The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 822 contributions

Speeches by Hoare.

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

Showing 761780 of 822 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
8 Jan 2025Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 477)

Ms Carville, your observations?

4
8 Jan 2025Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 477)

Would you like to see a more bargaining mindset from HMT, which effectively says, “We understand the issues, pressures, history and the need for additional per capita expenditure, but there has to be a quid pro quo”? Perhaps for every pound saved you get whatever it may be—I will not go into the semantics of the number

79
8 Jan 2025Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 477)

I have a terrible sense of déjà vu. The question I wanted to ask you is this. Witnesses have referenced, and we all readily understand, the historical challenges of delivering public services across Northern Ireland. Ms Carville has referenced the by-product of Stormont not sitting, etc., in terms of driving forward ch

124
8 Jan 2025Northern Ireland Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 477)

Can I ask Professor Farry—I suppose we are getting the band back together, Stephen.

14
6 Jan 2025Child Sexual Exploitation and Abuse

I thank the Home Secretary for her statement. It is important to remember that these terrible crimes could happen to anyone and could be perpetrated by anyone, irrespective of colour, class, heritage or geography. I think the Home Secretary is right that the public want to see action now. Frankly, I remain unconvinced

crimesocial-care
172
17 Dec 2024National Insurance Contributions (Secondary Class 1 Contributions) Bill

In essence, the hon. Gentleman has described what we on the Conservative Benches would have called the big society some years ago. Does he share my concern, however, that that huge bank of volunteers who often prop up and form the supports for the organisations he has described are likely to drift away as their organis

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobshealth
102
16 Dec 2024 English Devolution

There is much to commend in the White Paper and, broadly, the Minister is to be congratulated. However, he knows as well as I do, as welcome as the multi-year settlement announcement is, it is predicated on an outdated and effectively broken funding system. I understand the Treasury is not keen to revisit that in any m

local-governmenteconomy-jobshousing
183
16 Dec 2024Royal Mail Takeover

As many have mentioned, many rural communities will be concerned to know how this could affect them. I spoke to postal workers in Blandford Forum in my constituency on Friday; they can be the best advocates, so can the Minister ensure that they are well primed to explain to their customers—who they are very proud to se

economy-jobsutilities
151
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

The Minister continually refers to tax breaks. They are not tax breaks. Why can he not just be honest with the House and admit that this is the first time that any Government in a civilised democracy has imposed a tax on learning and education?

educationfiscal-policy
45
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

Given that there are many on the Government Benches who had almost as their life’s work the destruction of the private school system, is my hon. Friend as shocked as I am that for this flagship policy, which the red flag has so often demanded, the Government Benches are so underpopulated? I thought that they would be t

educationfiscal-policy
63
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

I am grateful to the Minister for giving way a second time, and I am so grateful for the public finance lesson. Surely he has to accept that as no tax is placed on learning in any sector in the educational landscape across the United Kingdom, this measure is not a tax break. It is not that there is a tax break for one

educationfiscal-policy
95
11 Dec 2024 Finance Bill

rose—

educationfiscal-policy
1
4 Dec 2024Farming and Inheritance Tax

This point of order is spontaneous, unlike that intervention. [Interruption.] I am Mr Spontaneity. Mr Speaker, you are entirely right that many right hon. and hon. Members read their speeches almost verbatim, but surely it is just rude and discourteous to the House for the hon. Member for Scarborough and Whitby (Alison

economy-jobsenvironmentcost-of-living
86
4 Dec 2024Farming and Inheritance Tax

claimed to move the closure (Standing Order No. 36). Question put forthwith, That the Question be now put. Question agreed to. Question put accordingly (Standing Order No. 31(2)), That the original words stand part of the Question.

economy-jobsenvironmentcost-of-living
37
4 Dec 2024Farming and Inheritance Tax

I am very grateful to the Minister for giving way. He has just referred to his analysis of four years of data which led him and the Government to this position. That is an incredible thing to ask the House to believe, because just a few months ago his right hon. Friends the now Prime Minister and Secretary of State wer

economy-jobsenvironmentcost-of-living
103
4 Dec 2024Farming and Inheritance Tax

My right hon. Friend is right to highlight the devastating effect of this policy and to highlight the incredible rounding-up exercise on the Treasury account books of the contribution that it will make to NHS expenditure. With the Labour party having a serious foothold in rural constituencies for the first time since 1

economy-jobsenvironmentcost-of-living
102
4 Dec 2024Farming and Inheritance Tax

On a point of order, Mr Speaker.

economy-jobsenvironmentcost-of-living
7
29 Nov 2024Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I thank the hon. Lady for giving the House the time to debate the Bill this morning. She references coercion, and I understand her point about the two medics, but medics will not be able to see or hear everything at all times. People will not be put beyond challenge, because subsequent to the death, if a relative claim

healthsocial-care
86
29 Nov 2024Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

The thrust of the Bill, as I understand it, is to ease suffering and pain in a patient who has a diagnosis and will die of the condition that has been diagnosed. But that right could only be exercised within a six-month period, and the pain and discomfort could last a lot longer than that. Has my hon. Friend heard—beca

healthsocial-care
111
27 Nov 2024 Finance Bill

As a former state school pupil with three daughters in a state school, let me assure the hon. Member that, despite the caricature that sometimes he and others like to paint, not all Conservative Members are privately educated. I say to him quietly that it is not a choice of either/or; we want to see excellence and choi

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsagriculture
71
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.