The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 182 contributions

Speeches by Barclay.

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

Showing 6180 of 182 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
3 Dec 2025Ely: Railway Upgrade

I congratulate the hon. Lady on securing the debate. I very much support the case she is making. Given that the previous Government, in October 2023, did secure funding for this, it is deeply regrettable that the Labour Government have cut it. Does she agree that if we are to unlock the growth potential of Cambridgeshi

transporteconomy-jobsenvironment
89
3 Dec 2025Ely: Railway Upgrade

The Minister seems to be citing a lack of funding as the reason for the scheme not being funded, but when I spoke to the Rail Minister in his previous role as chair of Network Rail, it was a priority for Network Rail. Can the Minister confirm from the Dispatch Box that schemes with a worse benefit-cost ratio were funde

transporteconomy-jobsenvironment
84
3 Dec 2025Ely: Railway Upgrade

What about the BCR?

transporteconomy-jobsenvironment
4
1 Dec 2025Office for Budget Responsibility Forecasts

Mr Speaker, you described the chaos and leaks in the run-up to the Budget as a “hokey-cokey”. Just today, the House had to be suspended because the statement arrived so late, on a Budget that was delivered so early that the Chancellor had not actually given it. That was a few hours after the Prime Minister had had to d

economy-jobsmp-performance
111
1 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

The Secretary of State opened this debate by saying that we should look at the backdrop of the general election, which was a surprising way for him to open discussion on the Budget, not least because a central theme of the Budget is Labour doing the very opposite of what it said it would do at the general election. Tha

cost-of-livingeconomy-jobsutilities
750
1 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

I am happy to; perhaps the hon. Member wants to come in on the Government’s pay offer.

cost-of-livingeconomy-jobsutilities
17
1 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

Clearly the hon. Member has just had a text message from the Whips Office. The reality is that the Government inherited inflation at 2%, and it is currently at 3.6%, and the OBR—the independent forecaster—forecasts it to be 3.5% next year. It takes a certain genius to intervene to show that the Government are going in

cost-of-livingeconomy-jobsutilities
270
17 Nov 2025Budget: Press Briefings

As the Minister will know, leaks of market sensitive data obviously carry a much higher premium than other leaks that may occur in Government. Again, could he address the shadow Chancellor’s question as to why the Cabinet Secretary and the permanent secretary have not been asked to launch an inquiry into these leaks?

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobsmp-performance
53
17 Nov 2025Asylum Policies: Danish Model

The Home Secretary likes to talk tough, while the numbers continue to rise. As part of the statement that she will bring to the House later, will she confirm that detailed modelling will be published and whether she has shared that modelling with No. 10?

immigration
45
5 Nov 2025 Bronze-age Heritage: Cambridgeshire

rose—

culture-communitylocal-governmenteducation
1
5 Nov 2025 Bronze-age Heritage: Cambridgeshire

I pay tribute to my Cambridgeshire colleague, the hon. Member for Peterborough (Andrew Pakes), for securing this debate. I am grateful that the Minister draws out that distinction. Must Farm, the 3,000-year-old settlement dubbed the “Pompeii of the fens”, is in Fenland in my constituency, yet the funding always seems t

culture-communitylocal-governmenteducation
88
3 Nov 2025Huntingdon Train Attack

May I join in with the tributes of my fellow Cambridgeshire MPs? In her statement, the Home Secretary indicated that she was receptive to the deployment of facial recognition at railway stations. Can she clarify, on the current timeline, the earliest date on which that would be deployed more widely? Given some of the e

crimetransport
72
29 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

Indeed, change for the worse. It is bizarre that when serious offences take place, quite often it is the judiciary who get the blame. Perhaps I have an unfashionable view in that I think that we have a very high-quality judiciary, but it is easy for people to look at sentences and then quickly leap to criticise the jud

crime
274
29 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

Indeed. The new clauses under debate highlight a wider principle that is driving much of the public frustration with the democratic process: the sense of people voting and then seeing decisions that they do not feel were on the ballot paper. My right hon. Friend the Member for South Holland and The Deepings was right t

crime
519
29 Oct 2025 Sentencing Bill

The Bill illustrates a wider theme that we see across a number of debates in the House, which is the gap between the Government’s words and how they vote. Indeed, that is illustrated by a number of the new clauses that colleagues on the Opposition Benches have already spoken to. New clause 14, tabled by my hon. Friend

crime
381
12 Oct 2025Topical Questions

In April, the Government described their decision to approve a major scheme to unlock over 8,500 homes next to Cambridge North station after six years in planning as “nationally significant”. Just four months later, the Government scrapped the whole thing. How is that consistent with the Secretary of State’s announceme

local-governmenthousingeconomy-jobs
57
15 Sept 2025 Employment Rights: Impact on Businesses

I join colleagues in welcoming the Minister to her place. She said in her reply to my hon. Friend the Member for Spelthorne (Lincoln Jopp) that there would not be an additional cost, but the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services has raised concerns about the additional costs and the funding gap, given that

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
88
15 Sept 2025 Employment Rights: Impact on Businesses

My hon. Friend is right to highlight the flaws in the impact assessment—there has been wider commentary supporting that point. Does he agree that one of the issues is the accumulation of different aspects of the Bill? For example, not only will there be more hooks for grievances to be based on, but the removal of the 5

economy-jobslabour-marketfiscal-policy
122
15 Sept 2025Topical Questions

Prison officers at Whitemoor prison in my constituency have raised concerns that the recruitment process for staff is not working effectively and is unduly bureaucratic. Will the Secretary of State write to me with his assessment and look at what changes could be made?

crimesocial-care
44
7 Sept 2025Defence Industrial Strategy

The Government said over the summer that the Dreadnought programme was on track, despite the fire last year at Barrow, the challenges of covid and the other Government programmes that are running delayed. However, there is a lot of latitude in saying that the programme will be delivered in the early 2030s. Is the Minis

defenceeconomy-jobs
80
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.