The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 819 contributions

Speeches by Thomas-Symonds.

Every Hansard contribution by Nick Thomas-Symonds this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

Showing 581600 of 819 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
13 Feb 2025 Infected Blood Compensation Scheme

The right hon. Gentleman makes a powerful point, and what is crucial, whether it is this compensation scheme or others that have been run by Government, is that we learn the lessons between the different compensation schemes and we learn best practice. I absolutely agree with him that that is crucial with this compensa

healthfiscal-policy
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13 Feb 2025 Infected Blood Compensation Scheme

I can certainly give that assurance both to my hon. Friend and to his constituent, Sue. The Government will continue to push this forward as quickly as is reasonably possible. I am conscious of the strength of feeling, and I am also conscious that victims have waited decades for justice, and that need for speed is reco

healthfiscal-policy
59
13 Feb 2025 Infected Blood Compensation Scheme

The hon. Lady is absolutely right that this scandal goes across decades and across Governments. While compensation is obviously one of the crucial recommendations, there are a total of 12 recommendations from Sir Brian Langstaff, on which I will be updating the House in due course. At present, IBCA will meet its target

healthfiscal-policy
160
13 Feb 2025 Infected Blood Compensation Scheme

I will make sure that your stricture about time is properly communicated across Government, Madam Deputy Speaker. May I start by echoing the comments of the hon. Member for Kingswinford and South Staffordshire (Mike Wood) about my predecessor as Paymaster General, the right hon. Member for Salisbury (John Glen), who di

healthfiscal-policy
212
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

I would like to reassure the hon. Gentleman that Northern Ireland is always at the forefront of my mind. Since I came into office, I have visited Belfast twice; I chair the inter-ministerial group, which obviously includes the Minister and Deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland; and the Windsor framework taskforce s

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
103
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

The hon. Gentleman is right to mention fishing. I can tell him first and foremost that I will engage with the fishing industry and its representatives about the issues that they face, particularly in selling into European markets. We will of course advocate for the interests of our fishers, and ensure that we fulfil ou

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
61
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. We speak to businesses, and they want fewer barriers to trade. It is astonishing that the modern Conservative party does not seem to share that view.

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
32
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

We were elected on a manifesto that set out clear red lines, but of course there is significant economic advantage, not just to the United Kingdom but to citizens all across Europe, in the reset that we are now looking to take forward. Whether in making our citizens more prosperous, or in making them safer and more sec

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
64
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. The chaos of the previous Government did extraordinary damage to this country on the international stage, and frankly it sullied our international reputation. I am pleased that the Leader of the Opposition at least understands the chaos that the Conservatives caused our economy. My h

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
75
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

My hon. Friend makes a powerful point, and if we look back over recent decades, there have been many people in this House who have had the benefit of studying abroad. As my hon. Friend has also pointed to, though, the red lines upon which this Government were elected are fundamental.

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
51
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

With permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I wish to make a statement on the UK’s relationship with the EU. On Monday, in Brussels, the Prime Minister attended an informal retreat with the 27 EU leaders and Presidents von der Leyen and Costa. This marked a clear step forward for this Government’s reset of the UK’s relation

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
856
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

I thank the shadow Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster for his contribution. Of course NATO remains the cornerstone of our security; that has been a cross-party position for decades. He asks about plans and red lines. I refer him to our manifesto, which was put to the people last year, that contains those clear red li

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
441
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

The Chair of the Select Committee is entirely right about the involvement of civil society, trade unions and businesses. I am sure that he will have seen the comments of the managing director of food at Marks & Spencer only today, who said: “We wholeheartedly support the Government’s plan to negotiate a Veterinary

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
92
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

I am grateful as always for the contribution of the hon. Lady; we had a fine debate in Westminster Hall last week. All I would say to her about speed, though, is that this Government are acting on the red lines in our manifesto around the single market, customs union and freedom of movement, on which we were elected an

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
182
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

I am grateful to my hon. Friend, who I know has campaigned on this issue. Energy is very much a priority for the discussions—specifically the emissions trading scheme and linkage. The existing trade and co-operation agreement commits the UK and the EU to considering that.

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
45
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

I would be more than happy to speak to the right hon. Gentleman—I acknowledge his expertise in these matters. He refers to interoperability, which is hugely important. He will have seen that the Prime Minister met the Secretary-General of NATO on Monday. That sends out a signal that NATO remains absolutely fundamental;

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
86
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. At least the Leader of the Opposition was candid about the chaotic decision making under the previous Government. Together with our friends and neighbours in the EU, we have over £800 billion-worth of trade. It is clearly in our national interest to lower trade barriers pragmatically

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
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6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

We are not doing nothing. There are areas where this Government will be in a world-leading space. Let us look, for example, at what we are doing on employment rights and product safety. As I indicated earlier to the hon. Member for Brentwood and Ongar (Alex Burghart), the Government believe in a race to the top on stan

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
64
6 Feb 2025 UK-EU Relations

My hon. Friend raises an important point. I am pleased that we have already increased our National Crime Agency presence at Europol. The speed with which we can share data is hugely important. When crimes are committed, those early hours and days are so important for catching those responsible. We want to work with the

economy-jobsdefenceimmigration
70
29 Jan 2025 Youth Mobility Scheme: EU

What a pleasure it is to serve under your chairmanship for the first time, Sir Jeremy. I congratulate the hon. Member for Richmond Park (Sarah Olney) on two counts: first, on securing this debate—she always holds me to account on European matters at Cabinet Office questions, and I very much welcome the scrutiny that sh

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