The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 426 contributions

Speeches by Leigh.

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

Showing 81100 of 426 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 5 of 22Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
12 Jan 2026Call for General Election

“You lot”? Not me, thank you very much. I will not impose a time limit, but Members can see that quite a lot of people want to speak, so I am sure they will be considerate to colleagues and will focus on the petition.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslocal-government
44
12 Jan 2026Finance (No. 2) Bill

Even more important than the point made by the right hon. Member for East Antrim (Sammy Wilson) is the fact that, as I read recently, the average family is paying £12,000 in tax to cover the benefits bill. That is important, because we are taxing entrepreneurial people more, and they will perhaps decide to work a littl

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobscost-of-living
112
12 Jan 2026Private Rent Inflation

We all know that rent inflation, like all inflation, is caused by over-demand and lack of supply, and we can agree on the need to address problems by building more houses and tackling immigration, but does the Minister agree that the more controls and regulations are imposed on landlords, particularly small landlords,

housingcost-of-living
74
12 Jan 2026Call for General Election

Order. I remind colleagues that the focus of this debate is not a general critique of the Government, or indeed a general defence of the Government. The focus of this debate is on whether or not there should be a general election.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslocal-government
42
12 Jan 2026Finance (No. 2) Bill

Will the Minister give way?

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobscost-of-living
5
12 Jan 2026Call for General Election

For a calming speech, I call Peter Prinsley.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslocal-government
8
12 Jan 2026Finance (No. 2) Bill

rose—

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobscost-of-living
1
12 Jan 2026Call for General Election

I remind colleagues that this is a debate about a general election, so we want to keep it focused on that.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslocal-government
21
12 Jan 2026Call for General Election

I thank you for a cerebral speech, which will probably do you no good at all.

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobslocal-government
16
7 Jan 2026 Rural Communities

My right hon. Friend is quite rightly talking about what really matters in the countryside, namely the family farm tax. Does it say much about the priorities of this Government that they think it is really important to waste Parliament’s time by banning people from getting on a horse and chasing after a rag soaked in l

agriculturecost-of-livinglocal-government
58
5 Jan 2026Migrants: Safe and Legal Routes

Of course we are all proud of our historic record in welcoming genuine political refugees who apply in the proper way, but I am sure that the Home Secretary would agree that this humane policy is being entirely negated by illegal boat crossings, which are driving people mad and putting people at risk. Will she do the h

immigrationcrime
114
5 Jan 2026 Venezuela

At the end of the Foreign Secretary’s statement, I am no wiser on whether the Government approve this action, or on whether they believe that it breaks international law. The Prime Minister is such a devotee of international law that he is not prepared to defend our borders from the small boats, and to take the necessa

defenceeconomy-jobsother
107
18 Dec 2025 Ukraine

I agree with the Minister that we have to work on a cross-party basis on this issue, because that is how we are strongest, so can we agree on the following two points? First, it would be intolerable if any peace settlement forced Ukraine to give up territory that Russia has not already conquered forcibly and if Ukraine

defenceeconomy-jobs
143
18 Dec 2025 Community Audiology

The hon. Gentleman is giving an absolutely brilliant speech. It is such a pleasure to hear a Member of Parliament speaking from direct, personal experience. I want to emphasise one important point that might come out of this debate: a lot of people are paying a lot of money for private hearing aids, but I know from per

healthlocal-government
67
18 Dec 2025Business of the House

May I ask the Leader of the House about the restoration and renewal of the Houses of Parliament, which is fast developing into a major scandal? According to some estimates, up to £800 million may already have been spent, with barely a brick being laid. We need an urgent decision. I served for many years on various bodi

local-governmenthealtheconomy-jobs
136
18 Dec 2025 Community Audiology

I congratulate the hon. Member for Uxbridge and South Ruislip (Danny Beales) on moving this timely motion. I declare an interest: I am someone who suffers from hearing loss—it is good to be honest about these things. I recently found a picture of myself in uniform in the pouring rain, looking very miserable in Germany

healthlocal-government
372
18 Dec 2025 Community Audiology

At the risk of giving in to economic reductionism, there is a significant impact on the economy. The Royal National Institute for Deaf People has estimated that untreated hearing loss costs the UK economy around £30 billion per year in lost productivity. Adults of working age with hearing loss have an employment rate o

healthlocal-government
837
18 Dec 2025 Community Audiology

The hon. Gentleman makes a good point that we often hear about national screening programmes. It has just occurred to me that if everybody over the age of 70 was sent a text message through the NHS, summoning them into a screening programme, we could make huge advances in this area, particularly with things such as dem

healthlocal-government
76
18 Dec 2025 Animal Welfare Strategy

We have some of the best animal welfare standards for farm animals in the world. Of course, we can do much by regulation, but the best way to protect farm animals is to have contented and prosperous family farmers who love their animals and care for them. When I arrived in the House, farmers used to talk in glowing ter

agricultureenvironmenthealth
111
17 Dec 2025Northern Ireland Troubles: Legacy and Reconciliation

A lot of very complex legal arguments have been alluded to today, but I think what concerns the public—and what concerns me—is the state of mind of our veterans, some of them quite elderly, who sought only to serve their country decades ago. The Secretary of State is a very moderate, clever and reasonable person. Given

defencesocial-care
88
← PreviousPage 5 of 22 · click a debate to open the transcript with this MP’s speeches highlightedNext →
Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.