The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 95 contributions

Speeches by Fuller.

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

Showing 2140 of 95 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
15 Jan 2026New Towns

I am grateful to my hon. Friend for making the point about making brownfield sites a priority, and I think he is giving the Minister some very good advice. The first question that will be asked by people in Tempsford and the villages, who may see so much more housing come upon them, is, “Well, why haven’t you built in

housinglocal-governmentenvironment
126
17 Dec 2025 National Insurance Contributions (Employer Pensions Contributions) Bill

For a Bill that proposes to raise taxation on working people by such a large amount, this has been a remarkably brief debate. But I commend my hon. Friend the Member for Solihull West and Shirley (Dr Shastri-Hurst), who correctly said that this was yet another anti-aspiration measure from this Government, and the hon.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslabour-market
770
17 Dec 2025 National Insurance Contributions (Employer Pensions Contributions) Bill

Will the Minister give way?

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslabour-market
5
9 Dec 2025Income Tax and National Insurance Threshold Freeze

The Minister said this was “fair”—no, no, no. Perhaps breaking the election promise on tax thresholds is the reason why, by two to one, the public view the Budget as unfair, just 3% think it will make them better off, and two out of three think things will get worse. Does the Minister want to tell the public they are w

fiscal-policycost-of-livinglabour-market
80
9 Dec 2025Economic Growth: Rural Areas

As this is my last question before Christmas, I want to ask my counterpart a nice and constructive one. As he will know, rural residents and businesses already pay more on fuel than their urban counterparts and there are fewer public transport options. Can he advise what were the results of his assessment of the relati

economy-jobsagriculturetransport
70
3 Dec 2025 Oxford to Cambridge Growth Corridor

I congratulate the hon. Member on securing this debate. He is right to talk about the torrid history of East West Rail, but he misses some crucial points. First, the railway loses taxpayers an enormous amount of money. Secondly, East West Rail chose a long, hilly, environmentally damaging route that it did not need to

economy-jobstransporthousing
128
3 Dec 2025 Oxford to Cambridge Growth Corridor

On the point of cross-Bedfordshire roads, we will have potentially Tempsford new town in my constituency and an entirely new railway being drawn across the area, in addition to Universal Studios and the expansion of Luton airport. Over time, that will all create enormous internal pressure. To amplify the point about co

economy-jobstransporthousing
69
3 Dec 2025 Oxford to Cambridge Growth Corridor

rose—

economy-jobstransporthousing
1
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

Madam Deputy Speaker, before I start my comments on the subject of this debate, let me say that I am aware, and I think a number of right hon. and hon. Members are aware, that since you presided over the opening of this debate last Wednesday, you have been subject to abuse online, with a series of presumptions on your

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
545
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

The hon. Lady needs to recognise that people are struggling because of decisions made by this Government. The people do want better public services, but they do not understand why, after the Government handed out a 15% pay hike to train drivers, more trains are running late this year compared to last year. People are s

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
255
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

Perhaps the hon. Lady would like to reflect on the fact that, when she stands in the next election, real household incomes will have gone up by just a quarter of the rate they went up by under 10 years of Conservative government. If we are to fund the defence of our nation against greater threats, enable young people t

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
160
4 Nov 2025Topical Questions

That is a very broad definition. Maybe the Chancellor should speak to the Prime Minister, the Transport Secretary, the Education Secretary and the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, who have all given different definitions of working people over the last 12 months. After last year’s Budget, the Chancellor said that

economy-jobscost-of-livinglocal-government
131
4 Nov 2025Topical Questions

What is the Chancellor’s definition of “working people”?

economy-jobscost-of-livinglocal-government
8
8 Sept 2025Topical Questions

I fear that the Chancellor’s dismissive response fails to acknowledge either the serious state of public finances or the serious difficulties of her own position. Having extended economic uncertainty until just before Christmas, will the Chancellor at least confirm that the November Budget will include savings from wel

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobscost-of-living
49
8 Sept 2025Government Debt Interest Payments

UK long-term borrowing costs are now consistently above the range of G7 countries—something that did not occur at any time under previous coalition or Conservative Governments. It is because markets are pricing in the specific weakness of this Labour Government’s economic policies. The cost of that weakness means risin

economy-jobscost-of-living
87
8 Sept 2025Government Debt Interest Payments

indicated dissent.

economy-jobscost-of-living
2
8 Sept 2025Topical Questions

May I welcome the new members of the Treasury team, with their courage in joining it? I also do so for the shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, my right hon. Friend the Member for Central Devon (Sir Mel Stride), who cannot be with us today. May I particularly welcome the new Chief Secretary, who replaces the old Chief S

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobscost-of-living
153
1 Sept 2025 Solar Development: Newark

I know that there are rules about shadow Ministers speaking in Adjournment debates, but with your permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I would like to make an intervention. My right hon. Friend has made an important point about the impact on the local economy and the options of farming and new housing. If 10% of the land

energyagricultureenvironment
88
14 Jul 2025Taxes

We have had an exciting and heartfelt debate. I commend for their speeches my right hon. Friends the Members for Sutton Coldfield (Sir Andrew Mitchell), for Wetherby and Easingwold (Sir Alec Shelbrooke), for Basildon and Billericay (Mr Holden), for Salisbury (John Glen) and for Beverley and Holderness (Graham Stuart),

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslabour-market
965
30 Jun 2025Employer National Insurance Contributions

Labour’s jobs tax has really clobbered British businesses. The Office for National Statistics says that the number of available jobs is collapsing. Perhaps the Chancellor has not updated herself on how British business thinks about confidence: the Institute of Directors has said today that business confidence has plumm

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslabour-market
133
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.