The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 338 contributions

Speeches by Dakin.

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

Showing 241260 of 338 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
29 Jan 2025Arbitration Bill [Lords]

I have only a few. [Laughter.] The House would be the poorer for not hearing these quotes—[Hon. Members: “Hear, hear.”] I feel that it is important to share them. More are available, but I will restrict myself to just a few. The Bar Council said: “We welcome the Law Commission’s characteristically careful and balanced

economy-jobstechnology
990
28 Jan 2025Youth Justice System

The number of children in custody has fallen significantly over the last decade, but those who are detained are now a more complex and violent cohort. Our turnaround programme provides funds that enable youth offending teams to intervene early to address child offending. Only 5% of children who completed such intervent

crimeeducation
73
28 Jan 2025Topical Questions

It is right that IPP sentences were abolished. Last week, I hosted a roundtable for MPs to discuss their concerns about IPP sentences and share the work the Department is doing. The Prisons Minister in the other place hosted a similar roundtable for peers. We are determined to make further progress towards a safe and s

crimesocial-caremp-performance
72
28 Jan 2025Youth Justice System

I am deeply saddened by this tragic crime, and my thoughts and, I am sure, those of everyone else go to the family of Leo Ross. Such horrific events underline just how important it is to deliver our manifesto commitment to ensure that every young person caught in possession of a knife is referred to a youth offending t

crimeeducation
86
28 Jan 2025Prison Conditions

I thank my hon. Friend for his question. He draws attention to a deeply disturbing case. I am very happy to meet him and the families concerned.

crimefiscal-policy
27
28 Jan 2025Prison Conditions

The right hon. Lady is right. We inherited contracts that were already well progressed; for best value and to move things forward quickly, we decided it was important to keep going with that process. However, I can assure the House that we have an open mind regarding private and public sector contracts in the future. T

crimefiscal-policy
70
28 Jan 2025Prison Conditions

The right hon. Lady is right to raise this issue. We inherited historic under-investment in maintenance and a rising prison population. That is why we have already published our 10-year prison capacity strategy and have plans to invest £220 million in prison and probation service maintenance in ’24-25, and up to £300 m

crimefiscal-policy
55
28 Jan 2025Prison Capacity

The armed forces covenant affects us all. His Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service ensures that veterans’ issues are properly addressed with the individuals concerned, to give them the proper support that they need.

crimesocial-care
33
28 Jan 2025Prison Capacity

I assure my hon. Friend that that will be the case. People who commit a crime worthy of prison will be sent to prison. As we have assured the House, we have plans to build 14,000 new prison places, as set out in our 10-year capacity strategy. In six months we have added 500 prison places. It took 14 years for the Conse

crimesocial-care
105
28 Jan 2025Prison Capacity

We certainly do not wish to reduce capacity. I can confirm that we contract with local authorities’ secure children’s homes, and place children there. In 2010 we contracted for 191 beds, and currently we contract for 103. That correlates with a decrease in the number of young people in custody, mostly over the period w

crimesocial-care
118
28 Jan 2025Prison Capacity

We took immediate action to prevent the collapse of the prison system by implementing SDS40. We are building 14,000 new prison places and have published our 10-year capacity strategy. We have launched an independent sentencing review, so that we never run out of prison places again.

crimesocial-care
46
28 Jan 2025Support for Female Offenders

That is a devolved matter, though clearly we are happy to speak to the devolved Government about any issues.

crimesocial-care
19
28 Jan 2025Support for Female Offenders

Safe spaces for women are crucial and a No. 1 priority in everything we do.

crimesocial-care
15
28 Jan 2025Support for Female Offenders

The vast majority of transgender prisoners are in men’s prisons. We have continued the policy of the previous Government, but all policies are always under review.

crimesocial-care
26
28 Jan 2025Support for Female Offenders

I pay tribute to women’s centres across the country such as that in north Wales for the excellent contribution that their work makes. I agree that short custodial sentences can be problematic; they exacerbate women’s underlying needs without allowing time for rehabilitation, and they separate mothers from children and

crimesocial-care
98
28 Jan 2025Support for Female Offenders

We are awarding £7.2 million for the upcoming year to community organisations and local areas that are already supporting women in the community. We are also employing options to increase the use of residential provision as an alternative to short custodial sentences. That includes engaging with the judiciary to ensure

crimesocial-care
66
28 Jan 2025Support for Female Offenders

I thank my hon. Friend for raising this matter. In this case the court’s decision was to impose a prison sentence, and neither Ministers nor officials can intervene in sentences passed down by our independent courts. I understand the frustrations and can assure the House that we are working hard to find alternative app

crimesocial-care
62
28 Jan 2025Support for Female Offenders

We know that family support is very important to women in custody, which is why grant funding has been awarded to the charity Parents And Children Together—PACT—to provide a resettlement family engagement worker in HMP Foston Hall, as well as in seven other women’s prisons.

crimesocial-care
45
28 Jan 2025Support for Female Offenders

This Government’s plan to support women is clear and ambitious: to reduce the number of women going to prison and to have fewer women’s prisons. Our Women’s Justice Board, which met for the first time last week, will support implementing this vision. I would also remind the House that, as the Minister responsible for y

crimesocial-care
80
28 Jan 2025Prison Officer Recruitment

As I have said, the Lord Chancellor has requested advice on this matter. We promote our strong employee total reward package as part of our recruitment. The terms and conditions of the civil service pension scheme are some of the best in the public sector, with a low employee contribution rate and a significant employe

labour-marketcrime
93
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.