The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 484 contributions

Speeches by Ali.

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

Showing 2140 of 484 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
25 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

Does anyone want to add anything to that? Great—thank you very much.

12
25 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

As you know, in April the pension age will go up from 66 to 67. That was legislated for in 2014. There are no mitigations in terms of social security support. Can you talk us through what you think the Government could do, given the short timeframe?

47
25 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

Wendy, did you want to add anything on this question?

10
25 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

Turning to the Government’s options, given the urgency of this issue, we know that there are some estimates suggesting that this particular change would save public spending about £10 billion, and the interventions to try to mitigate could range between £200 million and £600 million, depending on who is in scope and ho

106
25 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

Do you have any estimates of how many more people are going to be pushed into poverty because of the lack of mitigation? Beyond the specific policy changes, is there anything else that the Government should plan for, given the short timeframe before it comes into effect?

47
18 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

To come back to the point about how many people may still face poverty, over and above the interventions you are making, do you think there is a case for short-term changes around means-tested support for those who remain at risk because of this change? I appreciate that these are not changes that this Government have

74
18 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

With the greatest of respect, as you know, the IFS has produced some very good work, and I do not think we should dismiss it. We want to see as much action as possible, and it is good to see that there is that focus on mitigating and smoothing out the inequalities, because it is a big problem. We talked about working-c

185
18 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

Are there others that you think should be announced?

9
18 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

Are you confident that those changes will be sufficient in not having a sizeable number who continue to face poverty because of this change?

24
18 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

These are really important steps and inputs, but we are interested in understanding how you are signalling the departure from what has gone on before, and what we want to see happen. You have rightly talked about the issues we are concerned about, including geographical differences in terms of employment for those in o

214
18 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

I want to carry on with the subject of mitigation of the state pension age increase. You mentioned that you are already taking action. To pick up on the numbers that are expected to face poverty, can you tell us how many people would be lifted out of poverty because of the interventions that you mentioned you are alrea

60
18 Mar 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1482)

Yesterday, the Secretary of State made a very welcome announcement about tackling youth unemployment—those who are in the NEET category—and at the other end obviously we are trying to get older people into work. We have a massive structural change in the labour market, particularly in relation to AI’s impact on differe

144
17 Mar 2026Youth Unemployment

I welcome this excellent initiative, with the backing of £2.5 billion of investment, and I commend the Secretary of State on trying to get a grip on the scourge of youth unemployment. We saw a generation lost during the previous Government because of the failure to support young people. What will the Secretary of State

economy-jobseducationcost-of-living
109
2 Mar 2026 Representation of the People Bill

I congratulate my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State and the Minister responsible for introducing this Bill. I am proud to have worked on these important proposals in government and remain determined to ensure that we protect, renew and enhance our democracy. Our democracy has inspired people and movements around

economy-jobscrimeculture-community
397
2 Mar 2026 Representation of the People Bill

My hon. Friend is absolutely right, and I have heard many say exactly that. In fact, a number of us have ourselves wondered whether, if we had known what we know now about the state of harassment and intimidation in our politics, we would have stood for Parliament. Of course, we have to fight against these threats, bec

economy-jobscrimeculture-community
496
2 Mar 2026 Representation of the People Bill

My hon. Friend makes the case for why it is crucial to legislate to close those loopholes, so that we can clean up our politics and ensure that the public have confidence in our political system. Turning to the subject of cryptocurrency, we know that it offers a number of ways of circumventing donation laws, including

economy-jobscrimeculture-community
463
2 Mar 2026 Representation of the People Bill

I thank the hon. Member for making that point. We have to take action against racism, anti-Muslim hatred, antisemitism and other forms of hostility and hatred towards particular groups in our society, especially those with protected characteristics. There are laws in place that need to be enforced, and those laws are o

economy-jobscrimeculture-community
172
2 Mar 2026 Representation of the People Bill

Absolutely. We all have such a responsibility, and I know of plenty of journalists in the media, particularly female journalists, who are being threatened and intimidated as well. This is a wider societal issue about making sure we can express ourselves freely and protect freedom of speech, but also protect those opera

economy-jobscrimeculture-community
70
2 Mar 2026Middle East

This conflict has already cost lives. Civilians are caught in the crossfire, and hundreds of thousands of UK nationals are stranded in the region. If it continues for weeks, that will only make it more difficult to evacuate our nationals, and it will cause a humanitarian catastrophe and damage to the world economy. Can

defenceenergy
107
4 Feb 2026Work and Pensions Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1668)

You don’t want scope creep.

5
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.