The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 106 contributions

Speeches by Pochin.

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

Showing 81100 of 106 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 5 of 6Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
14 Oct 2025Knife Crime

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms McVey. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Ashfield (Lee Anderson) for securing this important debate. I will speak about some of my experiences as a magistrate for 20 years in Cheshire. I am sure many think of Cheshire as a sleepy county, but statistics show that

crime
292
14 Oct 2025Knife Crime

Let me make a little progress, sorry. The other point about stop and search is that the police, and indeed politicians, should not congratulate themselves on how many knives are found through stop and search; we and the police should congratulate ourselves on how many knives are not found when stop and search is used t

crime
302
14 Oct 2025Knife Crime

My point is that if stop and search is working, we will eventually get to a point where knives are found less often. That is the measure of success. We as politicians need to give our courts and our police the power to have a zero-tolerance approach to stop and search. The police need to have the confidence to carry ou

crime
163
14 Oct 2025Knife Crime

Clearly, at the moment, the threat of a custodial sentence is not the deterrent that it has to be, which is an important point. The Sentencing Bill, which will have its next stage on Tuesday, will take away the power of magistrates courts to hand down custodial sentences of less than 12 months. That is a big issue, but

crime
144
13 Oct 2025 Northern Ireland Troubles

Does the Secretary of State agree that this Government’s continued hounding of our brave Northern Ireland veterans—many of whom should be enjoying well-earned retirement after their loyal service to the British Government, not living in fear of prosecution for simply following orders—is nothing short of shameful?

defencecrimesocial-care
46
15 Sept 2025Topical Questions

Does the new Secretary of State for Justice recognise sharia law and sharia courts in the United Kingdom—yes or no?

crimesocial-care
20
15 Sept 2025 Sentencing Bill

I thank the hon. Member—I was going to call him an hon. Friend, but I am not sure that is appropriate—and, yes, I could do that, but I think all Members know Reform’s policies on building prisons. [Hon. Members: “No, we do not.”] Let me finish my speech. The Bill proposes increased powers for the Probation Service such

crimefiscal-policy
161
15 Sept 2025 Sentencing Bill

I will make some progress, please. It allows for the even earlier release of dangerous criminals into the community on licence, reducing the time served from 50% of a sentence to a mere third. The implications for public safety in general, and for the safety of women from repeat offender domestic violence perpetrators

crimefiscal-policy
265
15 Sept 2025 Sentencing Bill

I was a magistrate for 20 years, so I hope that I speak with some authority and have something to contribute on Second Reading. This Bill is based on recommendations in the recent Gauke review, which falls woefully short of addressing the many concerns that the British people have about the current judicial system. Wor

crimefiscal-policy
275
7 Sept 2025Topical Questions

Will the Secretary of State guarantee—yes or no—that no British serviceman or veteran will face prosecution for actions taken in Northern Ireland while serving their country?

defenceeconomy-jobslabour-market
26
20 Jul 2025Asylum Hotels: Migrant Criminal Activity

While migrant hotels cost the British taxpayer billions, migrants are now being moved into houses in multiple occupation, taking houses from local people and causing misery for neighbours. Can the right hon. Lady tell the House how many migrants have been moved into HMOs? What is the cost to the British taxpayer?

immigrationcrime
52
13 Jul 2025Northern Ireland Veterans: Prosecution

It is an honour to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Lewell, an honour to speak on this important and emotive issue, and an honour to speak to this petition, which means so much to me and my constituents. The treatment of our brave Northern Ireland veterans by this Government, and by previous Governments, is a national

defencecrimemp-performance
148
13 Jul 2025Northern Ireland Veterans: Prosecution

Not yet. Those courageous men should be enjoying their hard-earned retirement, not facing prosecution for defending the British people from IRA terrorists. Those same British people value these soldiers, and are outraged at the unfair and unjust action of this Government. Why would a British Government of any political

defencecrimemp-performance
195
13 Jul 2025Northern Ireland Veterans: Prosecution

Not yet. The Government reward them by ruining their lives when they deserve nothing but our respect, support and gratitude. These prosecutions should not be allowed to happen. Why would we not defend those who defended us—those who put their lives on the line for us? I will defend them, and my party will stand up for

defencecrimemp-performance
90
9 Jul 2025UK-EU Trading Relationship

1. What assessment his Department has made of the effectiveness of the new trading relationship with the EU.

economy-jobsagriculture
18
9 Jul 2025UK-EU Trading Relationship

In 1973, the UK joined the European Economic Community, which later became the European Union. Given this week’s visit by the French President and this Government’s desire for closer co-operation with the EU, will the Minister confirm that no new or existing trade deal will lead to this country rejoining the EU through

economy-jobsagriculture
56
7 Jul 2025Topical Questions

The Secretary of State will be aware of the deeply troubling revelations over the weekend of the so-called Halal bride website. Does she agree that such practices have absolutely no place in Britain?

crimesocial-carehealth
33
22 Jun 2025Middle East

Can the Foreign Secretary explain to the House whether the United States felt unable to use the Diego Garcia base and had to refuel three times, in a highly dangerous operation, because of the deal that the Government did with the Mauritians, who would then tell the Chinese, who would then tell the Iranians?

defenceenergyeconomy-jobs
54
16 Jun 2025Crime and Policing Bill

Due to medical advancements, we can save the life of a foetus at 21 weeks, yet we can legally terminate a foetus at 24 weeks. I shall be voting against all the amendments relating to the decriminalisation of abortion. Does the right hon. Gentleman agree that we should actually be reducing the window in which it is poss

crime
72
10 Jun 2025Union of Great Britain and Northern Ireland: Wales

Diolch yn fawr. Welsh Labour has been in power in Cardiff Bay for 26 years. In that time, Wales has fallen further and further behind its nearest neighbour in the Union in almost every key devolved area. Welsh household incomes are lower than in England; Welsh employment rates are lower than in England; and Welsh life

economy-jobstransportlocal-government
74
← PreviousPage 5 of 6 · 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.