The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 852 contributions

Speeches by Francois.

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

Showing 681700 of 852 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

The relationship between the Armed Forces Commissioner and veterans cropped up several times in Committee, and I commend new clause 2, on this subject, to the hon. and learned Gentleman. He will know that the former Northern Ireland veterans commissioner recently resigned in part because he had concerns about the const

defence
76
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

I wish the new veterans commissioner in Northern Ireland all the best, but suffice it to say that he has a hard act to follow. In conclusion, we hope that we have been a critical friend to the Bill. We have pressed the Government on death-in-service benefits, and on the continuity of education allowance and its implica

defence
90
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

I will not read them out, but the point, in terms of retention, is that this is not just an officer’s benefit. It is a very important benefit for senior non-commissioned officers. If the costs become unsustainable, there is a risk that they will leave the armed forces, and that someone whom it may have cost the Crown o

defence
73
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

I thank the hon. Gentleman for his intervention. As we are on Report, we are trying to amend the Bill where we think it could be improved. Just because we have the Bill as originally produced on First Reading does not mean that it cannot be improved. If I may humbly say so, that is what Report is about. This subject is

defence
1,083
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

Just a second—I am just going to reply to this one. Forgive me, but if my remarks were not in order, we would have been told so by now. Maybe one day, after many years of distinguished service, the hon. Member for Leyton and Wanstead (Mr Bailey) will become a Deputy Speaker of this House, but not today. I will continue

defence
153
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

Thank you, Madam Deputy Speaker.

defence
5
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

In a moment. Indeed, the Forces Pension Society response to the consultation, which I have here, calls on the Government to do just that. However, having given the Minister what I believe was fair notice in Committee, I raised the topic again with him at the last Defence questions on 6 January—although, in fairness, th

defence
91
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

When I have finished this point, yes. The Forces Pension Society points out that the system is recoverable because the changes are subject to a consultation and are not currently due to come in until April 2027. Nevertheless, this is still a potentially worrying situation, especially for armed forces families in which

defence
208
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

First, that is a matter for the Chair. Secondly, I presume that, if the amendment were not in order, it would not have been selected. This is not Treasury questions, so I do not propose to reprise the whole debate about the winter fuel allowance; I will save hon. Members from that agony. Nevertheless, I hope the Minist

defence
253
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

In a moment—please do not interrupt the Royal British Legion. It says: “The Government needs to understand the impact of their policy on veterans in order to better support those affected.”

defence
31
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

On Second Reading, we began by announcing that, with regard to the Bill, our aim was to be a critical friend, and that remains our aim today, although I feel that, at one point, we may become very critical. May I begin, however, in a bipartisan spirit by pointing out that, even though we are here today to debate the ex

defence
824
21 Jan 2025Armed Forces Commissioner Bill

For the record, I am the shadow Veterans Minister. I am the shadow Armed Forces Minister and I do a bit of procurement on the side as well. We do take veterans very seriously on the Conservative Benches, but, as I will say later on, if I am lucky enough to catch your eye, Madam Deputy Speaker, I am not sure the Governm

defence
64
17 Jan 2025 Green Belt: Basildon and Billericay

I am grateful to my parliamentary neighbour for giving way. One of the most worrying things about Labour-run Basildon council’s new local plan is that 17,000 of the 27,000 proposed dwellings—just shy of two thirds of the total—are intended to be built in the green belt. Surely that is environmental and ecological vanda

housingenvironmentlocal-government
53
17 Jan 2025 Green Belt: Basildon and Billericay

I understand the principle, but I have read the local plan. There is not one specific word in there about plans to expand Basildon. There is an associated infrastructure delivery plan, which is a living document; it is three years out of date, and there is no specific plan in there for Basildon. I understand the theory

housingenvironmentlocal-government
73
17 Jan 2025 Green Belt: Basildon and Billericay

Mid and South Essex hospitals trust, which runs Basildon hospital, reported that in the autumn, the hospital was running at between 98% and 99% of its bed capacity. In recent weeks, because of winter pressures and flu, bed capacity has exceeded 100%. The standard NHS ratio is 2.4 new patients for each house, so 27,000

housingenvironmentlocal-government
91
15 Jan 2025 Women’s Changed State Pension Age: Compensation

I can confirm that my right hon. Friend has campaigned on this issue for a number of years, and not just today. He will know that in July 2022, the Prime Minister—then the Leader of the Opposition—responded to Carol, a WASPI woman who rang BBC Merseyside to raise this issue. The Prime Minister said: “It’s a real injust

fiscal-policysocial-carecost-of-living
77
15 Jan 2025 Local Government Reorganisation

Despite what senior county councillors are telling Ministers, there is absolutely no clamour in Essex for devolution—quite the reverse. Nor do the public support the Government’s proposal to cancel the local elections; that is anti-democratic. If the Government do press ahead, why do we not take the opportunity to have

local-governmenteconomy-jobsfiscal-policy
95
6 Jan 2025General Election

As Hansard will show, no one said that we would not have given public sector workers a pay rise. No one on these Benches uttered those words, but the £9 billion that Labour awarded was part of that supposed £22 billion figure. Does the hon. Gentleman contest that?

economy-jobscost-of-livingmp-performance
48
6 Jan 2025General Election

I am completely opposed to increasing VAT on school fees, but at least Labour did put that in its manifesto. Have my right hon. Friend’s constituents told him, as mine have told me, that one of the reasons they are so angry about the decision on winter fuel allowance is that it was not in the manifesto, they were not t

economy-jobscost-of-livingmp-performance
78
6 Jan 2025General Election

Happy new year to you, Mrs Harris, and to everyone else at this important debate, which was ably introduced by the hon. Member for Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross (Jamie Stone), the Chairman of the Petitions Committee. It is an extraordinary thing that we are debating a petition calling for a general election, ba

economy-jobscost-of-livingmp-performance
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.