The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 171 contributions

Speeches by Snowden.

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

Showing 81100 of 171 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
28 Oct 2025Stamp Duty Land Tax

The interest rates on the bond market are now higher than they were after that mini-Budget. Constantly harking back to that, when we are in a worse position now than we were then, makes the point that the Lib Dems are on everybody’s and nobody’s side.

housingfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
46
28 Oct 2025Stamp Duty Land Tax

While we are on the subject of paying for things and ownership of land—trying to find the funds to abolish a tax and allow our citizens to purchase their own home—one obvious solution would be to not give away territory that we already own and pay £36 billion over the lifetime of the deal to do so. One way of paying fo

housingfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
95
28 Oct 2025Stamp Duty Land Tax

Will the hon. Member give way?

housingfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
6
28 Oct 2025Stamp Duty Land Tax

That point shows the complexity of the issue. Painting it with “14 years this” and “14 years that” does not represent what is happening. In Fylde, we have seen the largest amount of house building taking place in the villages and small towns, because developers know that they can get planning permission there and sell

housingfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
113
28 Oct 2025Stamp Duty Land Tax

Going back to what a former fantastic, great Prime Minister did—and comparing it with the policy on stamp duty—we know that it was hated by Labour Members, because it took away the choking role of the state and freed people up to have that aspiration and that social mobility. It proved that allowing people to buy their

housingfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
115
22 Oct 2025Future Pandemic Preparedness

During the pandemic, Government agencies, bodies and Departments suddenly discovered ways to comply with GDPR to share significant amounts of data, which was critical to managing the pandemic response. Since then, the shroud of using GDPR as a reason not to share data has once again choked opportunities to solve the bi

healthlocal-governmenttechnology
94
22 Oct 2025 Business of the House

Lancashire county council has started a consultation on the future of adult social care. Critically, it includes a consultation on the future of 10 critical care homes across Lancashire. It says it has not made its mind up about the consultation, yet there is already a timeline for when those care homes would be closed

local-governmenteconomy-jobsagriculture
127
22 Oct 2025Topical Questions

The Minister was earlier asked about the ever-growing size of the civil service and the Cabinet Office under this Government and whether we would see those numbers coming down, not going up, next year. Instead of answering the question about the future, they talked about the past. Let me ask the question again, but fro

technologyeconomy-jobshealth
85
14 Sept 2025Human Rights Act 1998: Immigration

11. What assessment her Department has made of the potential merits of disapplying the Human Rights Act 1998 to immigration matters.

immigrationsocial-care
21
14 Sept 2025Human Rights Act 1998: Immigration

I welcome the Home Secretary to her position. Every new appointment comes with an opportunity to take a fresh look at these matters. Clearly, since the 1950s, when the refugee convention and the European convention on human rights were first written, the world has changed significantly. Successive Governments have twea

immigrationsocial-care
84
10 Sept 2025Topical Questions

T1. If she will make a statement on her departmental responsibilities.

transportlocal-government
11
10 Sept 2025Topical Questions

If my constituents pay £2 for a bus ticket one day, then £3 for a bus ticket the next, their fare has increased by 50%, not gone down, has it not?

transportlocal-government
31
9 Sept 2025 Bus Services (No. 2) Bill [Lords]

Political choices are made locally and nationally. Labour Members talk about the past 14 years, but we Conservatives won control of Lancashire county council in 2017, and increased the bus budget by 50%. We put on bus routes that the Labour party in Lancashire had made the political decision to cut, just as it chose to

transportenvironmentlocal-government
69
8 Sept 2025Infrastructure Strategy: Economic Growth

If the Chancellor is looking for some quick-win infrastructure projects that will unlock economic growth, I recommend taking a look at a passing loop on the South Fylde line, which would better connect trains to employment and education sites through more reliable services. It would also act as a boost for the tourism

economy-jobstransport
107
3 Sept 2025 Business of the House

In December 2021, part of the roof of Kirkham baths was blown off during storm conditions, leaving Kirkham and all the surrounding rural areas without access to public baths. Since the operator was unable to fund the repairs, Fylde council has recently stepped in to purchase the baths for £1 and is embarking on a proje

fiscal-policylocal-governmentmp-performance
142
3 Sept 2025Grooming Gangs

From my time as Lancashire’s police commissioner, I have seen the fruits when the police, the Crown Prosecution Service and the courts worked together to prioritise the listing of cases involving rape and serious sexual assault, as we know that victims and witnesses are less likely to continue with a prosecution the lo

crime
82
3 Sept 2025Grooming Gangs

2. What steps the Crown Prosecution Service is taking to prosecute people for grooming gang offences.

crime
16
1 Sept 2025Speciality Steel UK: Insolvency

This is the second crisis in the steel industry in the past year. It impacts other commercially operated industries that are critical to our national security. In Lancashire, the failure to place an order for 25 Typhoon jets is risking thousands of jobs in the critical defence industry of BAE Systems. There is also a l

economy-jobsenergydefence
132
9 Jul 2025 Resident Doctors: Industrial Action

My wife has a long-term chronic health condition; she has had to have two major lifesaving surgeries, and has had countless stays in hospitals. We have seen the fantastic work that many doctors and consultants do, but we have also seen the impact it has when there are cancellations and delays, or when no doctors are av

healthlabour-marketeconomy-jobs
145
8 Jul 2025Trial by Jury: Proposed Restrictions

Here we go again. Labour always talks tough on crime and always goes soft. The Minister talked about David Gauke as one of our own, as if that was some defence—I assure her that I probably have more in common with her than I do with David Gauke. That is not a good way to show off credentials on being tough on crime. I

crimefiscal-policy
158
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.