The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,526 contributions

Speeches by Cooper.

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

Showing 221240 of 1,526 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
20 Jan 2026Gaza and the West Bank: Humanitarian Situation

Let us be clear that nothing can replace the UN or its charter. The UN is the bedrock of multilateral co-operation and international law. I met the Secretary-General this weekend, while marking its 80th anniversary, to reaffirm our support for the UN and its work. On the humanitarian issue, over 3,000 people have been

defenceculture-community
126
20 Jan 2026Topical Questions

I thank my right hon. Friend for raising this issue, because the continuing humanitarian crisis and horrendous violence in Sudan are deeply troubling, and I worry that they are not getting sufficient international attention. This weekend, I discussed extensively with the UN Secretary-General what further action can be

defenceimmigrationother
90
20 Jan 2026Gaza and the West Bank: Humanitarian Situation

That was a slightly contorted question, but the right hon. Member will know that the board of peace proposal was originally in the 20-point Gaza plan. The proposals that have now been put forward are very different from what was previously expected for Gaza, so it is right that further international discussions are und

defenceculture-community
125
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

I welcome my hon. Friend’s point. That is exactly why the Minister for Europe, my hon. Friend the Member for Cardiff South and Penarth (Stephen Doughty), has been in touch with Greenland’s Foreign Minister, and why I had many discussions today with the Danish Foreign Minister about our support for the sovereignty of th

defenceeconomy-jobsother
76
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

My hon. Friend is right to raise the broader issue of critical minerals. Many of the issues relating to Greenland are long-term issues, as opposed to immediate critical mineral issues, but there is a wider need to ensure that we have security around our critical mineral supply chains, and to work with other countries t

defenceeconomy-jobsother
98
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

The biggest threat to Arctic security comes from Russia, and the hon. Member would have a lot more credibility in talking about any of these Arctic security issues if he and his new party looked inward at themselves and carried out the long-needed investigation of Russian influence in that party.

defenceeconomy-jobsother
50
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

My hon. Friend is right to point out that the issues in the High North are about the Russian threats. That has long been the case, but we have seen those threats grow. There was a time at the ending of the cold war when, I think, everyone was optimistic that this might fundamentally change. Sadly, many years on, that h

defenceeconomy-jobsother
114
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

I can tell the hon. Gentleman that we take all issues involving critical national infrastructure immensely seriously. There are areas—for example, our security and intelligence Five Eyes partnership—where our technology partnerships go back many generations. I remember my first Five Eyes meetings in the United States t

defenceeconomy-jobsother
87
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

I agree with the right hon. Member about the impact that threats can have, and the instability that they can cause. Stability and respect in relationships is a crucial underpinning of the economy.

defenceeconomy-jobsother
33
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

The Prime Minister has already discussed this issue with President Trump and made clear our position, and we are working through diplomacy and continued different avenues to stress the importance of respecting sovereignty, collective security, and the fact that tariffs benefit no one and are completely wrong in this si

defenceeconomy-jobsother
50
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

I thank the hon. Member for his support for the coalition of the willing. He will know that the UK and France set out a declaration of intent, and further work is under way on the security guarantees. I caution him against drawing an equivalence between the US and Russia, which I hope he did not mean to do, because it

defenceeconomy-jobsother
90
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

My hon. Friend is exactly right that there are principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity, underpinned by the UN charter, but also by the rules underpinning so many of our alliances, including the NATO alliance. At the heart of this is the very simple principle that the future of Greenland is for the Greenland

defenceeconomy-jobsother
58
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

Let me be really clear with the hon. Member: our Five Eyes intelligence and security partnership is vital and keeps us safe. It keeps us safe every single day of the week and every single day of the year, and that is vital. It is particularly close with the United States, but it is also with Canada, Australia and New Z

defenceeconomy-jobsother
73
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

I thank my hon. Friend for his question. Increasing our presence in the north of Norway—increasing the number of marines from 1,000 to 2,000 over three years—helps support the joint expeditionary force. It is also a crucial part of our co-operation across not just the Arctic, but the Baltic, and that work was welcomed

defenceeconomy-jobsother
64
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

In NATO, we have a long-standing alliance—a long-standing partnership—not just with the US, but with western Europe, and we continue to discuss with the US the issues affecting peace around the world. I would give the hon. Member the example of Sudan, which I do not think has had the level of international attention it

defenceeconomy-jobsother
93
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

We have always been clear that a trade war between any nation—certainly between the US and European countries—is deeply damaging and not in anyone’s interest. That is why our first priority right now should be to stop this happening and stop the tariffs, and to build a shared sense of security.

defenceeconomy-jobsother
51
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

My hon. Friend is right to welcome the £10 billion contract. That will support thousands of jobs in his constituency and across the UK. It is driven not just by the strength of our defence industry, but crucially, by the strength of our joint co-operation with Norway and the shared operations we will be able to take fo

defenceeconomy-jobsother
60
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

I welcome my hon. Friend’s framing of this around the interests of our young people and the values of shared co-operation. It is co-operation with allies that makes us stronger.

defenceeconomy-jobsother
30
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

I know the hon. and learned Gentleman’s views, but the Windsor framework was about sustaining the Good Friday agreement, which was a shared agreement underpinned by principles and peace.

defenceeconomy-jobsother
29
19 Jan 2026 Arctic Security

At all stages, we have discussions and co-ordination with our allies, but the Prime Minister made it clear this morning that our focus has to be on preventing a trade war and additional tariffs being introduced, and on building a constructive approach to our shared security.

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