The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 281 contributions

Speeches by Stride.

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

Showing 181200 of 281 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
19 May 2025Topical Questions

What many up and down the country are asking is why that manifesto pledge not to impose taxes on working people was broken. Last week the Pensions Minister confirmed to the House that the Government would never interfere with the fiduciary duty of pension trustees to get the best return for their members, but when the

economy-jobsfiscal-policycost-of-living
112
19 May 2025Topical Questions

Will the Chancellor explain what the Economic Secretary to the Treasury meant last week when she said that there will be no tax rises on individuals at the autumn Budget? Will the Chancellor similarly confirm that there will be no tax increases on businesses?

economy-jobsfiscal-policycost-of-living
44
19 May 2025Business Costs: Impact of Autumn Budget

Only last week the right hon. Lady was trumpeting that the economy had turned a corner, but, as she has just said, it is barely a month since her disastrous jobs tax started to bite. May I ask her precisely which business confidence survey—just one—she can point to which supports her assertion that everything is coming

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobscost-of-living
58
12 May 2025 Mansion House Accord

May I start by associating myself with the very fine tributes made to Sir Roy Stone? My condolences go to his family. No response from the Chancellor, we see, but I thank the Minister for his statement. The retirement incomes of millions of UK savers rely on the careful management of pension funds. Those pension provid

economy-jobsenvironment
390
12 May 2025 Mansion House Accord

(Urgent Question): To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if she will make a statement on the Mansion House accord.

economy-jobsenvironment
20
7 Apr 2025Topical Questions

You are quite right about that, Mr Speaker, as you are about everything. Indeed, the right hon. Gentleman is completely wrong when he says that he inherited less headroom than was the case at the autumn Budget. He inherited, on the current Budget, £23 billion, and he took it down to £9.9 billion to be precise. He also

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsdefence
165
7 Apr 2025Topical Questions

It was obvious to many before the emergency Budget that the President of the United States was going to be slapping tariffs on our exports. May I therefore ask the Chancellor why it was that she came forward at the emergency Budget with a recklessly slender slither of headroom—the same headroom that she had at the time

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsdefence
80
7 Apr 2025Speaker’s Statement

I thank the right hon. Lady for advance notice of her comments. This is a time of great concern for millions of people up and down our country, for businesses, and, as an open-trading nation, for our economy at large. Free trade has been the bedrock of prosperity for our country, and for many countries around the world

economy-jobsfiscal-policy
243
26 Mar 2025Spring Statement

May I just point out that all the Chancellor’s fiscal headroom disappeared, not just some of it? In fact, she went underwater to the tune of £4.1 billion. Reeling from one fiscal event to the next is not a way to run the public finances, and breaking your fiscal rules to the extent that the right hon. Lady has in just

economy-jobsdefencehousing
830
26 Mar 2025Spring Statement

This emergency Budget has brought the right hon. Lady to a cold hard reckoning. She has become fond recently of talking about the world having changed, and indeed it has. This country was growing at the fastest rate in the G7 only about a year ago. Just as the OECD, the Bank of England and other forecasters—including,

economy-jobsdefencehousing
1,034
26 Mar 2025Spring Statement

At the last Budget, the right hon. Lady said that she would bring stability to the public finances, but this statement, more appropriately referred to as an emergency Budget, has brought her to a cold—[Interruption.]

economy-jobsdefencehousing
35
4 Mar 2025Topical Questions

I am surprised that the right hon. Lady did not reference the fact that the OBR also said that there would be 50,000 fewer jobs as a result of the NICs increase; indeed, Bloomberg put that figure at 130,000 jobs. It does not need to be that way. On 26 March, the right hon. Lady should come to this House with a spring s

fiscal-policydefenceeconomy-jobs
102
4 Mar 2025Topical Questions

How many jobs will the right hon. Lady destroy as a result of her jobs tax?

fiscal-policydefenceeconomy-jobs
16
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

To paraphrase the leader of the hon. Gentleman’s party, I have already answered his questions. I do note his serial offence of being a member of several trade unions at the moment—it is good of him to disclose that. The changes to business property relief will see the break-up of many family firms. Of course, the Gover

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
375
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

As the party that increased the personal allowance, doubling it between 2010 and the present day, taking millions of people out of tax altogether, and that brought in the national living wage, we have done a great deal to support the lowest paid in our society in particular.

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
48
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. That is where the dearth of experience of entrepreneurship on the Government Front Bench really shows. We see this not just with BPR, but with agricultural property relief. Family farms will be broken up, with years and generations of people struggling and working hard, whatever the

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
72
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

I beg to move, That this House regrets the Government’s decision to introduce a cap on Business Property Relief, meaning that some family businesses passed down upon death will face Inheritance Tax for the first time in 50 years; further regrets the Government’s other economic policies that will damage family businesse

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
389
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

My right hon. Friend is absolutely right, and we see that in the surveys to which I referred; business confidence is at virtually an all-time low. Before this whirlwind of disaster visited us, we had a calmer time during the general election. It was a Labour party on best behaviour with business, a Labour party with a

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
377
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. It is not as if the Government were not warned about these issues. In its reports, the OBR made it extremely clear that while the headline figure to be raised through the national insurance contribution changes is £25 billion, the net figure will be far less because of the behavioura

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
170
26 Feb 2025Family Businesses

The hon. Gentleman asks a very fair question. The Bill will create a situation where employers are fearful of taking on new hires because of the consequences that may follow, where trade unions are advantaged in the way the Bill suggests—the trade union paymasters who may, perhaps, support the hon. Gentleman, but who c

economy-jobsfiscal-policyagriculture
97
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.