The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,093 contributions

Speeches by Reed.

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

Showing 401420 of 1,093 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
12 Oct 2025New Social Housing: Buckingham and Bletchley

I am sure that it will come as no surprise to my hon. Friend that I wholeheartedly welcome the delivery of 183 new council homes in his constituency. I fully agree that the Lakes estate demonstrates the ambition of Milton Keynes city council to build the homes that its communities want and need. I also value such counc

housinglocal-government
87
12 Oct 2025Social and Affordable Housing

First, I do recognise the challenges the hon. Gentleman has outlined. They should concern us all, and I thank him for raising them. He will be aware that we are making legislative changes right now, with the Planning and Infrastructure Bill that is going through Parliament, to speed up the planning system that is holdi

housinglocal-government
167
12 Oct 2025Topical Questions

The hon. Gentleman has raised an important point, and I am happy to arrange a meeting with the appropriate Minister so that he can share his concerns and we can come to a resolution.

local-governmenthousingeconomy-jobs
34
12 Oct 2025Topical Questions

I would be happy to meet my hon. Friend to discuss his concerns.

local-governmenthousingeconomy-jobs
13
12 Oct 2025Topical Questions

I have to say again that the right hon. Gentleman’s devotion to Trussonomics is admirable, particularly given that we have already seen it fail once. We heard from the shadow Chancellor that the Conservatives would put up income tax if they won the general election. They put it up to the highest level since the second

local-governmenthousingeconomy-jobs
63
12 Oct 2025Topical Questions

I know that the right hon. Gentleman was a strong supporter of Liz Truss when she stood for leadership of the Conservative party, but surely he cannot have forgotten what she did: she made multibillion pound unfunded spending commitments that crashed the economy, and sent wages down and prices, mortgages and rents skyr

local-governmenthousingeconomy-jobs
80
12 Oct 2025Social and Affordable Housing

I thank the hon. Gentleman for his kind words, but I think it is disingenuous to blame the Mayor of London for failings that were the fault of the previous Conservative Government and, I am afraid, current Conservative boroughs in London such as Bromley, which is a shocking 95% behind its house building target. We cann

housinglocal-government
183
3 Sept 2025Topical Questions

As we have heard, this summer has seen wildfires burning across our countryside. I add my thanks to the emergency services, who were out in force to battle those fires, but so too were farmers, gamekeepers and local volunteers who gave up their time and resources to control the fires and help put them out. I pay tribut

agricultureenvironmentfiscal-policy
163
3 Sept 2025Dorset Coast: Pollution

I have enjoyed visiting Milton Abbas on many very happy occasions. I agree with the point that the hon. Gentleman makes. We are working with farmers and landowners to ensure that they are getting the support they need to take the kind of action that he talks about. The new regional tier proposed by Sir Jon Cunliffe wil

environmentutilitiesagriculture
81
3 Sept 2025Topical Questions

My hon. Friend makes an important and timely point. Through the floods resilience taskforce, we are looking at how we can update the modelling to make sure that all areas that need protection will get the investment to do it, because far too many communities are exposed to the dangers of flooding. That is why we are in

agricultureenvironmentfiscal-policy
76
3 Sept 2025Dorset Coast: Pollution

Nationalisation is not the answer, because it would require handing over more than £100 billion to water company owners that could only be raised through higher taxation or cuts to vital public services. It would also take years of legal wrangling that would see the brakes slammed on investment, causing pollution to ge

environmentutilitiesagriculture
76
3 Sept 2025Topical Questions

Well, I was not far away a couple of weeks ago—I was down in Lewes. I congratulate my hon. Friend on being such a powerful campaigner on issues relating to sewage in his constituency. He tells me that he has brought together a group of campaigners. I would be delighted to meet him and them to see some of the problems a

agricultureenvironmentfiscal-policy
83
3 Sept 2025Topical Questions

The causes of food price inflation include rising global energy prices, extreme weather events that have been affecting harvests, as we have already heard, and global supply chain problems, including the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Those things are affecting food prices right across the country. As part of the road ma

agricultureenvironmentfiscal-policy
114
3 Sept 2025Topical Questions

First, may I welcome the shadow Secretary of State back to the Chamber? It was disappointing that she did not bother to turn up for the water statement; I can only assume that she does not care much about the pollution that her party is responsible for across the country. When it comes to farming, we are working with t

agricultureenvironmentfiscal-policy
136
3 Sept 2025Dorset Coast: Pollution

My hon. Friend showed me the scale of pollution on the Dorset coast and I share his determination to put a stop to it. This Government are fixing the broken sewage pipes that are responsible for this pollution, funded by £104 billion of private investment that we have helped to secure. Over the next five years, that wi

environmentutilitiesagriculture
98
3 Sept 2025Topical Questions

I am always happy to meet farmers. That is why I have visited two farms already this week and sat down with a group of six farmers to talk about their concerns. I am more than happy to make sure that the people the hon. Gentleman has visiting get an appropriate meeting to discuss their concerns.

agricultureenvironmentfiscal-policy
56
3 Sept 2025Household Water Bills

The reason that Thames is in the state that it is in is the weak, so-called “light-touch” regulation that the Conservatives imposed on the water companies when they should have been getting a grip. The point beyond that that the hon. Gentleman makes is a sensible one, however, and our reforms to water regulation and in

utilitiescost-of-livingenvironment
107
3 Sept 2025Household Water Bills

The hon. Gentleman is showing why the problem persists—if the SNP does not recognise the problem, there is no way that it can fix it. I have published the data and I stand by it: pollution under the SNP in Scotland is even worse than it was under the Tories in England. He should be thoroughly ashamed of what he is doin

utilitiescost-of-livingenvironment
72
3 Sept 2025Household Water Bills

My hon. Friend is right to advocate so strongly for his constituents in Derby at a time when they are experiencing the cost of living crisis, as others are. I thank him for his support in blocking the unfair, multimillion-pound bonuses that were previously paid to water bosses. By ensuring that customers’ money is spen

utilitiescost-of-livingenvironment
89
3 Sept 2025Household Water Bills

Customers were hit with outrageous bill increases last year as a direct result of the previous Government’s failure to ensure that water and sewage pipes were properly maintained over the long term. They deliberately imposed a light-touch approach to regulation that let the system crumble, while investment funding was

utilitiescost-of-livingenvironment
97
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.