The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,102 contributions

Speeches by Mahmood.

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

Showing 1,0011,020 of 1,102 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
5 Nov 2024Topical Questions

I am very sorry to hear about the circumstances facing my hon. Friend’s constituent’s sibling in prison. We are determined to make more progress with IPP prisoners, but never in a way that compromises public protection. If my hon. Friend writes to the Department with the specifics of the case, I will ensure that he rec

crimesocial-care
58
5 Nov 2024Foreign National Offenders

As the right hon. Gentleman well knows, we have legal obligations to those who arrive in this country that have to play out. However, PTAs relate to those who have committed an offence, have been convicted and are being held in the prison estate. They can therefore be removed from this country under a prisoner transfer

crimeimmigration
75
5 Nov 2024Foreign National Offenders

As I say, we are on track to remove more foreign offenders this year than in previous years. In fact, over the period when the shadow Justice Secretary was the Immigration Minister in the previous Government, the number returned was around 1,300. We have already returned more than 1,500 foreign offenders, utilising all

crimeimmigration
81
5 Nov 2024Foreign National Offenders

I share the public’s view that there are far too many foreign national offenders in our prisons. Since coming into office, we have returned more than 1,500 foreign offenders and, I am pleased to say, we are on track to remove more foreign offenders this year than at any time in recent years.

crimeimmigration
53
5 Nov 2024Early Release Scheme

The hon. Gentleman’s question is really about rates of recall, which is what happens when licence conditions are breached, including breaches of curfew. Recall rates for SDS40 releases are tracking similarly to recall rates for other offenders. We will publish those statistics once they have been assured in the usual w

crime
59
5 Nov 2024Early Release Scheme

I welcome the shadow Minister to his place. I have always enjoyed his contributions to justice debates, so I look forward to working with him where appropriate. After the Department’s daily monitoring—indeed, monitoring many times a day—I can confirm that the performance of Serco on tagging has improved significantly.

crime
82
5 Nov 2024Early Release Scheme

It is clear that we have to do better on reducing reoffending, given that 80% of offenders are reoffenders. Cutting reoffending is a strategy for cutting crime, keeping the public safe and helping ex-prisoners to turn their lives around. I am sure that the sentencing review will look carefully at short sentences.

crime
52
5 Nov 2024Early Release Scheme

The immediate purpose of the emergency release scheme was to stop us running out of prison places and to avert a total breakdown of law and order. If we look at the prison population today, it is clear that we have managed to avert the immediate crisis, but this was only a short-term measure; we have also set out a lon

crime
95
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

I hear the point my hon. Friend makes, and she makes it very well. We are not considering a re-sentencing exercise for IPP prisoners, because that would automatically release a number of people who we do not believe it would be safe to release. I am not willing to compromise public protection. I know that there is a hu

crimeeconomy-jobs
125
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

My hon. Friend makes a really important point about the relative costs of imprisonment and of punishment out of prison. Delivering the 14,000 prison places that the previous Government failed to deliver is a big cost, but it will be met by this Government. We must also ensure that we expand punishment out of prison. Al

crimeeconomy-jobs
70
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

Yes, I absolutely can. The whole point of the review is to ensure that the country is never again in a position in which we might run out of prison places, and to ensure that those who must be locked up to keep the public safe will always be locked up.

crimeeconomy-jobs
51
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. I can assure her that I will work closely with the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care to make sure that there is join-up across Government and that we do everything we can to reduce reoffending, rehabilitate more people and ultimately cut crime.

crimeeconomy-jobs
51
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

That is exactly the sort of area that the panel will review. Although the reoffending rates for community orders are lower, they are still far too high. I am sure that the sentencing panel will want to consider how to bring all the numbers down so that we can ensure we are rehabilitating more people and ultimately cutt

crimeeconomy-jobs
59
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

The hon. Member raises an important point. That issue is not within the review’s terms of reference. It will not consider disparities in sentencing because it is looking at the overall sentencing framework, and how we ensure that we never run out of prison places again. There is an important debate on disparities in th

crimeeconomy-jobs
80
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

Working closely with our trade unions is important to us. We have already engaged with the Prison Officers Association. Let me place on record my thanks to all who work in our prisons and our probation system. In our prisons in particular, the rates of violence against prison officers have been too high for too long. I

crimeeconomy-jobs
98
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

The hon. Member will know that sentencing decisions in individual cases are a matter for the independent judiciary, who have to consider all the facts in front of them and sentence accordingly, based on the law, the sentencing guidelines and the framework. I cannot comment on the specifics of the case he mentions. The

crimeeconomy-jobs
95
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

My hon. Friend will know that in our safer streets mission, improving confidence in the criminal justice system is one of the key outcomes we are focused on. He is right to make the point that the whole criminal justice system requires stabilisation. It all needs to be put on a better trajectory than the one we inherit

crimeeconomy-jobs
126
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

I knew immediately that the right hon. Gentleman was going to ask about the meeting he referenced last week, when I made my other statement. I assure him that I will follow that up. I am interested in the work of the group that he mentions, and I am sure that the sentencing review panel will also be interested in it.

crimeeconomy-jobs
61
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

I can assure my hon. Friend that my ministerial team and I have been working closely with our colleagues, primarily in the Home Office, but also across Government. Support for victims sits in different Departments, but we are making sure that we have a “one team” approach to this important matter. I have sought to pull

crimeeconomy-jobs
127
21 Oct 2024Sentencing Review and Prison Capacity

I can confirm that all sex offences of all types are excluded from the SDS40 measures.

crimeeconomy-jobs
16
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.