The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 658 contributions

Speeches by Foord.

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

Showing 321340 of 658 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
1 Sept 2025Sudan

The Rapid Support Forces have trapped 260,000 civilians in El Fasher, half of whom are children, and many of whom are surviving on animal fodder. How are the Government working with allies to alleviate the effects on civilians of the terrible war in Sudan?

defenceother
44
1 Sept 2025 The Battle of Britain

It is an honour to serve with you in the Chair, Sir Desmond. I pay tribute to my hon. Friend the Member for Tewkesbury (Cameron Thomas) for choosing and securing this debate. In June 1940, with France fallen, Hitler expected Britain to negotiate a peace deal. When Britain made it clear that it would fight on, Hitler pr

defenceculture-community
543
1 Sept 2025 Group-based Child Sexual Exploitation and Abuse

I am wholly supportive of this Government-commissioned report into group-based child sexual exploitation, but the Government must not be distracted from the places where child sexual abuse occurs most frequently. The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children reports that 90% of young people who have be

crimesocial-care
121
31 Aug 2025 Transnational Repression in the UK

It strikes me that this is an excellent report that has been presented to us by the joint Committee this evening. The report deals with SLAPPs—strategic lawsuits against public participation. I appreciate that the hon. Member was not able to get to that in his allotted 10 minutes, so I would like to ask a little more a

crimedefenceculture-community
136
31 Aug 2025Borders and Asylum

When Labour was in opposition, it attacked the Conservatives on the small number of asylum seekers who had been removed to Rwanda as part of the Tory deterrent. Now that the Conservatives are in opposition, they are attacking Labour for the small number of asylum seekers who will be removed to France as part of the Lab

immigrationlocal-governmentcrime
85
31 Aug 2025 Middle East

In May the Government revealed in court that they, the Executive, had made recent assessments of the risk of breaches of international humanitarian law in Gaza. I say breaches, but the Government revealed that they had found only one possible breach of IHL among tens of thousands of airstrikes in Gaza across 11 months.

defenceother
76
31 Aug 2025 Ukraine

Admiral Sir Tony Radakin is a fine example of public service, so I humbly agree with the Defence Secretary about the retiring Chief of the Defence Staff. When the CDS appeared before the Defence Committee in June, he said of NATO that “The crucial thing is whether we are deterring Russia and whether we can face down th

defenceeconomy-jobs
107
20 Jul 2025 Middle East

The Foreign Secretary appeared before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 July, when he was asked what would happen if we did not see a ceasefire in Gaza in the coming weeks. He was also asked whether the British Government would take further measures against Israel. The Foreign Secretary was pensive, and said “Yes”—tha

defencecost-of-livingsocial-care
88
16 Jul 2025Global Plastics Treaty

The hon. Member makes an excellent point. I voted in favour of that initiative when it came before us, and the banning of disposable plastic vapes was very welcome. Too much waste still ends up in incinerators. Sometimes, what we think will be repurposed or recycled is in fact burned. The number of incinerators in the

environmenteconomy-jobs
535
16 Jul 2025Global Plastics Treaty

The world produces over 460 million tonnes of plastic each year. On our current trajectory, plastic pollution is set to triple by 2040, and every year 11 million tonnes of plastic goes into our oceans. In Devon, this picture is very obvious. According to the Marine Conservation Society’s data, an average of 103 litter

environmenteconomy-jobs
311
16 Jul 2025 Ukraine

These plans for a so-called coalition of the willing are contingency plans. They are designed for a time when Putin agrees to a ceasefire in Ukraine, which, as the Secretary of State acknowledged, he shows no sign of doing. How does the prospect of Ukraine’s allies, such as the UK, deploying armed forces to Ukraine aft

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
65
16 Jul 2025Global Plastics Treaty

The hon. Gentleman is dead right. Children from Sidmouth primary school wrote to me earlier in the year, urging me to advocate for reduced plastic use and for cutting down our plastic use. I quoted them in a debate and the Minister for Nature, who is no longer in her place, summed up the debate with their words. Let us

environmenteconomy-jobs
202
16 Jul 2025Global Plastics Treaty

The hon. Member makes a very good point. The business of our standards being very different is one we should look at first. These notes plainly need to be looked at, and we will have to go about some international negotiations to try to improve standards elsewhere. The UK has high recycling standards internationally, b

environmenteconomy-jobs
110
13 Jul 2025Northern Ireland Veterans: Prosecution

Military personnel have a term for passing the buck: sloping shoulders. Is the hon. Gentleman concerned that, with the measures we are discussing, the state risks sloping shoulders on to personnel who swore an oath of allegiance?

defencecrimemp-performance
37
9 Jul 2025Victims of Terrorism: State Support

I am grateful to the hon. Member for giving way; I understand why he might need to take a moment to compose himself. This debate is an opportunity for those of us whose friends and family have served in the armed forces or security organisations and lost their lives to pay tribute to them. Although today is about the v

crimesocial-carehealth
78
9 Jul 2025Victims of Terrorism: State Support

It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Mrs Harris. I am grateful to the hon. Member for Rossendale and Darwen (Andy MacNae) for securing a debate on this subject, and pay tribute to all Members who have spoken. The hon. Member for Beckenham and Penge (Liam Conlon) told the story of Christian; we have heard he

crimesocial-carehealth
927
9 Jul 2025 UK-France Nuclear Partnership

The threats and nuclear sabre-rattling that we have heard from President Putin since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine is utterly unacceptable, and the response from the British and French Governments has been robust. For me, defence co-operation between the UK and France is always welcome. Will our Governments a

defenceeconomy-jobs
76
9 Jul 2025National Security

The BBC covered the Government’s publication of the national security strategy last month with the headline “UK must prepare for war scenario”. Often, the public will read an alarming headline like that without reading about the context, or about what it might mean for them or what they should do about it. Will the Gov

defencetechnologyeconomy-jobs
86
9 Jul 2025 Business of the House

There are over 10,000 education, health and care plans currently registered in Devon and the average cost is rising—it is now over £18,000 per pupil. Much of that is spent on private providers who are not subject to the rigorous oversight that we demand of SEND provision in the state sector. Given that the Leader of th

healtheconomy-jobseducation
88
8 Jul 2025Trial by Jury: Proposed Restrictions

The Justice Secretary talks about the need to expedite trials for the sake of victims of crime, and she is absolutely right. As she considers the proposals from Sir Brian Leveson, will she take into account those who are innocent and who stand wrongly accused, who are having to wait anxiously for years for their day in

crimefiscal-policy
58
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.