Speeches by Malthouse.
Every Hansard contribution by Kit Malthouse this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.
Showing 301–320 of 484 contributions · most-recent first
| Date | Debate & contribution | Words |
|---|---|---|
| 4 Mar 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Seventeenth sitting) “On a point of order, Mr Dowd. In his opening sentence, my hon. Friend said that none of us wanted to see the creation of an assisted dying agency. My interpretation of our speaking to a particular amendment is that we have to address what it intends to do in the Bill. My hon. Friend said that he does not want what the …” healthsocial-care | 132 |
| 4 Mar 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Sixteenth sitting) “On a point of order, Mr Efford. I seek your guidance on the votes that we have just taken on the last group of amendments. If any Member, or any external person, were to attempt to misrepresent part of the debate on those amendments, what could we do? For example, in respect of amendment 368, tabled by my right hon. Fr…” healthsocial-care | 139 |
| 4 Mar 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Sixteenth sitting) “As the hon. Lady will know, a number of our proceedings have been misinterpreted, shall we say, on social media. For complete clarity, with regard to the initial conversation, the Bill leaves to the discretion of the doctor whether it is appropriate to raise the matter, given their knowledge of the patient. They have n…” healthsocial-care | 132 |
| 4 Mar 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Sixteenth sitting) “Perhaps I was not clear. I meant the guidance on this Bill. Although the Minister may not necessarily be able to say what will be in it, is it conceivable that the CMO, in drawing up guidance as a requirement under the Bill, would not consult Down’s syndrome groups? My point is that, given what has been expressed and t…” healthsocial-care | 80 |
| 4 Mar 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Sixteenth sitting) “I apologise for having arrived ever so slightly late, Mr Efford. In the Minister’s view, is it conceivable that he or any future Minister—or, indeed, the current or any future chief medical officer—would not consult with groups representing those with Down’s syndrome in drawing up the various guidelines on the Bill?” healthsocial-care | 51 |
| 4 Mar 2025 | Gaza “I was going to ask what we would do if the Israelis refused to let in aid, or to turn on the water and power, but I think we all know that basically the answer is nothing. Instead, let me ask this. The Minister rightly mentioned the macabre display around the return of the hostages and the condition of those hostages, …” defencesocial-carehealth | 173 |
| 4 Mar 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Seventeenth sitting) “On a point of order, Mr Dowd. I am very sorry, but I just want your guidance. The hon. Lady is giving a speech which I am afraid we have covered before. We have had extensive debates on the impact of terminal diagnosis on people’s mental health and depression. I just want your guidance on what the Committee should do t…” healthsocial-care | 79 |
| 4 Mar 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Seventeenth sitting) “Just to be clear, a number of the amendments the Minister mentioned are in my name; I have now withdrawn them, albeit they would not have been voted on until later stages. I have withdrawn them in favour of the amendments tabled by the hon. Member for Spen Valley, which broadly do the same thing.” healthsocial-care | 55 |
| 4 Mar 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Seventeenth sitting) “No, no. I formally withdrew those amendments earlier today.” healthsocial-care | 9 |
| 4 Mar 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Seventeenth sitting) “I rise to speak in support of amendment 184 and to point out that I have now withdrawn amendments 329 to 334, so we will not vote on them later. Like the hon. Member for Spen Valley, I had thought that although it was sensible at Second Reading to have schedules to the Bill that laid out the forms, they were quite limi…” healthsocial-care | 799 |
| 4 Mar 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Seventeenth sitting) “We do not necessarily have specific registers. People are members of professional bodies, and within those professional bodies, people become accredited because of their training. As the Minister referred to earlier, there is no such thing as a list of palliative care specialists; it is not defined in that way. Creatin…” healthsocial-care | 113 |
| 26 Feb 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Fourteenth sitting) “Amendment 50 requires that whoever is medically assessing capacity is also able to understand the legal implications. The final point of the amendment says that they have to understand what the insurance implications are likely to be, which would mean that they would have to inquire into the individual’s financial circ…” healthsocial-care | 182 |
| 26 Feb 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Fifteenth sitting) “I rise to speak briefly to amendment 368, which stands in the name of my right hon. Friend and constituency neighbour the Member for East Hampshire (Damian Hinds). I thought it was an interesting amendment to table, not least because I witnessed the introduction of the Down Syndrome Act 2022 by our colleague—sadly, now…” healthsocial-care | 516 |
| 26 Feb 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Fifteenth sitting) “What we have been talking about this afternoon does not necessarily affect the reality of what the vast majority of conversations are like. There are some people who show up, get a terminal diagnosis and are told they are going to die within a matter of weeks, and they need an approach. But the vast majority of people …” healthsocial-care | 117 |
| 26 Feb 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Fifteenth sitting) “Maybe we have a different interpretation of the Montgomery case, but my interpretation is that it shifted the duty of doctors from being based on what a reasonable doctor should disclose to what a reasonable patient would want to know. In these circumstances, in which someone has a terminal diagnosis and only a few mon…” healthsocial-care | 76 |
| 26 Feb 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Fifteenth sitting) “I am not sure my hon. Friend is entirely right. My understanding is that under law and medical ethics, doctors have to discuss all courses of action with someone, even if they believe a course of treatment might have adverse consequences. It is not that they can restrict themselves; they have to give someone the full r…” healthsocial-care | 63 |
| 26 Feb 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Fifteenth sitting) “I am very grateful to the hon. Lady. It would be fantastic if she did that. However, I think we could probably deal with the intent of the amendment if the Minister were willing to commit—it is not a big commitment to make—that in the making of regulations and in the instructions to the CMO to produce guidance, he will…” healthsocial-care | 129 |
| 26 Feb 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Fifteenth sitting) “The Minister can correct me if I am wrong, but my understanding is that there are extra checks in specific circumstances, on top of the MCA, as the hon. Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford said. They are generally specific to those circumstances: for example, if someone is going to marry, they have to understand what m…” healthsocial-care | 134 |
| 26 Feb 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Fifteenth sitting) “I want to reiterate briefly a point that we have made previously. The more we seek to police the conversations between medics and patient, the more guarded those conversations may become. As we know from the evidence that we have received, there are those who are determined to get an assisted death. The more we lay it …” healthsocial-care | 157 |
| 25 Feb 2025 | Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Twelfth sitting) “That is a misrepresentation.” healthsocial-care | 4 |