the jobs tax, and all we have seen are jobs disappearing. Before the election, the Prime Minister promised “not a penny more on your council tax”. Th

healtheconomy-jobsimmigration
91
8 Jul 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister says that he has stabilised the economy. Has he spoken to any farmers recently? It is time for him to take responsibility for the mess that he is making. He has been in office for a year, and all we see is him congratulating himself on what a fantastic job he has done. [Interruption.] Nobody out ther

healtheconomy-jobsimmigration
178
1 Jul 2025Engagements

It has been a difficult week for the Prime Minister, so let us start with something simple. Can he tell the House how much his welfare Bill is going to save?

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobssocial-care
31
1 Jul 2025Engagements

How awful for the Chancellor that the Prime Minister could not confirm that she would stay in place. He talks about his year in office. This week marks the first anniversary of Labour coming into office. [Interruption.] Yeah, yeah, let’s have it. The Whips cannot get their MPs in the Lobby, but they can get them to che

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobssocial-care
253
1 Jul 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister talks about jobs. Unemployment has risen every month since Labour took office. Has he spoken to Nissan, by the way, and looked at what is happening there? This man has forgotten that his welfare Bill was there to plug a black hole created by the Chancellor. Instead, they are creating new ones. [Inter

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobssocial-care
125
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.