The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 331 contributions

Speeches by Shastri-Hurst.

Every Hansard contribution by Neil Shastri-Hurst this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

Showing 81100 of 331 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
7 Jan 2026Jury Trials

The hon. Gentleman is entirely right: there is no mandate for this decision. It represents such a significant constitutional change to our legal system, and it is being made without reference to the will of the people. Justice delayed is indeed justice denied, but justice expedited at the cost of constitutional princip

crime
59
6 Jan 2026Justice Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1247)

Good afternoon. My name is Neil Shastri-Hurst. I am the Member of Parliament for Solihull West and Shirley. My interests are as per the register. In addition, I would note that I am an associate tenant at No5 Barristers’ Chambers and a former officer of the APPG on access to justice.

51
6 Jan 2026Justice Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1247)

Very quickly, and you may not have the details in front of you, but you are all making a very compelling case for more legal aid funding in order to have a long-term benefit and reduce costs across the board. I do not have a handle yet on whether there has been any concrete modelling in how increasing at the front end

106
6 Jan 2026Justice Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1247)

To a degree, we are doing things anecdotally here.

9
6 Jan 2026Justice Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1247)

Is part of that underpinned by the fact that, as you said earlier, there is not sufficient data across the board?

21
5 Jan 2026HMP Leyhill: Offender Abscondments

Since October of last year, five people have absconded from Leyhill, which suggests that there are systemic issues around both security and licensing arrangements. I suspect that those are not bespoke to Leyhill, but are used across the wider open prison estate. With that in mind, what has the Minister’s Department don

crime
74
5 Jan 2026Northern Ireland Troubles Bill: Armed Forces Recruitment and Retention

The Minister has more experience than most with the global threats facing this country. In those circumstances, we need to be recruiting the brightest and best to our armed forces and retaining them. He has set out current retention levels with certain detail, but that is before the Bill passes through Parliament and,

defence
86
17 Dec 2025 National Insurance Contributions (Employer Pensions Contributions) Bill

It strikes me that it should not be particularly controversial that a Government should be encouraging people to save for their retirement, to take responsibility for their future and to feel secure in later life. Therefore, although we are dealing with a short Bill that appears to be purely procedural in nature, its p

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslabour-market
320
17 Dec 2025 National Insurance Contributions (Employer Pensions Contributions) Bill

The Minister is right that people should be putting into their pensions and we should encourage them to do so, but we should not put forward legislation that disincentivises that. In respect of women, it is a fact that they are more likely to take career breaks and, by virtue of that, they may want to make up their con

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslabour-market
171
16 Dec 2025Court Backlogs

One of the contributing factors to the court backlog is the state of disrepair of our court infrastructure. Will the Minister set out how many of the more than 500 Crown court rooms are currently unusable because of their state of disrepair?

crime
42
2 Dec 2025Criminal Court Reform

Nobody would disagree with the Lord Chancellor’s diagnosis—the criminal courts are in crisis. It is the treatment that is in dispute. The question is whether the watering down of jury trials will be the solution, when in fact the problem is a lack of judges, court space and infrastructure, and inefficiencies in the sys

crimefiscal-policy
98
1 Dec 2025Office for Budget Responsibility Forecasts

The British public are, by nature, a forgiving people. However, does the Chief Secretary to the Treasury not recognise that obfuscation of the kind we have seen over the weekend deeply damages public confidence?

economy-jobsmp-performance
34
1 Dec 2025 Evacuation Chairs: Schools and Colleges

The hon. Gentleman is making a powerful speech, and Lucas’s poem really resonates with that. In my constituency, we have Evac+Chair, which creates evacuation chairs like the ones we have in Parliament. Does the hon. Gentleman agree that the current legislation, the stay-put policy from an outdated era—1962—does not rec

educationhealth
56
27 Nov 2025 Right to Trial by Jury

The crisis in our criminal justice system is not caused by jury trials but by inefficiencies in the system and a lack of advocates able to prosecute and defend trials, according to the Bar Council and the Criminal Bar Association. When will the Government engage with them, rather than relying solely on Sir Brian’s repo

crime
74
12 Nov 2025Taxes

This debate is much broader than mere numbers on a spreadsheet buried in the Treasury; it is about trust, stewardship and the future of our country. That matters because, at the last general election, the now Government and all those elected on their manifesto said they would not raise taxes on “working people”, yet at

economy-jobscost-of-living
406
12 Nov 2025Taxes

No, I want to make this point. The difference is that the Chancellor told the media last year that the buck stops with her. She has to own these decisions. As I say, people in this country are asked to live within their means, and they make sacrifices and plan for contingencies. They expect the Government to do the sam

economy-jobscost-of-living
172
12 Nov 2025Taxes

The hon. Member may have forgotten the covid pandemic that swept this country, which of course turned the tables, and difficult decisions had to be made.

economy-jobscost-of-living
26
11 Nov 2025Prisoner Releases in Error

Mistaken releases of prisoners do not just undermine public trust and confidence in the system; they cost money, because the police have to go and find them and return them to prison. Can the Secretary of State set out how much it has cost the police to return prisoners to prison since this Government came to power?

crimemp-performance
57
27 Oct 2025North Sea Oil and Gas Industry

Sadly, this is not an isolated case; regrettably, it is a pattern of decline that we are seeing under this Government. Can the Minister tell us how many companies must go under before the Government realise that Great Britain cannot build a resilient and secure energy system by shutting down the energy industry?

energyeconomy-jobsenvironment
53
19 Oct 2025SEND Provision

I have spoken to many anxious parents whose children have not been in receipt of an EHCP or local authority funding but would historically have benefited from independent education provision because of their SEND needs. One of their concerns is that such provision can no longer be afforded because of the imposition of

educationsocial-carehealth
76
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.