The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 608 contributions

Speeches by Rigby.

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

Showing 241260 of 608 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
13 Jan 2026 Finance (No. 2) Bill

My point was that the benefit of the decision not to update alcohol duty will be felt mostly in the off-trade, which is a point that the hon. Gentleman appears to understand. The small producer relief aims to support SMEs and new entrants by permitting smaller producers to pay reduced duty rates. Clause 86 maintains th

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127
13 Jan 2026 Finance (No. 2) Bill

It was not me who had those engagements, but as I said, I confirm to the hon. Member that we are not proposing to make any changes to the treatment of free plays and free bets through the Bill, which I hope reassures her in that regard. I urge the Committee to reject new clauses 21 and 25 and agree that clauses 83 to 8

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241
13 Jan 2026 Finance (No. 2) Bill

Clauses 83 to 85 and schedule 13 make changes to the gambling duties regime, to better reflect the modern gambling market and to raise more than £1 billion a year to support the lifting of the two-child benefit cap. I will first speak briefly to the broader context of the package, and I will then turn to each clause. G

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335
13 Jan 2026 Finance (No. 2) Bill

No, I will make some progress. The hon. Member for Keighley and Ilkley (Robbie Moore)—he represents a wonderful place in the world, which is where I was between Christmas and new year—referred to the difference between CPI and RPI. As he knows, we are uprating alcohol duty by RPI, as with many other taxes expressed in

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247
13 Jan 2026 Finance (No. 2) Bill

I will make some progress. On the impacts on the public finances, HMRC publishes data on alcohol duty receipts quarterly. That data is reviewed alongside other evidence by the OBR when it produces its forecasts of alcohol duty receipts, as it did most recently alongside the November Budget. The Government’s view, as is

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129
13 Jan 2026 Finance (No. 2) Bill

I am going to make a bit more progress. New clauses 8, 9 and 26 would require the Government to publish reports on the impacts of alcohol duty. The shadow Exchequer Secretary, the hon. Member for North West Norfolk (James Wild), invited me to refer to our tax information and impact note, and I will take him up on that

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130
13 Jan 2026 Finance (No. 2) Bill

I want to make this point. The Liberal Democrat spokesperson, the hon. Member for St Albans (Daisy Cooper), asked several questions. We will come forward with a support package—any further support that we will make available—when we are able to do so. As for her point about VAT, I know that an answer has been given to

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139
13 Jan 2026 Finance (No. 2) Bill

I am going to make some progress. Based on HMRC’s ready reckoner, freezing alcohol duty would cost the Exchequer around £400 million a year. That money, despite the Opposition’s best efforts to pretend otherwise, would have to be found elsewhere. This is one of the measures that assists in ensuring that our economy is

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87
13 Jan 2026 Finance (No. 2) Bill

I thank hon. Members for their contributions to the debate on this group of clauses. Before I respond to the specific points that have been raised, I will reflect briefly on the core purpose of the Bill. The Bill contains fair and necessary reforms to the tax system, which unfortunately have been ducked for far too lon

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407
16 Dec 2025 Finance (No. 2) Bill

Not yet. We have heard absolutely nothing from the Opposition that acknowledges that they made the wrong choices. Indeed, what we heard just now from the shadow Financial Secretary and earlier from the shadow Chancellor was a masterclass in selective amnesia. People would be forgiven for thinking that Members on the sh

economy-jobscost-of-livingenvironment
115
16 Dec 2025 Finance (No. 2) Bill

The shadow Financial Secretary, the hon. Member for Grantham and Bourne (Gareth Davies), took the time to mention Father Christmas and Tinder. I thought he might also have taken a moment to welcome the fourth major trade deal secured by this Government and signed today with South Korea, which is set to boost our econom

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207
16 Dec 2025 Finance (No. 2) Bill

The Scottish Government have been given a record settlement—a £820 million boost in this Budget—that takes the total additional funding for the Scottish Government from this Labour Government to more than £10 billion. I was talking about the entrepreneurship package in the Budget. As my hon. Friend the Member for Bucki

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268
16 Dec 2025 Finance (No. 2) Bill

It is not a concession to acknowledge that that was the topic of much of the debate. We are more than aware of the strength of feeling on inheritance tax and the cost pressures that farmers are under, and I appreciate the compassion with which hon. Members have made their arguments. I remind them that that is why the G

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163
16 Dec 2025 Finance (No. 2) Bill

I am afraid to tell the right hon. Gentleman that employment is rising in every single year of the forecast. My hon. Friend the Member for Glasgow East (John Grady) raised the importance of getting debt and borrowing down. I could not agree more. There is nothing progressive whatsoever about spending over £100 billion

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141
16 Dec 2025 Finance (No. 2) Bill

I assure the hon. and learned Member, who makes a valid point, that there are hardly any—very few, if any—of these types of goods and wholesale electricity companies in Northern Ireland that come close to the existing limits of the scheme, let alone the extended limits. We are very clear about the role of business and

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542
16 Dec 2025 Finance (No. 2) Bill

I will make a bit of progress. Our choices are different: they seek to rebuild and repair our country and our economy. They are choices to renew our public services and reform our welfare system; we are rebuilding our NHS, helping to lift hundreds of thousands of children out of poverty, and investing in getting more p

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93
9 Dec 2025Support for Entrepreneurs

At the Budget, we introduced the UK listing relief, which incentivises companies to list in the UK. The UK raised more equity capital in 2024 than was raised in the next three European exchanges combined. I look forward to seeing the brilliant entrepreneurs in my hon. Friend’s constituency benefit from these deep pools

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55
9 Dec 2025Support for Entrepreneurs

I am grateful to the right hon. Member for his question, as I always am. We are doing an awful lot to support R&D in this country, including through many of the measures announced at the Budget. That includes putting an additional £7 billion into specific areas within the industrial strategy.

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51
9 Dec 2025Support for Entrepreneurs

As has been covered by my colleagues, we are putting in a £4 billion support package and continuing to engage with the hospitality sector. I should also add that we are easing licensing to help venues offer pavement drinks and one-off events too.

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43
9 Dec 2025Topical Questions

The Government of course recognise that innovation is key to our long-term economic growth and to higher productivity, and indeed to living standards. That is exactly why we are investing more in R&D, and we have made other incentives available too.

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