The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,065 contributions

Speeches by Carns.

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

Showing 841860 of 1,065 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
11 Nov 2025 Remembrance Day: Armed Forces

The cadets play such an important part, with the sea cadets right at the forefront. Seeing Joshua thriving in that environment is absolutely superb, and hearing of Martin Rowley excelling after being in service is hugely admirable—I thank him in particular for his service. As we remember the generations who have sacrif

defenceculture-community
109
11 Nov 2025 Remembrance Day: Armed Forces

I thank the hon. Lady for such a moving contribution. May I say, in jest, that she has a very good choice of best friends? I know that her best friend’s memory will live long into the future, and it is a delight to hear that her son took part in that commemoration. Importantly, we must look after bereaved children. If

defenceculture-community
495
11 Nov 2025 Remembrance Day: Armed Forces

I thank my hon. Friend for his poignant contribution, and I thank those in Newcastle-under-Lyme for ensuring that awareness about the sacrifice is spread not just across the adult population, but across the youth of today. I always say that navies, armies and air forces do not win wars, but industries, economies and so

defenceculture-community
66
3 Nov 2025Drone Procurement

The irony! The Conservatives started the deal and they processed the deal. When Labour came into government, we finished it and we put it into place, supported by our allies—both the US and multiple others. Not only did we finish that deal, but we have started and finished an India deal, a US deal, a Europe deal, a Typ

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
67
3 Nov 2025Drone Procurement

The uncrewed centre of excellence is trying to pull all of Government together to make the system easier to deal with for small and medium-sized enterprises. I pay tribute to Ukrspecsystems, which has been providing drones to Ukraine for the past three years. They have been used to very high effect in that country.

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
54
3 Nov 2025Drone Procurement

The very reason that I left the military was because the lessons from Ukraine, particularly around uncrewed systems, were not being learned within our military. The drone architecture was exceptionally limited, despite our watching a revolution in the character of conflict for about two years. Since then, the strategic

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
80
3 Nov 2025Drone Procurement

I have been reassured that the Minister for Defence Readiness and Industry will visit the hon. Gentleman’s constituency to have a look at the factory. From my perspective, we have increased our production of drones for Ukraine—up to 100,000 this year alone—and we are increasing the procurement of drones into the Britis

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
55
3 Nov 2025Drone Procurement

It is not lost on anyone in the House that the first 100 pages of the strategic defence review are all about industry, about ensuring that SMEs can dock into the defence enterprise far more effectively, and about ensuring that we start procuring weapons and systems—and not only for our defence, but for our overseas par

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
92
3 Nov 2025Drone Procurement

I recall that a quadcopter landed on the deck of HMS Queen Elizabeth when she set sail several years ago, and since then investment in taking out uncrewed air systems has been relatively limited. However, in the strategic defence review we have pledged £1 billion to integrated air defence here in the UK, and my hon. Fr

defenceeconomy-jobstechnology
68
3 Nov 2025Low-flying Military Aircraft

The UK and its allies must be ready to deal with the most demanding of circumstances, deterring and preventing a full-scale war by being combat-ready. I can assure the hon. Member that low-flying training plays an indispensable role in achieving and maintaining our war fighting capability, and that it is spread through

defenceenvironmentlocal-government
64
3 Nov 2025Low-flying Military Aircraft

I can assure the hon. Member that those increased training missions are to support an increased deployment across Europe, highlighting the issues, but I will meet the Minister to talk through those issues and see if we can make some slight changes.

defenceenvironmentlocal-government
42
3 Nov 2025Topical Questions

The scale of the problem is truly gigantic. We have re-bought 36,000 homes. Nine out of every 10 homes will be refurbished and 14,000 homes might be completely rebuilt. We have already started on the first 1,000 that need modernising, and once that is done we will move on to the next.

defenceeconomy-jobshousing
52
9 Sept 2025 Russian Drones: Violation of Polish Airspace

We support the ability to get resources into Ukraine in any way, shape or form. I will raise that specific matter with the Home Office and our cross-Government colleagues and get back to the hon. Gentleman on the answer.

defenceeconomy-jobs
39
9 Sept 2025 Russian Drones: Violation of Polish Airspace

First, we are fully in support of our NATO allies and, of course, our Baltic allies. The last time article 4 was invoked was 2022, when it was invoked by many of our Baltic allies on the invasion of Ukraine. It has been invoked eight times, with the most recent instance, obviously, being this morning. I am not going to

defenceeconomy-jobs
135
9 Sept 2025 Russian Drones: Violation of Polish Airspace

The United States is one of our most critical allies, and when the President of the United States visits the UK there will be a multitude of discussions, particularly focused on Ukraine, European security and, of course, NATO.

defenceeconomy-jobs
38
9 Sept 2025 Russian Drones: Violation of Polish Airspace

Putin’s actions pull NATO together and forge alliances and partnerships, and they focus us in on the barbaric nature of Russia’s aggression. I have worked with the Polish in the past, and we have a great relationship with them. They are increasing defence spending, and there are industrial opportunities there. We also

defenceeconomy-jobs
88
9 Sept 2025 Russian Drones: Violation of Polish Airspace

In 24 years in the military, I have never seen it as fractious or fragile as it is, particularly today. It is on all of us to make sure that the population understands the risk to the geopolitical environment that surrounds us and gives us the standard of living we have in the UK. We are working towards a bilateral def

defenceeconomy-jobs
74
9 Sept 2025 Russian Drones: Violation of Polish Airspace

The hon. Member raises a really important point. One of the biggest impacts on the cost of living across this country is the war between Ukraine and Russia—it is having a second and third-order effect that is affecting everyone in the country. It is really worthwhile reminding our citizens of that, and that if article

defenceeconomy-jobs
84
9 Sept 2025 Russian Drones: Violation of Polish Airspace

We will absolutely do that. It is worth noting that articles 4 and 5 are not linked; nevertheless, we will be going all out to remind all our allies and partners of the severity of the situation and, of course, the continuing barbaric nature of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

defenceeconomy-jobs
49
9 Sept 2025 Russian Drones: Violation of Polish Airspace

The intelligence agencies will be able to provide the best analysis of this attack, so I will not jump to conclusions on the intentions behind it. It has, however, been clear for several years now that there has been consistent testing of NATO as a whole, whether that is 20,000 cyber-attacks from hostile states in the

defenceeconomy-jobs
126
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.