The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 840 contributions

Speeches by Evans.

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

Showing 441460 of 840 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
16 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fifth sitting)

My hon. Friend has identified the nub of the issue, and his intervention leads me on to an example that demonstrates the problems that we are talking about. I have chosen to debate these provisions in the order shown on the selection list because I wish to understand whether the Minister believes that Government amendm

healthsocial-care
594
16 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fifth sitting)

I welcome the chance to contribute to the debate on clauses 24 to 28. I will then turn to Government amendments 40 and 41 and to amendments 54 and 55, tabled by my hon. Friend the Member for Runnymede and Weybridge (Dr Spencer). Clauses 24 to 28 represent a significant reform to the Mental Health Act 1983. They seek a

healthsocial-care
513
15 Jun 2025School Estate

4. What steps she is taking to help improve the school estate.

education
12
15 Jun 2025Child Sexual Exploitation: Casey Report

One of the reasons I was not supportive six months ago, in January, of the Government’s strategy was that it could not compel local inquiries to bring forward witnesses, which is key. Listening to our questions carefully, could the Home Secretary clarify whether those local inquiries will be able to compel witnesses, w

crimesocial-carelocal-government
77
15 Jun 2025School Estate

I am grateful to the Minister for his answer. I draw his attention to the process for getting some of that funding. Battling Brook is a small primary school in the heart of Hinckley. It is well loved, but it has had problems with two of its classrooms having damp and falling into disrepair, so the school cannot use the

education
152
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Third sitting)

My hon. Friend is right: we agree that this is not a place for the police unless there is an absolute sign of criminal intent. The problem is that what happens is a member of the public sees something, reports it to the police and, naturally, it is the police, the fire service or the paramedics who come forward. If a p

healthsocial-care
239
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Third sitting)

The hon. Lady makes an incredibly important point about the range of people who can and do respond in such cases. The Opposition are not saying that is a problem; we want to support them by giving them the legal backing and framework to step up to be the first port of call. Unfortunately, by default it is always the po

healthsocial-care
264
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Third sitting)

My hon. Friend is spot on about training. It is one thing to enshrine these measures in primary legislation; it is another thing to have the training and interpretation that go with them. One of the reasons that we have not tabled an amendment on the matter, as yet, is that there could be some concerns about what “cumu

healthsocial-care
214
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Third sitting)

It is a pleasure to be here on day two in Committee. I will first address clause 5 and then the Government amendments. The clause marks significant reform to the legal foundations of mental health detention in this country. At its core, the clause seeks to update the grounds for detaining individuals under the Mental H

healthsocial-care
775
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Third sitting)

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Under the last Government, the “right care, right person” initiative was launched with the Humberside police force to try to ensure appropriate care, but that is an example in isolation. One solution would be to include guidance in the codes of practice, but it would not have the sta

healthsocial-care
365
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting)

Clause 11 will introduce new section 56A into the Mental Health Act 1983. The clause represents an important reform to the framework for how treatment decisions are made to detain patients under part IV of the Act. The clause effectively establishes a statutory clinical checklist. It imposes a duty on the approved clin

healthsocial-care
1,417
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting)

It is a relief that we have not dropped clause 11, an important clause. Equally important is clause 12, on the appointment of a doctor to provide a second opinion. The clause will introduce the new framework for appointing second opinion appointed doctors under the Mental Health Act, which is indeed important. I begin

healthsocial-care
1,058
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting)

The hon. Lady makes an excellent point. This is especially relevant when capacity fluctuates in some patients, which we expect to see more often with the kind of dementia that will potentially come forward —for example, some of the new illicit drugs that are available can cause significant problems. Does she agree that

healthsocial-care
165
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Third sitting)

The hon. Lady points to the fact that the police are named, as they should be. Imagine if we took out the police completely—whowould then have the power to restrain, restrict and detain people under the Mental Health Act? That is the whole point of having the provision. What we are trying to do is refine and constrict

healthsocial-care
492
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting)

I cannot resist the opportunity to probe the Minister on something so important. He said that NHS England will predominantly look at this, but changes are happening there. Will he ensure that Gillick competence and the assessment of capacity will be at the heart of this? It is unclear now, given that it will take two y

healthsocial-care
83
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting)

Clause 20 addresses a central principle in healthcare, ethics and law: the right of individuals to make informed decisions about their treatment, and the conditions under which that right can be overridden. Let me begin by recognising the objective of clause 20 as both important and welcome. It replaces the outdated an

healthsocial-care
1,340
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting)

I welcome the Government’s recognition that modern technology can play a valuable role in improving care in the mental health system. The move to allow remote interviews and examinations for second opinion appointed doctors, through live audio or video links, reflects the realities of healthcare today and the potential

healthsocial-care
679
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting)

The clause will amend section 61 of the Mental Health Act 1983 on the review and treatment of detained patients. The 1983 Act requires approved clinicians to provide reports on the treatment and condition of detained patients, particularly where patients do not consent to treatment. Those reports are integral to the sc

healthsocial-care
708
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting)

I rise to speak to clauses 15, 17 and 18 and Liberal Democrat amendment 13. Clause 15 will amend section 58A of the Mental Health Act 1983 in regard to ECT. It is worth understanding the law as it stands. At present, if a patient lacks capacity to consent to ECT, treatment may be administered only if a second opinion a

healthsocial-care
555
11 Jun 2025Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting)

I am frantically trying to find the exact point in the explanatory notes—I think it is in either paragraph 114 or paragraph 115—about where the second opinion comes together. There is a reference to having a combined certificate. That seems to be a practical solution, but I worry about the crossover relating to who may

healthsocial-care
78
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.