The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 721 contributions

Speeches by Stuart.

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

Showing 441460 of 721 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

Is it the hon. Lady’s understanding that the existing regulations on lithium-ion batteries are insufficient? There is a British standard, and there are environmental and disposal regulations. There is a swathe of regulations relating to lithium-ion batteries, but if there is a failure to enforce them, that should not g

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
79
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

rose—

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
1
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

I am grateful to the hon. Lady, but I shall survive. Given the time that she has spent in this House, I am surprised that, like some newer Members, she may have been taken in by the Government’s wording. The Bill gives Ministers such blanket powers. Sure, they can align more with EU regulation, as she desires; equally,

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
120
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

The hon. Gentleman is making a brilliant speech and he has focused on some of the key issues in ways that not every speech has. He makes a powerful case, but why does he think that those arguments have not persuaded, in three different attempts in three different reports, the cross-party Delegated Powers and Regulatory

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
66
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

My hon. Friend is making a powerful speech. Does he, like me, hope that the Liberal Democrats, despite their hobby-horse love of the EU, do not allow the EU flavouring of the Bill to blind them to the frankly illiberal Executive-enhancing, legislature-diminishing aspect of the Bill? If they genuinely aspire to being Hi

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
66
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

It is a pleasure to take part in the debate. We have had excellent speeches from across the House. I think the whole House agreed on the brilliance of the speech made by the hon. Member for Erewash (Adam Thompson), and—perhaps I would say this—great speeches have come from Opposition Members in particular. My hon. Frie

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
457
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

I will press on a little, but I may come back to the hon. Lady. I understand that, following the loveless landslide that brought the Government to power, the Government, and Government Members, have done an about-face. They now delight in more powers for the Executive, so much so that the Bill’s very first subsection g

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
1,266
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

They will not. The Secretary of State—not the current wonderful, benign, insightful and genial Secretary of State, but a future rather less palatable one—could wake up one day and impose new regulations on business that effectively strangle and bring red tape to every business in the land. Remember how close we were in

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
354
31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

Can the hon. Gentleman give a single instance of a Government at any time in the past decade not being able to take action on a seriously risky product? I cannot think of one.

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
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31 Mar 2025 Product Regulation and Metrology Bill [Lords]

And the last.

economy-jobstechnologyfiscal-policy
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30 Mar 2025 Institute for Apprenticeships and Technical Education (Transfer of Functions etc) Bill [Lords]

Can the Minister explain, in answer to the points made by the hon. Member for Stoke-on-Trent Central (Gareth Snell) and others, the rationale behind eliminating level 7 apprenticeships?

educationeconomy-jobslabour-market
28
27 Mar 2025 Scunthorpe Steelworks

It is now clear that domestic virgin steel production is a national security imperative. Acting on it is not acting on a whim. Will the Minister respond to her hon. Friends and to Conservative Members by recognising that domestic virgin steel production is a national security imperative? Whether it is through nationali

economy-jobsdefencelocal-government
87
26 Mar 2025Spring Statement

The Chancellor claimed that growth was her top priority, yet she has taken the fastest-growing economy in the G7 and brought it to a shuddering halt. She promised that there would be no tax rises, but next week’s jobs tax will put tax rises on ordinary working people. Today, she has cut the housing numbers by 200,000 a

economy-jobsdefencehousing
87
25 Mar 2025Special Educational and Disability Needs

Mr Speaker, your heart would have been gladdened last week to see colleagues from across the House coming together to support my debate calling for the Down Syndrome Act 2022 to be implemented three years on. The Minister for Secondary Care said in response that Down syndrome-specific guidance would be produced, which

healtheducationsocial-care
95
19 Mar 2025 Down’s Syndrome

I beg to move, That this House has considered Down’s syndrome. It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Turner. I assume that the Minister responsible for this area of policy is still the Minister for Care, the hon. Member for Aberafan Maesteg (Stephen Kinnock)—the Minister for Secondary Care is nodding. I

healtheducationsocial-care
2,574
19 Mar 2025 Down’s Syndrome

Several colleagues have mentioned the need for specificity—if the Minister is coming on to that, then great. Would it be fair to say that it is the intent of the Government—I am not looking for cast-iron promises, because we know how challenging these things are—that we should see the guidance issued before the end of

healtheducationsocial-care
61
19 Mar 2025 National Insurance Contributions (Secondary Class 1 Contributions) Bill

Will the Minister outline how many billions the Government will spend this year, what percentage £22 billion represents in that amount, and—if I may be so greedy as to ask an additional question, Mr Speaker—how much the flatlining of the economy has cost the Government compared with that £22 billion? I put it to the Mi

fiscal-policyeconomy-jobshealth
80
19 Mar 2025 Down’s Syndrome

We have had 10 speeches in this debate, which is fantastic. I think we all agree that the stand-out speech was that of the hon. Member for Thurrock (Jen Craft). It is great to have the whole House coming together in this way—a number of colleagues focused on that—and to have the pledges from the Minister. I think we ca

healtheducationsocial-care
144
18 Mar 2025Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2025-03-18)

That is a good question—I should be better briefed to know. I do not think they have, unless the hon. Lady thinks they have.

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18 Mar 2025Backbench Business Committee — Oral Evidence (2025-03-18)

Exactly. Anything to do with money, Ministers talk about a spending review and put it off. This is really good opportunity to land it and raise the salience.

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