The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,213 contributions

Speeches by Jones.

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

Showing 1,0811,100 of 1,213 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

The hon. Gentleman will know that this Government’s approach to stimulating growth in the economy is about stability, investment and reform—the political and economic stability the Chancellor has brought to this country; the investment from private sector partners, as well as from the state, where appropriate; and the

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133
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Our industrial strategy, through which we will invest alongside businesses and industries of the future, and our infrastructure strategy, which sets out how we will get Britain building again, are two examples of the Government playing their part by bringing economic and political st

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78
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

The question was whether the Government have an iron grip on public finances; the answer is yes.

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9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

That is exactly why our fiscal rules are non-negotiable. While the Conservatives borrowed to pay the bills every month because they did not have enough money to pay for all their promises, this Government are investing in the future of our country, whether through reforming public services or investing in infrastructur

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78
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I think the question was whether I was going to demand that the Chancellor come back from her trade trip to China. I will not, no.

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26
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

My hon. Friend asks an important question. Why did we have to take that action? Why was this Government’s first Bill about fiscal responsibility? It was because of the mess that Conservative Members left this country in. That is why we have given the Office for Budget Responsibility stronger, independent powers of over

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9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I am always grateful to the hon. Gentleman for thinking that I am making such substantive interventions, and for his continued support in that respect. This is not austerity, as he will know full well. Austerity was ideological cuts to public financing and the size of the state. It was 3% cuts, irrespective of what tha

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98
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Let me set out the difference that the British people will experience. At the end of 14 years of Conservative Government, they had higher mortgages, higher bills, a higher cost of living and public services on their knees. At the end of this Labour Government, pointing towards the ne

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96
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

As I said, the fiscal rules are non-negotiable. The only reliable sources on future financing will be the OBR forecast on 26 March, the conclusion of the spending review in June, and the Budget, which the Chancellor will present in the autumn. The hon. Gentleman mentioned austerity, but I remind him that this Labour Go

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74
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I very much agree. That is why fiscal stability and economic responsibility are at the heart of this Labour Government and the Chancellor’s agenda. Members on the Opposition Benches may want to pay attention to that.

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36
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

At the autumn Budget, the Chancellor invested in frontline public services, because we recognise that people rely on them, but also because functioning public services are an important route to growth in the economy. If people are sick and cannot get to work, they need to be able to see a doctor in a timely fashion, so

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88
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

My hon. Friend is right. May I offer some probably unwelcome advice to Opposition Members? The sooner they stop groaning and stop laughing about their performance when they were last in government, and the sooner they apologise for it, the sooner the British people might start listening to them again.

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50
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I must say I am rather surprised by the inflammatory language of the former Chair of the Treasury Committee, which is clearly no reflection of reality. The Chancellor is going on her trip to China. It has been well documented for many weeks, and it is an important visit for trade and investment in the UK economy. May I

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109
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I thank the Chair of the Science, Innovation and Technology Committee for her question. She will know that our first commitment in the Labour party manifesto at the last election was to fiscal responsibility. It is the bedrock of this Government and the bedrock of every decision we take. As the Prime Minister set out i

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92
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I have been clear to the House, as has the Chancellor, that the fiscal rules are non-negotiable. Public services will have to live within their means. We set the Budget in the autumn last year, and we have the OBR forecasts coming in March. Those are the numbers that Departments are working to in the spending review, a

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77
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I very much agree with my hon. Friend. We have to pay day-to-day bills with the income we generate day to day. The lesson that we learned from the Opposition was about what they were happy to do, but this Government are not. They were happy to announce plans and programmes to make promises to the British people, even t

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80
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I can absolutely assure the Father of the House that we are working through this spending review on the basis of the envelope set at the Budget. Public services will have to operate within the means that we are providing to them. The OBR forecast will come in March, which will give us the latest set of information, and

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134
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

My hon. Friend knows very well that this Government’s approach has been about stability, investment and reform: the stability we have brought following the chaos of the years under the Conservative party, as has been recognised by the British people and by the markets; the investment we have been unlocking, from our gl

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125
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I thank the hon. Member for his question. He will note from the Prime Minister’s plan for change that the NHS is the subject of one of this Government’s key commitments, with commitments to get the elective waiting list down and to invest in the national health service so that we can do so. He will have heard that from

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159
9 Jan 2025 Public Finances: Borrowing Costs

I thank the Chair of the Select Committee for her question. As the House knows, we have started the second phase of the spending review, to set public sector budgets from 2026-27 onwards. The Chancellor confirmed in a written ministerial statement before the House rose for Christmas that there will be a forecast from t

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