The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 677 contributions

Speeches by Lamont.

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

Showing 221240 of 677 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
16 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 463)

There have been a few examples of where communication has not been so good when you have been in charge. I am thinking about the Budget, the speech from the Chancellor and the briefing, and then the U-turns when the Budget came. Then you had the briefing against the Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, the night before he

79
16 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 463)

Since your appointment, have you made as much progress as you would have liked in those areas?

17
16 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 463)

You have mentioned a few times the need to improve communications, and that is one of your responsibilities. Can you give some examples of where you have made a clear difference to Government communication?

34
16 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 463)

Good afternoon, Minister. Is the centre of Government operating effectively?

10
16 Dec 2025 Finance (No. 2) Bill

My hon. Friend is making an excellent speech. Is he aware of some research done by the National Farmers’ Union of Scotland, which shows that, under the current inheritance tax rules, farmers in Scotland typically pay a £20,000 inheritance tax bill, whereas under Labour’s current proposals the figure goes up to a stagge

economy-jobscost-of-livingenvironment
61
16 Dec 2025 Finance (No. 2) Bill

There are hundreds, if not thousands, of farmers in Parliament Square this afternoon, blasting their horns about the family farm tax. The shadow Chancellor and many other colleagues from the Opposition Benches have been out to meet the farmers to understand their concerns. Has he heard, like I have, their frustration a

economy-jobscost-of-livingenvironment
71
9 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1488)

The EIC, as I understand it, has a much more formal role in terms of co-ordinating all these different bodies. Is that not a step in the right direction?

29
9 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1488)

Good morning. My question relates to the Ethics and Integrity Commission; as you will know, the current Government made a commitment prior to the last election to set this up and replace the Committee on Standards in Public Life. What is your view on that change?

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9 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1488)

I mean in any respect.

5
9 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1488)

That is helpful, thank you. The Government have said they have a commitment to, “Restore confidence in Government and ensure Ministers are held to the highest standards.” We have touched on this already, but what further reforms or changes do you think might be put in place to achieve that?

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9 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1488)

Yes.

1
9 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1488)

If you fast forward the clock five or 10 years and look at the EIC, how would you measure success or failure?

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9 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1488)

What role do you think the EIC should have in terms of making appointments to the House of Lords?

19
9 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1488)

In terms of the office that you hold, how do you envisage that relationship with EIC? Is it clear, or does it need to be refined a little?

28
9 Dec 2025Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1488)

You mentioned that there are a lot of different bodies that operate within this space just now. Some are part of the EIC structure, and others are outside of it. Are there any bodies not currently in the formal structure that you think should be being brought into it?

49
9 Dec 2025 Network Rail Timetable Changes: Rural Communities

The hon. Lady makes a good point. Talk of social mobility often focuses on urban and city areas, but those of us who represent rural constituencies know that social mobility is a big problem. Arguably it is even greater in our areas because, as the hon. Lady highlighted, if the bus or train does not turn up, it is not

transportlocal-government
185
9 Dec 2025Grooming Gangs: Independent Inquiry

The Scottish Government have announced a review of the grooming gangs evidence in Scotland, but that falls short of a full inquiry and disappoints many of the victims. I have asked for this before. Please will this UK Government extend their inquiry to the whole of the UK so that the victims of these appalling crimes g

crimelocal-governmentsocial-care
74
9 Dec 2025 Network Rail Timetable Changes: Rural Communities

I beg to move, That this House has considered the impact of Network Rail timetable changes on rural communities. It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Mr Stuart. This year marks the 200th anniversary of the first passenger railway services in our country. Railways have transformed transport and trade, connec

transportlocal-government
403
9 Dec 2025 Network Rail Timetable Changes: Rural Communities

I am grateful to all hon. Members for their contributions this afternoon. We have demonstrated the importance of rail services to the rural communities that we collectively represent. I am grateful to the Minister for his response. I have two points of concern. We again heard from the Minister about the importance of t

transportlocal-government
343
9 Dec 2025 Network Rail Timetable Changes: Rural Communities

The hon. Gentleman makes another excellent point. The argument put forward by Network Rail and LNER is that there will be alternative services, but it involves connecting to other trains. As I will go on to describe, if someone is disabled or an older person, the idea of making a connection is in itself sometimes daunt

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