The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 73 contributions

Speeches by Huddleston.

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

Showing 2140 of 73 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 2 of 4Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

Again, my right hon. Friend is correct. Of course, it is not just the tax policies, but the wraparound—the devil in the detail of what can and cannot be included in various exemptions—that causes some perhaps unintended or indeed intended consequences. I think we all care very much about the future of our high streets,

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
294
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

Absolutely. Again, my hon. Friend is a great advocate for the hospitality and leisure sector. He is absolutely right that there are alternative approaches to backing businesses and enabling them to succeed and generate taxes and employment. I add my congratulations on the British kebab awards. As a big fan of kebabs, I

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
60
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

My hon. Friend and constituency neighbour is absolutely right. I think the increase in costs for the average pub over the next few years—I have the figures and will come to them in a minute—is equivalent to needing to serve an extra 10,000 pints. How many pubs will be able to do that?

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
53
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

I think my hon. Friend knows my answer to that. It is ironic—it would be laughable if it was not so sad—that the Government announced over the weekend that they will introduce subsidies to create jobs, because if they did a better job at running the economy, jobs would be created anyway. I will come back to this issue

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
229
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

Yet more common sense is coming from those on this side of the Chamber, and I agree with my hon. Friend. Of course, it is young people in particular who do not have confidence in this Government and are fleeing. It is clear that I do not have particularly high regard for Labour’s economic competence, but even I did not

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
252
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

I have spoken to a few zero-hours workers, and many of them are not happy with the Government’s policy, because it is going to make some of them unemployed. Of course, the one thing that we do know about Labour Governments is that they know how to spend other people’s money. They have no idea how wealth is created and

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
123
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

I will give way one more time, and then I will make a bit of progress.

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
16
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

My hon. Friend puts it incredibly well. As I say, the onus is on all of us in this place to make sure that we listen, learn and advocate on others’ behalf.

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
32
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

I, too, have a great deal of affection for the hon. Gentleman; we go back quite a long way from when we were elected. We need to recognise that there are Members on both sides of the House who come from poor or modest backgrounds, and it is simply not true to say that the Conservative Benches are full of posh people an

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
84
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

My right hon. Friend is correct: having people who have run a business is good for Government. I am sorry to hear that Labour Members do not believe that their Cabinet would be better if there were a few more pro-business people in it. I can assure him that most of his constituents agree.

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
54
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

Members of Parliament may not have to work in business, but I expect every one to come to this House and advocate for business.

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
24
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

Perhaps the hon. Gentleman can correct me.

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
7
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

No, the pandemic was largely to blame for that, but to ensure that we recovered from the pandemic, and to help save lives and livelihoods, which included supporting the hospitality sector, the Government spent £400 billion, so I am afraid I do not accept the premise of the hon. Gentleman’s question. Of course, few memb

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
80
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

Absolutely. The hon. Gentleman makes a really important point. We see that the hospitality sector is hard-hit, because numbers for the sector are easily available, and there have been a great many reports about the job losses there, but multiple sectors will be hit by these changes. As he points out, the problem is not

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
75
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

I suggest that the hon. Lady talk to those constituents again. I do not think one has to be a sparkling economist to work out that when something has gone up, it is higher, not lower. Those people are not getting a permanent reduction in business rates. The numbers are going up. That is basic economics and facts. It is

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
108
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

I suspect that during the debate we will hear many names of great pubs, and I will try to visit as many of them as I can, as long as they still survive—but my hon. Friend is right: there is an alternative course of action here. There is a Conservative, pro-business economic policy that we can advocate. Later in my spee

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
77
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

My hon. Friend is absolutely correct. The hospitality sector has been particularly hard-hit by Labour’s damaging economic policies. Many of us who were out on small business Saturday spoke to a number of those businesses, and unfortunately, UKHospitality fears that there could be a further 100,000 job losses because of

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
52
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

Yes, indeed; my hon. Friend makes an important point. I was here when the Minister said that. He said that there were “no plans” to bring in a tax—although clearly there were, because a few weeks later, one was brought in—and that the sector had been “taxed enough”. Well, I agree with that Minister, and I therefore do

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
236
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

I beg to move, That this House regrets Government policies that are making seasonal, flexible and part-time work more difficult; notes that these policies particularly impact young people who are likely to start their first job in the hospitality, leisure and retail sectors, and specifically regrets Government policy t

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
301
27 Nov 2025Topical Questions

Happy Lancashire Day, Mr Speaker. May I join the Secretary of State in expressing congratulations to Scotland? At Department for Culture, Media and Sport oral questions in September, the former tourism Minister, the hon. Member for Rhondda and Ogmore (Chris Bryant), said that the Government have “no plans” to bring in

culture-communityeconomy-jobslocal-government
122
← PreviousPage 2 of 4 · click a debate to open the transcript with this MP’s speeches highlightedNext →
Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.