The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 168 contributions

Speeches by Hollinrake.

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

Showing 6180 of 168 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
24 Mar 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

That is absolute nonsense. Talking of confidence, according to a monthly survey by the Institute of Directors, business confidence in this country has collapsed since Labour took over. A high of plus 5 in July last year has collapsed to a covid-level low of minus 65. The Deputy Prime Minister’s Government inflicted tha

housingenvironmentlocal-government
144
24 Mar 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

My right hon. Friend raises a very important point. Constituencies such as his and mine that include those protected landscapes do not seem to have that considered or catered for in the housing targets, particularly the new ones that we have before us. Again, I am very keen to discuss with the Minister how we might add

housingenvironmentlocal-government
192
24 Mar 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

We could talk with the Minister for Housing and Planning, the hon. Member for Greenwich and Woolwich (Matthew Pennycook) about making such amendments to the legislation as it passes through Committee. I have other questions. Is Natural England sufficiently resourced to carry out its work? How long will it be before the

housingenvironmentlocal-government
298
24 Mar 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

My right hon. Friend is absolutely right. What have the Deputy Prime Minister and the Chancellor got against first-time buyers? We helped 1 million first-time buyers to get on the housing ladder through Help to Buy and discounts on stamp duty. The Government scrapped both those schemes.

housingenvironmentlocal-government
47
24 Mar 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

I do not disagree that there were some flaws in the scheme. Nevertheless, around 340,000 people made it on to the housing ladder through that process. They include people in my constituency and probably people in the hon. Member’s constituency. We recognise the need to go further. That is why we commissioned work by Ch

housingenvironmentlocal-government
210
24 Mar 2025 Planning and Infrastructure Bill

I can guarantee that we will support measures that we think will be successful. The hon. Gentleman brings up some of the work we tried to do in the previous Parliament, some of which was successful. Other things were unsuccessful, including our solution on nutrient neutrality, which was blocked by his party by about 10

housingenvironmentlocal-government
97
4 Mar 2025 Plan for Neighbourhoods

Value for money.

local-governmenteconomy-jobshousing
3
3 Mar 2025Topical Questions

Help to Buy helped 350,000 young first-time buyers and the stamp duty discount helped 640,000 first-time buyers get on the housing ladder with discounts of up to £11,000. Both are now scrapped. Is the Secretary of State pulling up the housing ladder behind her?

housinglocal-governmentsocial-care
44
3 Mar 2025Topical Questions

I will try again. The Government’s manifesto promised to preserve the green belt. Then grey belt came along, which was supposed to be a few garage forecourts. Now it turns out that grey belt will mean 640 square miles of green belt—the size of Surrey—are to be built on. Is this simply another broken promise?

housinglocal-governmentsocial-care
55
3 Mar 2025Local Government Funding

The Minister mentions local government reorganisation. On 5 February, the Deputy Prime Minister stated: “We are postponing elections for one year, from May 2025 to May 2026”—[Official Report, 5 February 2025; Vol. 761, c. 767.] but on 17 February, the Minister, in a written parliamentary question, said that “new unitar

local-governmentfiscal-policy
115
26 Feb 2025Grenfell Tower Inquiry: Phase 2 Report

May I thank the Deputy Prime Minister for advance sight of her statement and the Government’s response to the phase 2 report? I echo the Deputy Prime Minister’s sentiments, which are shared across the House. The tragedy of Grenfell, which claimed 72 innocent lives—54 adults and 18 children—will always remain a scar on

housinglocal-governmentcrime
626
5 Feb 2025Local Government Finance

I will come on to that, but we do have a different perspective. The point that I am making principally right now is that there are rising costs on councils, both in direct costs through national insurance and through indirect costs, which are not fully covered by this settlement, and I think the Minister accepted that

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
293
5 Feb 2025Local Government Finance

I have spoken before about the financial pressures all councils are under. That is principally due to rising demand on services; that is the reality. Eighty per cent of discretionary spend is on the three areas I referred to earlier. There is no doubt that there are challenging circumstances. Nevertheless, the vast maj

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
102
5 Feb 2025Local Government Finance

I think my right hon. Friend the Member for Richmond and Northallerton (Rishi Sunak) was talking about fairness, which we all believe in. The hon. Member for Middlesbrough and Thornaby East (Andy McDonald) will have a different perspective on fairness from other people. The reality is that there is a political division

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
95
5 Feb 2025Local Government Finance

I can only reiterate what the hon. Gentleman has said and what I said earlier: they do fine work and most do not do it for money but because they have the interests of their local communities at heart. That should always be the case, and those are the kind of councillors that we want. Where people have expenses to do t

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
314
5 Feb 2025Local Government Finance

We all have different views on this matter. Many parts of my constituency are not wealthy and have deprivation that is not sufficiently catered for by some of the formulas. That is what we are concerned about. We are keen to see fairness across the board, so we will scrutinise Labour’s plans very carefully on that basi

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
492
5 Feb 2025Local Government Finance

It is interesting, because the loss of the rural service delivery grant cost my local authority £14 million, so it depends where we draw the line and what the priorities are. The change in the rural services delivery grant is robbing Peter to pay Paul. That is the reality.

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
49
5 Feb 2025Local Government Finance

I do not want to be party political, but it is not us who are changing the formula. The reality is that this Labour Government are robbing Peter to pay Paul. This is a zero-sum game. If they move the formula around, some councils will be worse off and some will be better off. I want everybody to be treated fairly, but

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
157
5 Feb 2025Local Government Finance

Of course there are some needs around deprivation, but that is not the entirety. The major cost drivers for local authorities are the things that I outlined earlier: adult social care, special educational needs and temporary accommodation. There may be some crossover, but the reality is that simply basing that on depri

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
72
5 Feb 2025Local Government Finance

May I first put on record my admiration for the fine work of councils, councillors and officers right across the country? That work is often carried out at the most challenging times against a backdrop of real financial pressures on those local authorities, not least the rising demand for adult social care, special edu

local-governmentfiscal-policysocial-care
205
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.