The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 359 contributions

Speeches by Gordon.

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

Showing 201220 of 359 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
15 May 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I start by thanking the hon. Member for Spen Valley (Kim Leadbeater) for introducing the Bill and for giving me the opportunity to serve on the Bill Committee. I rise to speak in favour of my amendment 4, which goes to the very heart of what the Bill is all about: dignity, compassion and choice at the end of life.

healthsocial-care
60
15 May 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I thank my hon. Friend for that powerful and compelling intervention. We risk creating a two-tier system. We say that we want to fix the status quo because we know that it is not working, but if the Bill forces people such as my constituent’s brother to consider dying earlier—or worse, to have to travel abroad for an a

healthsocial-care
217
15 May 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I will make a little progress, as I was in the middle of a quotation. It continues: “Unless you are actually affected by something as desperate as MND, you cannot understand what it really means to have such an option.” My constituent is right. We can debate legal safeguards, ethics and precedents all day in this Chamb

healthsocial-care
80
15 May 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I will make progress. Let me speak to the reality of my amendment with a story from a constituent who does not wish to be named. She wrote to me about her brother, who died at age 58 from MND. Prior to his diagnosis, he was strong, healthy and, as she put it, a lot of fun. He was a great family man, but it was dreadful

healthsocial-care
140
15 May 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I am bringing my remarks to a close. If we believe in dignity, let us ensure it is a dignity that includes everyone; if we believe in autonomy, let us not deny it to those who may lose their voice tomorrow; and if we believe in compassion, let it be a compassion that recognises the lived reality of all terminal illness

healthsocial-care
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15 May 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I thank my hon. Friend for his intervention. The amendment is designed to stop our having a conversation about eligibility after this Bill. I want to see a Bill that stops the argument about a slippery slope and gives equitable access to people with all health conditions.

healthsocial-care
47
15 May 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

The right hon. Member makes a pertinent point about other jurisdictions and the different Bills and conversations around them that they have. I tabled my amendment in order to ensure that we have that debate in this place. I extend my condolences to the family. These are progressive, irreversible diseases; their trajec

healthsocial-care
154
15 May 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I thank my hon. Friend for her intervention. It was really interesting how the debate was conducted on Second Reading and in Committee, and how we were meant to be having that respectful debate, and it is disappointing to hear comments from opponents already. Amendment 4 seeks a simple yet crucial change to extend the

healthsocial-care
156
15 May 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I will make a little progress. We have gone further than any other jurisdiction in terms of safeguards. Why, then, if we are satisfied that our safeguards are robust, are we excluding those with neurodegenerative diseases—people who are terminally ill—on the basis of an arbitrary timeframe? We say that the Bill is abou

healthsocial-care
113
15 May 2025Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

I will make some progress. The amendment is not about eroding the careful work that the Bill Committee has done to expand the rigorous safeguards already in the Bill; it is about ensuring that some people with the cruellest terminal conditions are not left out of the options that we are seeking to give others.

healthsocial-care
55
14 May 2025Accountability for Daesh Crimes

The Government could do more to look at, collate and document that information, so that we have something that we can refer back to for similar situations that may, sadly, occur in the future. The evidence sessions were carried out in the last Parliament, before my election, but I have read some of the transcripts, and

crimedefence
108
14 May 2025 Business of the House

A number of weeks ago, I mentioned the inaugural Harrogate town council elections. Will the Leader of the House join me in congratulating all those who were elected? May we have a debate in Government time on local government reorganisation? Harrogate borough council used to receive 0.5% of profits from Harrogate Sprin

educationeconomy-jobshealth
97
14 May 2025Solar Farms

I have a solar development in my constituency, and there are proposals for a battery storage solution. The hon. Gentleman mentions safety. I am hoping to address that through an amendment to the Planning and Infrastructure Bill that would require relevant fire authorities to be statutory consultees. Would he support th

energyagricultureenvironment
51
14 May 2025Accountability for Daesh Crimes

I thank my hon. Friend for that important question. Throughout our discussion, our deliberations and the formulation of the report, the Committee talked extensively about that. A number of issues pertain to the rights of a child, and one of the key structural points of the report is the deprivation of citizenship. We t

crimedefence
101
14 May 2025Accountability for Daesh Crimes

It is an honour to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Jardine, and a privilege to speak on this important statement on the Joint Committee on Human Rights report “Accountability for Daesh crimes”. The report represents the shared conclusions of a cross-party group of parliamentarians from both Houses, a rare show of una

crimedefence
1,094
13 May 2025 Infected Blood Inquiry: Government Response

A constituent of mine infected with hepatitis C and under the special category mechanism has written to express their distress that earlier this year supplementary regulations removed the provisions, which they had previously been promised, to bring their compensation in line with those with cirrhosis. The group were a

healthsocial-care
107
11 May 2025British Nationals Murdered Abroad: Support for Families

I congratulate my hon. Friend on securing this important debate. He eloquently outlined the steps that would ensure that people who suffer bereavement abroad receive justice. Does he agree that as well as having a framework for going forward, we also need the Foreign Office to look retrospectively at historical cases t

crimesocial-care
64
11 May 2025British Nationals Murdered Abroad: Support for Families

I have been helping a constituent whose relative was murdered abroad over 10 years ago, and it is still an ongoing issue. My constituent tells me that the responses from the FCDO have not always been prompt or clear, that there has not always been a named point of contact and that, sadly, in some instances there have b

crimesocial-care
115
7 May 2025Climate Resilience Plans

11. If he will publish updated climate resilience plans.

environmentenergy
9
7 May 2025Climate Resilience Plans

With the effects of climate change already being felt, the Institution of Civil Engineers and others have urged the Government to prioritise infrastructure resilience. Following the Court ruling on the third national adaptation programme, the Government pledged to strengthen the approach, but the Climate Change Committ

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