The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 184 contributions

Speeches by Byrne.

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

Showing 161180 of 184 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
16 Dec 2024Israel and Palestine

It is a pleasure to speak in this debate, Mrs Harris. First things first: I utterly condemn the attacks on 7 October. I utterly condemn the kidnap, torture and murder of hostages by Hamas. I also utterly deplore and condemn the destruction of Palestine and Palestinian life that has ensued. That destruction is now so co

defenceculture-communityother
125
27 Nov 2024Stellantis Luton

This is indeed a hard day for Luton. I welcome what the Secretary of State shared with the House, and the review of the zero emission mandate that he announced. In that review, I hope that he looks again at the perversities of the regime that he inherited, which could involve petrol engine makers in this country transf

economy-jobsenvironmenttransport
124
21 Nov 2024 G20 and COP29 Summits

I congratulate the Prime Minister on the restoration of UK leadership. Lord Prescott, who did so much to lead on Kyoto, would be truly proud of my right hon. Friend’s work and that of his Cabinet. I was very proud to lead the UK Inter-Parliamentary Union delegation to Baku this weekend, where we heard loud and clear a

environmentenergydefence
131
13 Nov 2024 Future of the Post Office

Today is the last day of the Horizon inquiry. I look forward to working with you, Madam Deputy Speaker, and with colleagues across the House to explore appropriate sanctions for those who clearly misled us as the scandal unfolded. I look forward to seeing the Minister and the Minister of State, Ministry of Justice, my

economy-jobslocal-governmentculture-community
120
31 Oct 2024Topical Questions

On Tuesday, we will hear from Sir Alan Bates and other victims of the Horizon scandal, which continues to deepen. In September, we learned that there will be 100 more convictions quashed than we originally thought, and yesterday the bill for redress went up by half a billion pounds. Have all the victims now come forwar

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
67
30 Oct 2024Budget Resolutions

Correct. In a way, that is the point that I am gently trying to make to the House, with a very brief and, everyone will be pleased to hear, soon-to-conclude lesson in the fiscal consolidation of the last 14 years. Austerity, a bungled Brexit and chaos left us with a growth rate that fell from an average of 3% in the La

economy-jobscost-of-livinghealth
688
30 Oct 2024Budget Resolutions

I am incredibly grateful to the Father of the House for giving way, which is characteristically generous. I think we would both agree that his inspiration and mentor, Nigel Lawson, was not a hoary old socialist, but, of course, he was the one who equalised the top rate of tax and the rate of capital gains, and I did no

economy-jobscost-of-livinghealth
67
30 Oct 2024Budget Resolutions

I agree 100%, but I say gently to right hon. and hon. Members across the House that that is not free. If we want to ensure that there are good transport links and digital links, that the workforce is healthy, well and trained, and that there is a rich ecosystem of ideas, the money has to come from somewhere. The sensib

economy-jobscost-of-livinghealth
837
30 Oct 2024Budget Resolutions

I congratulate our first female Chancellor on delivering an outstanding Budget. It is a great pleasure to speak in my first Budget debate for 14 years, and I think that period of silence was probably appreciated more by my own party than by any other. When I look back on those debates, which I listened to even though I

economy-jobscost-of-livinghealth
273
30 Oct 2024Budget Resolutions

Let us be really clear about what has been bequeathed to this Government. The right hon. Gentleman is right that back in 2010, at the height of the financial crash, the deficit went up. What happens in a financial crash is that the economy has a heart attack: spending continues, because to cut spending would be to deep

economy-jobscost-of-livinghealth
221
30 Oct 2024Budget Resolutions

We aimed to get the right balance between spending restraint, budget rises, growth and time. Balancing those four ingredients was at the heart of any Budget judgment, and our judgment would have halved the deficit within four years and seen debt falling by 2016. Our obsession was to avoid the double-dip recession that

economy-jobscost-of-livinghealth
107
29 Oct 2024 Israel: UNRWA Ban

I utterly condemn this decision by the Israeli Parliament. Tens of thousands of people have died as a result of Israeli firepower, and now thousands more will die as a result of an Israeli-induced famine unless the world acts. Will my right hon. Friend confirm that if this decision is put into effect, it will be a brea

defencesocial-careimmigration
80
16 Oct 2024 International Investment Summit

rose—

economy-jobsenvironmentculture-community
1
16 Oct 2024 International Investment Summit

I, too, congratulate the Government on an extraordinary achievement in securing £63 billion-worth of investment, which is a tremendous vote of confidence not only in this Government but in this country. My hon. Friend is right to say that a big part of this is the stability dividend, but she is also right to say that r

economy-jobsenvironmentculture-community
82
16 Oct 2024 International Investment Summit

The hon. Gentleman gives way with characteristic generosity. The truth is that the International Monetary Fund forecast growth for this year at about 0.5%, that families were about £1,200 worse off on average at the last election than in 2019, and that since 2010 the national debt has more than doubled, to £2.3 trillio

economy-jobsenvironmentculture-community
69
10 Sept 2024Port Talbot Transition Project

I am not yet Chair of the Committee, Mr Speaker, but fingers crossed. I welcome the Secretary of State’s announcement. I hope the whole House will recognise that what he has brought us today is not a set of sound bites but a strategy. In the long term, that strategy will benefit from a stronger cross-party consensus, s

economy-jobsenergyenvironment
153
8 Sept 2024Post Office Horizon: Redress

I add my congratulations to Sir Alan Bates and Lady Suzanne on what looked like a very happy day. I welcome what the Secretary of State has set out for the House this afternoon. When our Select Committee reported back in March, we said that trust in the Post Office was fundamentally broken and that the appeals scheme n

social-carecrimelocal-government
156
4 Sept 2024Topical Questions

What thought has the Secretary of State given to attending the Williams inquiry? The Post Office scandal is unfinished business. It is now vital that we not only learn the lessons, but accelerate redress for the innocent and, crucially, punish the guilty fast.

economy-jobslabour-marketlocal-government
43
4 Sept 2024 UK Steel Manufacturing

President Biden has just vetoed the foreign acquisition of US Steel, because he understands that it is vital to have sovereign capability in ensuring the manufacture of virgin steel. The reality is that at the end of the last Parliament we were unable to establish clarity around that objective from the last Government.

economy-jobsenergyenvironment
84
1 Sept 2024Council Funding

Council funding in Birmingham is inadequate because of a set of sadistic directions based on speculative estimates of equal pay liabilities. No one believes those estimates, not even the lead commissioner, so will the Minister revisit those directions quickly and meet with Birmingham MPs to help us to get them right?

local-governmentfiscal-policy
51
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.