The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 471 contributions

Speeches by Farron.

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

Showing 101120 of 471 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

I strongly empathise with the Minister’s articulate fury at the previous Government and the damage they did to our village and town centres. But will she acknowledge the fact that Cumbria Tourism, which represents the employers of 60,000 people in Cumbria, reports that the national insurance rise has seen 37% of those

economy-jobsfiscal-policylocal-government
92
4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

My hon. Friend has listed a number of factors, but one that would not cost the Government very much money to put right is the lack of a workforce. In areas such as mine, 63% of all the hospitality and tourism businesses are operating below capacity, because they cannot find enough staff. There is surely room in town ce

economy-jobsfiscal-policylocal-government
90
4 Nov 2025Supporting High Streets

Just like IKEA, it may not fit together. [Laughter.]

economy-jobsfiscal-policylocal-government
9
28 Oct 2025 Family Farming in Northern Ireland

The hon. Lady is making an important point. To follow up on the previous intervention, I wonder whether she has noticed in Northern Ireland, as I have in Cumbria, that farmers are holding money back. If they need a drystone wall fixing, they are not paying for that. If they need a new tractor, they are not investing in

agriculturefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
106
28 Oct 2025 Family Farming in Northern Ireland

Will the Minister take a look at the University of Cumbria report that shows that upland farmers in all four corners of the United Kingdom will, at the end of the transition, will be earning only on average 55% of the national minimum wage—barely half the living wage? Those are the same farms, often worth £2 million or

agriculturefiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
96
28 Oct 2025Gaza Peace Plan

How will the United Kingdom help to ensure that the Gaza peace plan includes measures to restore access to clean and plentiful water? The main source of fresh water in Gaza is the coastal aquifer, which is contaminated by sea water, sewage and chemicals. Up to 97% of Gaza’s tap water is unfit for human consumption. Sur

defenceculture-community
72
27 Oct 2025Young People: Employment, Education and Training

Skills bootcamps in Cumbria have provided a great opportunity: 60 hours of training for young people in disciplines as varied as coding, scaffolding and project management. The cost to deliver those bootcamps across the whole of Cumbria is £2.7 million—chicken feed compared with the benefit that those young people and

economy-jobseducationlabour-market
80
20 Oct 2025Health Service Spending

Does the Minister agree that it is completely wasteful to make cancer patients who need to go for chemotherapy in Carlisle on a Wednesday but who live in, say, Kirkby Stephen to have to travel to Carlisle on the day or on the day before to get their bloods taken? Why is that? Because the local hospital will no longer f

healthfiscal-policy
99
19 Oct 2025Asylum Seekers: Support and Accommodation

I am grateful for the hon. and learned Member’s opening remarks. I too would like to put on record the support I get from the Refugee, Asylum, Migration and Policy Project. The Government have managed to get the number of people waiting for initial decision down by 18% in the last year, which is good, but the number wa

immigrationlocal-governmentcost-of-living
115
19 Oct 2025Asylum Seekers: Support and Accommodation

I commend the hon. Member for taking the time to visit to see for himself and to hear people’s voices, and I mean that sincerely. More colleagues should do that before forming opinions. What he is talking about is the use of a private asset for public purposes and at the cost of public money. At the same time, those in

immigrationlocal-governmentcost-of-living
140
19 Oct 2025Post-16 Education and Skills Strategy

Perhaps the biggest single barrier that prevents young people from rural communities such as mine accessing vocational studies through FE colleges is that they live so far away and travel costs a fortune. For a student living in Appleby, Kirkby Stephen, Coniston or Windermere, it can cost them £1,000 a year to get to K

educationeconomy-jobslabour-market
80
13 Oct 2025Emission Reductions: Progress Report

A major gap in our ability to make progress in reducing emissions is the disconnect—both literally and figuratively—between small renewable energy schemes and the communities in which they are situated. I think in particular of the Coniston hydro scheme, which faces resilience and sustainability issues relating to the

environmentenergyhousing
98
13 Oct 2025Speaker’s Statement

Further to that point of order, Mr Speaker. I wish to add my words of tribute to my friend, Ming Campbell. He had an impact on me long before I met him. The first general election I was active in was 1987. No offence to any other Liberal MP at the time—none of them are present here—but I was very impressed with Ming Ca

mp-performancedefenceculture-community
578
12 Oct 2025Bovine Tuberculosis Control and Badger Culling

One of the reasons for that suspicion is that farmers know that vaccination is not simple. It might be the most effective way of dealing with the disease if it is rolled out properly, but it is logistically challenging and resource intensive. That is why the Liberal Democrats are urging the Government to invest heavily

agricultureenvironmenthealth
717
12 Oct 2025Bovine Tuberculosis Control and Badger Culling

It is, as always, a pleasure to serve under your guidance, Mr Stuart. A massive thank you to the hon. Member for North Ayrshire and Arran (Irene Campbell), who introduced the debate so eloquently, and to the more than 102,000 people who signed the petition, 239 of whom live in Westmorland and Lonsdale. We are a constit

agricultureenvironmenthealth
321
12 Oct 2025Bovine Tuberculosis Control and Badger Culling

Go on: you can make my point for me.

agricultureenvironmenthealth
9
12 Oct 2025Bovine Tuberculosis Control and Badger Culling

I did not give my hon. Friend any warning whatsoever, so I thank him for his eloquence and for immediate springing to his feet on this issue, which he cares about deeply, as do I. Is it not ludicrous to outlaw the culling of badgers for scientific purposes—to try to reduce the spread of a dangerous disease—yet permit i

agricultureenvironmenthealth
535
12 Oct 2025Homelessness

Thanks to the action of the previous Government and councils up and down the country, 90% of rough sleepers were got off the streets at the beginning of the pandemic, five and half years ago. Tragically, since then, most of those people—young and old—have returned to rough sleeping. In constituencies like mine, street

housingsocial-care
101
14 Sept 2025Antisocial Behaviour

In line with the comments made by my hon. Friend the Member for Maidenhead (Mr Reynolds) about how we best tackle antisocial behaviour among young people, does the Minister agree that it is really important that outdoor education is integrated in the Government’s youth strategy? The first draft made no reference to out

crimelocal-government
82
8 Sept 2025 National Trails

My hon. Friend makes a point about the urban settlements that the trails go through. I have three trails in my constituency—the Pennine Way, the Pennine Bridleway and the Coast to Coast Path. They go through beautiful countryside, of course, but places like Orton, Shap and Kirkby Stephen benefit hugely from people walk

environmenteconomy-jobsculture-community
122
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.