BB
647 MPs·389 Bills·£2.9T

April 2026

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Events for Tuesday, 28 April 2026(21249 total)

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Darren JonesspeechLabour
Referral of Prime Minister to Committee of Privileges
I will finish this section, then I will come to the right hon. Lady. Sir Philip Barton told the Foreign Affairs Committee this morning that “during my tenure, I was not aware of any pressure on the substance of the Mandelson DV case.”
Tue 28 Apr
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Darren JonesspeechLabour
Referral of Prime Minister to Committee of Privileges
That is an important question, because it goes to the very heart of the motion before the House today. [Hon. Members: “Answer it!”] I am going to—rest your horses. It is important to place the Prime Minister’s words in the right context. When the Prime Minister—[Hon. Members: “Ah!”] The Opposition do not want to listen to the answer—again, they do not like the facts—but I am going to try my best. They should pay attention. To answer the right hon. Lady’s question directly, when the Prime Ministe
Tue 28 Apr
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Darren JonesspeechLabour
Referral of Prime Minister to Committee of Privileges
These investigations cannot be done every week off the back of PMQs on an interpretation of the wording of the Prime Minister. Instead, they must be done on very significant cases that warrant the work of the Privileges Committee. That is why it is important to contrast the allegations and accusations of the Opposition parties, as many Members of the House have done today, with the seriousness of the situation when Boris Johnson was referred to the Privileges Committee in the last Parliament. Th
Tue 28 Apr
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Darren JonesspeechLabour
Referral of Prime Minister to Committee of Privileges
I notice that the right hon. Member has nothing to say to those kids, to those patients waiting in the NHS, or to the line of other people waiting for his Government to perform. Just for me to complete going around the House, the so-called Green party is desperate to distract from Labour’s clean energy mission, from its opposition to clean nuclear power, and from its quibbling over new solar farms that—I literally could not make this up—it thinks are too big. Get real!
Tue 28 Apr
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Darren JonesspeechLabour
Referral of Prime Minister to Committee of Privileges
We are in an energy bills crisis and a climate emergency, and this Labour party is going to pull out the stops to serve the British people. While the Opposition parties play—
Tue 28 Apr
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Darren JonesspeechLabour
Referral of Prime Minister to Committee of Privileges
I am grateful, Mr Speaker. I, for one, am rather enjoying myself, but I think the public might want to listen to the debate in the House today. While the Opposition parties are playing games—as we can hear from their chuntering, their joking and their shouting—this Labour Government are doing the work that matters. I have been asked, “Where is the Prime Minister?” This afternoon, the Prime Minister has been chairing the middle east response committee, bringing together the Government to mitigate
Tue 28 Apr
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Darren JonesspeechLabour
Referral of Prime Minister to Committee of Privileges
rose—
Tue 28 Apr
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Darren JonesspeechLabour
Referral of Prime Minister to Committee of Privileges
Further to that point of order, Mr Speaker. First, may I apologise to the right hon. Gentleman? I would have cleared parliamentary questions, but I have been in the House all afternoon. To answer his specific question, I refer him to the evidence given today to the Foreign Affairs Committee by Mr Morgan McSweeney, who confirmed that the first person to recommend Peter Mandelson to become ambassador was Peter Mandelson.
Tue 28 Apr
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Gerald JonesspeechLabour
Fuel Costs: Support for Motorists
Even before the current conflict in the middle east, fuel suppliers in the Merthyr Tydfil part of my constituency were charging an average of 10p per litre more than those in other parts of my constituency and neighbouring towns. Even London fuel prices were cheaper than they were in Merthyr Tydfil, and the situation has not improved since. I have written to suppliers and met some, with limited success, and I have asked the Competition and Markets Authority to look at the matter, which it has so
Tue 28 Apr
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Sarah SackmanspeechLabour
Courts and Tribunals Bill (Twelfth sitting)
I absolutely recognise what the hon. Lady says. That is why I come back to this: swifter justice for victims is the guiding principle behind all these reforms. As she says, the longer people are stuck waiting for their day in court, the longer they need to be supported. It becomes a vicious cycle, because we must expend more resource on victim support to keep them engaged in the process. It is not just that we do that for longer; it gets harder the longer they are stuck in the backlog. I very mu
Tue 28 Apr
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Sarah SackmanspeechLabour
Courts and Tribunals Bill (Twelfth sitting)
Let me begin, as we all have in this Committee, by acknowledging the challenges that victims face in accessing the information and support they need. We have talked about the Government’s drive to centre victims in the criminal justice process. I have a couple of things to say in response to new clause 7. First, there is lots of work under way. For example, on 5 February this year we launched a consultation on a new victims code to ensure that we get the foundations right for victims. Through th
Tue 28 Apr
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Sarah SackmanspeechLabour
Courts and Tribunals Bill (Twelfth sitting)
I do have confidence in the changes. Look at the levers in the Government’s gift: we can get more money for the system—tick. We can try to drive performance and govern the system to be more efficient—we are doing everything we can, but I refuse to be over-optimistic about that. The other lever I can pull is reform, based on the recommendations we have had. The hon. Lady asks me why we are not piloting, being more cautious or waiting for the efficiencies to work themselves through the system rath
Tue 28 Apr
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Ed DaveyappearanceLiberal Democrat
Spoke in debate: Referral of Prime Minister to Committee of Privileges
Parliamentary appearance by Ed Davey
Tue 28 Apr
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Sarah SackmanspeechLabour
Courts and Tribunals Bill (Twelfth sitting)
The hon. Lady makes a fair point. There is a mismatch between the performance data that PECS has recorded and the qualitative evidence that one hears from barristers and the judicial office as to the time that is being lost because prisoners are not being produced on time. One of the things we discussed in the first meeting of the oversight board was that we need to have a shared understanding of the data and how we capture it. Another important theme, which we will come to in respect of another
Tue 28 Apr
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Sarah SackmanspeechLabour
Courts and Tribunals Bill (Twelfth sitting)
This group contains a number of new clauses, and I want to make sure that I address all the principal themes. New clause 5, tabled by the hon. Member for Chichester, relates to publishing targets for reducing court backlogs. It would require the Lord Chancellor to set and publish targets for reducing court backlogs, and to report annually to Parliament on progress. It is important to note that the Ministry of Justice and His Majesty’s Courts and Tribunals Service are downstream Departments, by w
Tue 28 Apr
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Sarah SackmanspeechLabour
Courts and Tribunals Bill (Eleventh sitting)
We heard evidence from Sir Brian Leveson about how in his earlier years sitting in the Crown court it was not unusual to hear a couple of trials in a day. One of his insights was that part of the changing nature of what we are grappling with here is that Crown court trials are just taking longer. That ability to hear multiple trials within the court day has been impeded by the fact that trials are taking longer because of the nature of the evidence and the procedural safeguards. I understand the
Tue 28 Apr
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Sarah SackmanspeechLabour
Courts and Tribunals Bill (Eleventh sitting)
As I have said, we have precedent. The pilots showed that there was precious little improvement. Extending sitting hours might make things worse if, for example, one is stuck in extended hours on one trial, meaning that one is not available to be in other parts of the country.
Tue 28 Apr
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Sarah SackmanspeechLabour
Courts and Tribunals Bill (Eleventh sitting)
Well, during covid courts did operate with extended and flexible arrangements, but those were temporary measures, under exceptional conditions, dealing with reduced volumes. By the way, to the point made by the hon. Member for Chichester, the reduction in the hearing time in a sitting day—now under four hours—concerns me greatly. That loss of time aggregated over the 117,000-odd sitting days adds up and is hugely significant. But where HMCTS conducted pilots of increased and flexible sitting hou
Tue 28 Apr
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Sarah SackmanspeechLabour
Courts and Tribunals Bill (Eleventh sitting)
I thank the hon. Member for Chichester for tabling new clauses 3 and 4, which seek to extend Crown court sitting hours, including the possibility of running two separate sessions per day, and enabling multiple cases to be heard in a single courtroom each day. In the same vein, amendments 59, 35 and 36, tabled by the hon. Member for Bexhill and Battle, also call for a consultation on extending sitting hours in the Crown court, funding for 130,000 sitting days and a consultation on increased sitti
Tue 28 Apr
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Sarah SackmanspeechLabour
Courts and Tribunals Bill (Eleventh sitting)
A juryless system?
Tue 28 Apr