The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 482 contributions

Speeches by Badenoch.

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

Showing 261280 of 482 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
30 Jun 2025Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill

I will remind the right hon. Lady of our inheritance. We took difficult—[Interruption.] I will. I have said it before, and I will say it again: we had 8% unemployment, and we got it down to 4%. Every single time Labour leaves office, it leaves more people unemployed. The welfare system needs continual reform. We took d

economy-jobssocial-carehealth
246
30 Jun 2025Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill

I am not surprised that the hon. Gentleman is baffled, because he is clearly not listening to what I am saying. We had three conditions. We have been very, very clear that we want to see the welfare budget come down. I will make some progress. Even with the changes in this Bill, welfare spending will still be higher by

economy-jobssocial-carehealth
82
30 Jun 2025Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill

I will make some progress. Despite the obvious flaws in the Bill, we offered to support benefit changes in the national interest. The hon. Member for Gateshead Central and Whickham (Mark Ferguson) asked a question, and I will answer it very clearly for those who have not been paying attention. We agreed to support the

economy-jobssocial-carehealth
201
30 Jun 2025Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill

I definitely will not agree with the hon. Gentleman. He is talking about relative poverty figures. The fact is that the best way to get people out of poverty is to get them into work—something we did again and again and again. The Bill is more incoherent now than it was at the beginning. It does not do the job at all.

economy-jobssocial-carehealth
360
30 Jun 2025Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill

The fact that the Government have refused to commit to not raising taxes means it is probably inevitable that they will. However, it is quite clear that Labour MPs will feel emboldened to push for more unaffordable changes to our welfare system, including the two-child benefit cap. Let us be clear: part of the reason w

economy-jobssocial-carehealth
148
30 Jun 2025Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill

We would cut unemployment. As I was saying, health and disability benefits are forecast to rise to £100 billion, meaning that one in every four pounds raised in income tax will pay for those benefits. That is not sustainable. Until the pandemic, we in the Conservative party had spent years bringing down the benefits bi

economy-jobssocial-carehealth
145
30 Jun 2025Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill

My right hon. Friend makes an excellent point. I have nothing further to add—he said it as well as it could possibly be said. The whole House agrees that the system needs to change in one way or another, but what we have in front of us today is a big mess; it is neither fish nor fowl. Because of the Government’s hasty

economy-jobssocial-carehealth
468
30 Jun 2025Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill

We are staring down the barrel of a crisis that no serious Government can ignore. The welfare system no longer works as it should, and what was once a safety net has become a trap. A system designed to protect the most vulnerable is now encouraging dependency, and dragging this country into deeper debt. The welfare sys

economy-jobssocial-carehealth
354
25 Jun 2025 G7 and NATO Summits

Labour Members can shout as much as they like, but we all know the truth. We used to be a strategic player on the global stage, advancing Britain’s interests with confidence, and now we are on the sidelines. Over the last few weeks, historic events unfolded in the middle east, and at every stage Britain has been out of

defenceeconomy-jobsimmigration
1,026
25 Jun 2025 G7 and NATO Summits

I thank the Prime Minister for advance sight of his statement. He has evaded Prime Minister’s questions for two weeks, only to come back here to tell us what we already heard on the news. This is a weak statement from a weak Prime Minister, which can be characterised in two words: noises off. In his statement, the Prim

defenceeconomy-jobsimmigration
156
15 Jun 2025Child Sexual Exploitation: Casey Report

I thank the Home Secretary for advance sight of the statement, although when I listened to it, I could not believe my ears. It was as if this was the Government’s plan all along, when we all know it is another U-turn. After months of pressure, the Prime Minister has finally accepted our call for a full, statutory, nati

crimesocial-carelocal-government
387
15 Jun 2025Child Sexual Exploitation: Casey Report

Mr Speaker, they can point and shout as much as they like; they know the truth, just as we on the Conservative Benches do. Three times—[Interruption.] I will repeat myself: Labour MPs voted against the reasoned amendment to the children’s Bill; in Committee, they voted against that Bill; and they voted against the Crim

crimesocial-carelocal-government
1,004
10 Jun 2025Engagements

Every week I come here to tell the Prime Minister the truth. The truth is that the economy is in a spiral because Labour—all of them—put up taxes, which cuts growth. We all heard the Prime Minister. He did not rule out tax rises, so the Government are going to have to put up taxes even more. This is a spiral. If that w

economy-jobsfiscal-policyhealth
98
10 Jun 2025Engagements

Last week, the Prime Minister had to get his lines from the Russian embassy. I think we all know that he is getting worse, and what he does not want to talk about is how he is going to make the economy better. That is what the people out there want to hear, and he has got no answers. His trade deals have unravelled. Wi

economy-jobsfiscal-policyhealth
125
10 Jun 2025Engagements

I get better every week; the Prime Minister gets worse. Last week—[Interruption.]

economy-jobsfiscal-policyhealth
12
10 Jun 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister loves talking about Liz Truss. Why? Because he wants to hide from his own economic record. He is a coward. Every time he stands at the Dispatch Box and talks about Liz Truss, it is because he is scared of talking about his record and what is happening to the economy out there. Let us bring the Prime

economy-jobsfiscal-policyhealth
153
10 Jun 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister knows this has nothing to do with national security; it is his bad negotiating. I have had the security briefings; it was a bad deal before, and it is still a bad deal. In half an hour, the Chancellor is going to stand up and tell us that everything is fine, but the truth is that she has made bad cho

economy-jobsfiscal-policyhealth
163
10 Jun 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister must be talking about a different economy. All of us in this House heard about unemployment increasing—unemployment has increased every month since Labour took office. Last year, the Prime Minister said that he was taking the winter fuel payment away to balance the books, but the books are not balanc

economy-jobsfiscal-policyhealth
88
10 Jun 2025Engagements

Perhaps the Prime Minister knows something I do not, because there is only one hospital in my constituency. Since Labour took office, inflation has nearly doubled, growth has halved and unemployment has surged. Is this what the Prime Minister meant when he tweeted that “The economy is improving”?

economy-jobsfiscal-policyhealth
48
3 Jun 2025Engagements

The Prime Minister clearly has selective amnesia. I asked him three questions about the winter fuel payment two weeks ago and he was floundering. The fact is he has not answered the question I asked him; he cannot tell us who will get the payments. All we see is U-turn after U-turn—his head must be spinning. Will he ap

economy-jobsfiscal-policysocial-care
85
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.