The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 346 contributions

Speeches by Tice.

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

Showing 101120 of 346 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 6 of 18Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
20 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

Does the hon. Lady accept that, in a democracy, it is important to be able to hold everybody to account, including judges? Does she accept that we need to be able to check that they are making good decisions on behalf of everybody?

crime
43
19 Oct 2025Asylum Seekers: Support and Accommodation

The hon. Member speaks passionately about all of us being keen to close down the hotels, including those in my constituency of Boston and Skegness. He talks about being for things, so is he for moving asylum seekers who are here illegally into houses in multiple occupation, or is he for moving them into processing cent

immigrationlocal-governmentcost-of-living
62
19 Oct 2025Alleged Spying Case: Home Office Involvement

Last Thursday, the Minister at the Dispatch Box agreed with me that China is indeed a national security threat, and the Government have consistently said that they are “disappointed”. As the Minister knows, I like to be helpful and constructive at all times, so I asked a KC to advise as to whether a private criminal pr

defencemp-performanceeconomy-jobs
118
19 Oct 2025 Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill

Will the Minister give way?

defenceenvironmenteconomy-jobs
5
19 Oct 2025Asylum Seekers: Support and Accommodation

The hon. Member speaks passionately about the great town of Hartlepool, which I know well. He made a key point: our nation has always been very compassionate towards genuine asylum seekers. Under the previous Labour Government, some 20 years ago, the average number of asylum seekers was in the order of 20,000 to 30,000

immigrationlocal-governmentcost-of-living
110
15 Oct 2025 Business of the House

Three weeks ago today, I met the Governor of the Bank of England to discuss the important decisions around quantitative easing and quantitative tightening, and the Governor agreed with me that this is actually a fiscal matter. It is triggering losses of tens of billions of pounds for the taxpayer every year, and theref

local-governmenthealthhousing
121
15 Oct 2025 Official Secrets Act Case: Witness Statements

Among all the noise of this China spy scandal, my constituents in Boston and Skegness—and the whole British people—want some clarity from the Government. Do they view China as a national security threat—yes or no?

defencemp-performance
35
14 Oct 2025Knife Crime

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms McVey, as always. I congratulate my good friend, my hon. Friend the Member for Ashfield (Lee Anderson), on securing this vital debate. Knife crime is the scourge of our society. Almost every day or every week, in the newspapers and in our constituencies, we hear hor

crime
397
13 Oct 2025Net Zero: Impact on Manufacturing

I welcome the Minister to his place. Talking about industry, the Lindsey oil refinery in Lincolnshire is in receivership and is currently being sold, but thousands and thousands of jobs are at risk and the workers there are desperately concerned that the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero and the official rece

economy-jobsenergyenvironment
87
13 Oct 2025Middle East

We all welcome the release of the hostages, the ceasefire and the beginning of the end of the suffering in Gaza. I know the joy that the hostage families I met a couple of weeks ago in Israel will be feeling; they will be ecstatic. As we hope that the divisions start to reduce in the middle east, we must also hope that

defenceculture-communityeconomy-jobs
138
12 Oct 2025 Security Update: Official Secrets Act Case

The stench emanating from the collapse of this Chinese spy case makes a manure heap seem positively floral. The bottom line is that everyone is disappointed, everyone thinks there is enough evidence and everyone seems to agree that China is a security threat, yet the case has collapsed and China has been given, essenti

defencemp-performancecrime
131
15 Sept 2025Ambassador to the United States

Last week, the Prime Minister expressed confidence in Lord Mandelson. This week, does the Minister express his confidence in national security vetting?

mp-performancedefenceother
22
15 Sept 2025Ambassador to the United States

Will the Minister give way?

mp-performancedefenceother
5
15 Sept 2025Ambassador to the United States

Will the right hon. Lady give way?

mp-performancedefenceother
7
15 Sept 2025Ambassador to the United States

The right hon. Lady is speaking powerfully. Does she think that if her Committee had been allowed to interview Lord Mandelson, it would have come up with a recommendation not to approve his appointment, and, in such a situation, does she think that her recommendation would have been listened to?

mp-performancedefenceother
50
15 Sept 2025Ambassador to the United States

The reality is that the Prime Minister personally decided to appoint Lord Mandelson as the ambassador to the United States, and in so doing, he has humiliated and embarrassed this nation on the international stage, because Lord Mandelson is someone who described himself as the “best pal” of a paedophile and advised tha

mp-performancedefenceother
508
14 Sept 2025 Official Secrets Act

There is a very nasty smell about the collapse of this Chinese spying affair case. Just over a year ago, the Crown Prosecution Service counter-terrorism unit said after complex investigations that these were very serious allegations and that charges were brought, but now we are supposed to believe that it cannot provid

defencecrimemp-performance
92
8 Sept 2025Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill

Will the Minister give way?

defencefiscal-policy
5
8 Sept 2025Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill

Does the Minister accept that we owned the freehold of the Chagos islands, and does he agree with me that in the mid-1960s we paid Mauritius £3 million in old money—some 80 million quid in today’s money—to cede all future claims over sovereignty?

defencefiscal-policy
43
8 Sept 2025Diego Garcia Military Base and British Indian Ocean Territory Bill

We have heard today that this deal—this supposed investment that is actually a liability—is essential to the defence of our realm. Yet the Defence Committee has not studied that investment or liability. I think the British people have a right to know why not.

defencefiscal-policy
44
← PreviousPage 6 of 18 · 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.