Speeches by Hayes.
Every Hansard contribution by John Hayes this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.
Showing 661–666 of 666 contributions · most-recent first
| Date | Debate & contribution | Words |
|---|---|---|
| 24 Jul 2024 | Criminal Law “I welcome you to the Chair, Madam Deputy Speaker. I have only three brief points to make. First, we need an honest debate in this place about the purpose of prison. It is true that prison exists to protect those who otherwise might suffer harm—we incarcerate people because they are dangerous—but prison also matters for…” crime | 719 |
| 24 Jul 2024 | Business of the House “I welcome the Leader of the House to her place, and may I say initially that I am sure she is a very good mum, actually? When the Government abandoned the plan to process illegal migrants offshore, they offered no real practical alternative, as my right hon. Friend the shadow Leader of the House has said. I know that m…” fiscal-policyimmigrationhealth | 140 |
| 22 Jul 2024 | Immigration and Home Affairs “It is a great pleasure to serve in the Chamber with you in the Chair, Mr Deputy Speaker. I wish the new Government Front-Bench team well. They know that I have high regard for many of them, including the hon. Member for Wallasey (Dame Angela Eagle) and the right hon. Member for Kingston upon Hull North and Cottingham (…” crimeimmigrationdefence | 364 |
| 22 Jul 2024 | Immigration and Home Affairs “I imagine you will not allow me to talk about the fall from the state of grace and the character of sin, Mr Deputy Speaker, but let me say briefly to the hon. Lady that human beings are capable of the greatest wickedness and the greatest good. When they choose to do good, they can do immensely joyful things. I hope tha…” crimeimmigrationdefence | 642 |
| 22 Jul 2024 | Immigration and Home Affairs “Community sentences can play a part, that is true, but my hon. Friend will recall that the problem I described earlier of misunderstanding crime as an illness to be treated has its roots in thinking that stretches right back to the 1960s. You will perhaps know, Mr Deputy Speaker, that the Children and Young Persons Act…” crimeimmigrationdefence | 452 |
| 16 Jul 2024 | Debate on the Address “I would not normally intervene having just entered the House, but knowing that my friend, the hon. Member for Salford (Rebecca Long Bailey), was speaking, I felt I ought to come and hear her, and particularly to support the remark she has just made about those women so badly affected in the way that she has described. …” economy-jobshousinghealth | 117 |