The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,061 contributions

Speeches by Doughty.

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

Showing 481500 of 1,061 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 25 of 54Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

I genuinely have to say, as somebody who has respect for and likes the right hon. Lady, that I am disappointed by the tone of those remarks. I do not know who writes this stuff; I do not know whether it is just performative politics, or rhetoric—I don’t know what. I should point out that I have received and answered ov

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
308
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

My hon. Friend asks an important question. Since the treaty was laid, I have had 50 written questions from the right hon. Lady. In comparison, I have had four on Gibraltar, two on Ukraine, and one on Poland. He is right that this matter has received scrutiny.

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
47
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

I genuinely thank the hon. Gentleman for the generally constructive way in which he and his colleagues have approached the process. He is absolutely right to speak about the Chagossians. Indeed, as I have pointed out many times, the Chagossians’ interest in this matter has been at the heart of our discussions. We have

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
178
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. National security is the top priority of this Government, and working with our crucial allies, including the United States, is key to that. He is absolutely right to point out the support that was gained for this deal through a full and detailed inter-agency process in the United Sta

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
102
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

My hon. Friend is right. Whether it is in the ambitious agenda for national security and defence set out in the strategic defence review, in the unity and leadership we showed at the NATO summit last week, or in securing our crucial national security bases, including Diego Garcia, this Government are leading from the f

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
94
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

I have been very clear on this: the United States, our Five Eyes partners and India support this deal. Mauritius was one of the few countries not to join the belt and road initiative. It is very clear that the deal is in the interests of our security and that of our allies—otherwise, the United States would not have ag

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
66
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

The United States makes significant and crucial contributions to the operations from Diego Garcia. They are of a quantum much greater than the cost that we will pay in relation to the base under this deal. The benefit to the United Kingdom, the United States and our allies is priceless, and this Government will not scr

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
60
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. This Government took early action—even before the conclusion of the deal—to ensure that that route was closed down by the memorandum of understanding that we reached with St Helena, for which I again thank St Helena. Again, Mr. Speaker, I was rightly scrutinised by this House on that

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
72
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

My hon. Friend the Minister of State for the Armed Forces has replied to multiple questions on this topic, as have I. Indeed, I answered these questions in the due scrutiny that I received the other day. We do not have to provide notification in advance. The treaty refers to “expeditiously” informing after the event, a

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
82
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

I repeatedly hear a strong vote of confidence in our investment in national security and defence, whether it is from our European partners or from the United States. One just has to look at our leadership at the NATO summit and our ongoing support for Ukraine, which we agree on across the House. My hon. Friend asks abo

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
133
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

In the interests of time, I refer the right hon. Member to the detailed evidence that I gave in the House of Lords on this matter the other day, including on the legal circumstances. He knows the risk to the operation of the base in the medium and short term, and he recognises the risk of a binding legal judgment, whic

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
147
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

I am confused—I have mentioned ITLOS on a number of occasions, including just a moment ago. The long-standing view of the United Kingdom is that the UK would not have a realistic prospect of successfully defending its legal position on sovereignty in such litigation. Even if we chose to ignore binding judgments made ag

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
191
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

I will not take any lessons from a party that fawns over Vladimir Putin.

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
14
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

The primary purpose of the deal was of course to secure the base on Diego Garcia and the national security of the UK and our allies, but the right hon. Member is right to point out the historical situation regarding the Chagossians. We have expressed deep regret for how they were removed from the islands in the 1960s a

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
190
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

I have to correct the hon. Member as we have had days in court on this issue. That is one of the reasons—[Interruption.] There was the non-binding judgment in the International Court of Justice. He also forgets to mention the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, the votes in the United Nations and all the oth

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
117
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

Further to that point of order, Mr Deputy Speaker. Perhaps it was because of the noise and the shouting, but I was clear. The United States contributes to the operations on Diego Garcia, and rightly so. There is establishment of that in relation to the exchange of notes between the UK and the United States. It is not c

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
66
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

I will not comment on ongoing judicial matters, but as I have set out a number of times the negotiations were necessarily between the UK and Mauritius. However, we recognise the importance of the islands to Chagossians, which is why the measures that I just set out have been put in place.

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
52
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

I am genuinely surprised by the comments of the right hon. Gentleman. As a former Defence Minister and someone who has served, he will know the importance of this base and the need to secure it, and he will know the risks to our operations that were inherent under the previous Government. That is why his Government sta

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
103
1 Jul 2025British Indian Ocean Territory: Sovereignty

I have respect for the right hon. Gentleman, but I totally reject his assertion. There is full support for this deal—and, indeed, full support for it from our allies in the United States and the Five Eyes partners. On the point about alleged tax cuts, at no point in his Budget speech did Prime Minister Ramgoolam say th

defencefiscal-policyimmigration
127
23 Jun 2025Chagos Archipelago: Sovereignty

I have set out the costs very clearly. They average out at £101 million over the course of the deal. That compares very favourably with, for example, what France pays for its military facility in Djibouti. This treaty has been entered into in good faith by the UK and Mauritius, it will be legally binding, and we are ab

defenceother
72
← PreviousPage 25 of 54 · 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.