The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 918 contributions

Speeches by Holmes.

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

Showing 241260 of 918 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 13 of 46Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
17 Dec 2025Housing Development: Cumulative Impacts

Well, I believe the hon. Gentleman will have watched the news. I would be the first to acknowledge that we had quite a few in the last Parliament, but there absolutely was prioritisation of brownfield sites first. We prioritised building houses where they were needed, not where they were not. What steps do the Governme

housinglocal-governmentenvironment
254
16 Dec 2025Quarries: Planning Policy

The hon. Gentleman is absolutely correct. His situation sounds very similar to mine. I do not blame the Minister, as she has inherited a system that has been in place for decades, but what confidence can local people have in maintaining high standards when they are not in the guidance? What confidence can local people

environmenthealthlocal-government
188
16 Dec 2025Quarries: Planning Policy

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Dr Murrison. I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for South Leicestershire (Alberto Costa) on securing the debate, which is vital to me and my constituents. Over the past six years, since being elected in 2019, I have been fighting against a proposal for an aggrega

environmenthealthlocal-government
502
16 Dec 2025Quarries: Planning Policy

It is actually worse than that, is it not? In my case, the quarry is 50 metres from a local school. Parents are already talking about taking their children out of two very successful schools, which adds to the pressure on communities and the associated infrastructure.

environmenthealthlocal-government
46
16 Dec 2025Quarries: Planning Policy

Will the Minister give way on that point?

environmenthealthlocal-government
8
16 Dec 2025Quarries: Planning Policy

Will the Minister give way on that point?

environmenthealthlocal-government
8
16 Dec 2025Quarries: Planning Policy

On a point of order, Dr Murrison. I am desperately sorry, and I am not usually this kind of politician, but a number of Members have raised specific issues and contributed lived experiences, which relate directly to what the Minister is saying, yet she is not giving way. I seek your advice on how we can interact with t

environmenthealthlocal-government
66
16 Dec 2025Quarries: Planning Policy

Will the Minister give way briefly before she concludes?

environmenthealthlocal-government
9
16 Dec 2025Quarries: Planning Policy

I thank the Minister for giving way. She will recall that in my speech I did not attack the Government at all, so I am not sure why her tone this morning is quite dismissive of other Members of Parliament. I think she should reflect on that. I asked specifically whether a Minister in the Department would meet with me a

environmenthealthlocal-government
75
16 Dec 2025 Electoral Resilience

I thank the Secretary of State for giving me advance sight of his statement. Let me begin by saying that protecting the integrity of our democratic system from foreign interference is not a partisan issue. It goes to the heart of public trust in our elections. Interference in our elections by foreign actors is somethin

crimedefencemp-performance
625
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

Like me, the shadow Secretary of State will have been out in the constituency speaking to small businesses, and I am sure that Labour MPs will have been doing the same over the weekend. A local publican told me that that she would have to lay off staff in January because of the extra taxes that the Chancellor had come

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
99
10 Dec 2025Seasonal Work

I thank the hon. Lady for giving way; she is being characteristically courteous. She is entirely correct in outlining the choices and some of the policies that her Government have made, but does she not agree that those choices and policies will be delivered on the back of higher taxation? As a result, employers have l

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
113
10 Dec 2025 Conduct of the Chancellor of the Exchequer

As usual, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury is out here defending the Chancellor. I feel quite sorry for him. He has reeled off a number of policies that his Chancellor and his Government have made a choice about, but before the election, the Chancellor said that those choices would be on the back of a fully costed m

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsmp-performance
100
3 Dec 2025 Oxford to Cambridge Growth Corridor

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Jeremy. I congratulate the hon. Member for Cambridge (Daniel Zeichner) on securing this important debate on the Oxford-Cambridge growth corridor, an area of enormous potential, world-class institutions and a genuine capacity to drive innovation and national prosper

economy-jobstransporthousing
1,260
3 Dec 2025Engagements

Q7. In 2020, the Justice Secretary said:“Criminal trials without juries are a bad idea”,and the Prime Minister himself has said that there should be “a right of trial by jury in all criminal cases”,but now they want to scrap trials by jury. With a Chancellor who cannot count and a Justice Secretary who has lost count o

cost-of-livingfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
90
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

Will the Secretary of State give way?

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
7
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

I am grateful to the Secretary of State for intervening, but this is my intervention, not his. Why was he part of a Cabinet that stood by and punished his colleagues for voting against the two-child benefit cap? Why do we now see this sudden conversion and revisionism? Why does he think that most people in this country

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
70
1 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

My hon. Friend is right. My constituency on the south coast has Oil Spill Response Ltd, which tackles oil spills. At a recent event, the vice-president of a very big oil company said that it was essentially closing up its operations in the UK and moving 50 miles up the road to Norway. Has she found the same in her cons

cost-of-livingeconomy-jobsutilities
61
1 Dec 2025Free School Applications

Parents and pupils deserve a school system that builds on success, not one that holds it back. The coalition Government opened 24 free schools in 500 days, yet this Government have spent over 400 days reviewing 44 already-approved schools. Free schools outperform non-selective state schools at every key stage, so why a

education
62
1 Dec 2025Free School Applications

13. What her planned timetable is for decision on existing free school applications.

education
13
← PreviousPage 13 of 46 · 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.