BB
647 MPs·389 Bills·£2.9T

May 2026

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Events for Monday, 18 May 2026(8124 total)

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Sally JamesonspeechLabour (Co-op)
Audiology Services: Doncaster
I completely agree with my hon. Friend. As he knows, some appointments were outsourced during this period, but if we are honest, it was not enough. The waiting list is still far too long, and too many people have been waiting four or five years, so part of our collective ask as MPs for these areas is that the Minister continues to press the ICB to look at what resource is available for outsourcing more to the high street—at least in the short term—so that we can clear the backlog and get the wai
Mon 18 May
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Sally JamesonspeechLabour (Co-op)
Audiology Services: Doncaster
My hon. Friend is completely right. In a world in which we focus a lot on how we can treat and slow the progress of dementia and Alzheimer’s, this is something we really need to look at. That is key, and it is worrying and disappointing to us all that our constituents will be more susceptible to this issue because they do not have the service that might be available in other areas.
Mon 18 May
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Sally JamesonspeechLabour (Co-op)
Audiology Services: Doncaster
I completely agree with my hon. Friend. I reassure him that I will not attend the Alzheimer’s Society’s “singing for the brain” event in Cantley, as that would be devastating for everyone who had to hear it. It is important that we start to raise awareness of the knock-on effects that poor audiology services can have on wider society, and on people’s health generally. I ask the Minister to consider the following important points. First, will she ensure that the NHS 10-year plan includes greater
Mon 18 May
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Robert JenrickspeechReform UK
Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
Well, what a complete shambles! Less than two years ago, this Government were elected with the largest majority of any Government, bar one, in 100 years. People across our country, including most in my home county of Nottinghamshire, put their trust in the Labour party. Why? Because it promised change. It said it would do things differently, it would be better and it would end the chaos. It would put country before party. And where are we, less than two years later?
Mon 18 May
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Robert JenrickspeechReform UK
Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
We are here—[Laughter.] The hon. Member asks why I changed party. I will tell him why I changed party. It is because millions of people across the country look upon the performance of the last Government, and this one, and say that these are wasted years and that our country needs real change, yet we see nothing for it. This Government, let us be honest with ourselves, lie in ashes. They have failed. An air of unreality hangs over this debate. Members queue up to speak as if this were a normal K
Mon 18 May
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Robert JenrickspeechReform UK
Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
I will give way in a moment. Mass migration remains rampant. The public finances are getting worse. Look at what the markets are saying: the cost of borrowing is going up and the pound is falling. Unemployment is rising. Great, proud industries, such as one in my constituency, NSK, a business that makes steel ball bearings, are going bust because of uncompetitive energy prices and unfair competition from China—hundreds of people thrown on the scrapheap and now looking for new jobs in north Notti
Mon 18 May
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Robert JenrickspeechReform UK
Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
Let me give the hon. Gentleman some, then. We all know that this King’s Speech is not worth the paper it is written on—there is nothing in it. Speaking as a former Minister, it is made up of the very policies that officials pull out of the third drawer of a desk and hand to weak, inept Ministers who have no ideas of their own: “Here you go, Minister. Here’s a substitute for your own thoughts.” I will tell the House some things that we would do— that Reform would do, were there a Reform Governmen
Mon 18 May
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Adam JogeespeechLabour
Youth Justice
My constituents want and deserve a justice system that is fit for purpose, delivers justice for victims, and tackles crime properly and effectively. That said, poverty and deprivation play an important role, so will the Secretary of State assure me that there is a proper and effective cross-Government approach? He mentioned the Department for Education, but the heart of this strategy goes further than that. We need a carrot and stick approach, not just words.
Mon 18 May
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Kim JohnsonspeechLabour
Youth Justice
I thank the Justice Secretary for recognising the disproportionality that still exists within the criminal justice system for our black communities. Education and diversionary activities are absolutely essential to early intervention. After the anti-Muslim hate marches and anti-Muslim rhetoric that we saw at the so-called “Unite the Kingdom” march last weekend, how will the Government ensure that this White Paper provides our schools and youth services with the tools they need to prevent young p
Mon 18 May
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Sir Jeremy WrightappearanceConservative
Spoke in debate: Youth Justice
Parliamentary appearance by Sir Jeremy Wright
Mon 18 May
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Lillian JonesspeechLabour
Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
I welcome the King’s Speech and the Government’s focus on backing business to drive economic growth across every part of the United Kingdom. I declare my interest at the outset as the chair of the all-party parliamentary group for the wood panel industry. I want to begin with a positive vision of what Government can achieve when they work in genuine partnership with industry, supporting British manufacturing, strengthening domestic supply chains, creating skilled jobs and delivering the homes an
Mon 18 May
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Lillian JonesspeechLabour
Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
I agree. Health and safety should be written into public procurement contracts as standard. Finally, economic growth is about not only national strategy but the small businesses and entrepreneurs driving our local economies at home in our communities. On the day of State Opening, I was delighted to welcome to Westminster my constituent Elaine Borland, founder of Kilmarnock-based Blowin’ Free Gin, whose premium small-batch Agronomist gin is the very best of local produce and innovation—it is avai
Mon 18 May
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Baggy ShankerappearanceLabour (Co-op)
Spoke in debate: Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
Parliamentary appearance by Baggy Shanker
Mon 18 May
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Lincoln JoppspeechConservative
Youth Justice
I thank the Secretary of State for his statement. Is he concerned that by reducing the relative punishment for youth offending relative to adult offending, he may inadvertently be making the young people of Spelthorne and across the country more attractive to be recruited by county lines gangs? That would clearly be an unintended consequence of his actions, but will he think again if it turns out that that is the case?
Mon 18 May
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Amanda HackappearanceLabour
Spoke in debate: Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
Parliamentary appearance by Amanda Hack
Mon 18 May
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Alicia KearnsspeechConservative
Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
Does the Secretary of State not concede that GDP per capita is down? Can he tell me that a single one of his constituents, apart from those on welfare, feels better off under this Government?
Mon 18 May
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Alicia KearnsspeechConservative
Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
I will begin with an issue where the Government have promised action time and again but have failed to act: solar mega-plants. If rural communities are to host nationally significant energy infrastructure, we must be compensated fairly for doing so. An entire parliamentary term has passed, and yet the Government have still not regulated mandatory compensation, despite promising to do so. The consequences are real. In Rutland and Lincolnshire, a 2,100-acre industrial plant with 10-foot solar pane
Mon 18 May
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Alicia KearnsspeechConservative
Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
My right hon. Friend is completely right. What is breathtaking about this offer of £96,000 a year is that in a previous meeting—in a statement the company now disavows—we were told that paying compensation any higher would make the project financially unviable. That is to say that a project generating £15 million a year would be made financially unviable if it upped its offer to £144,000 a year in compensation. I wonder how Quinbrook’s investors and shareholders would feel if I asked them why ma
Mon 18 May
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Alicia KearnsspeechConservative
Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
My hon. Friend has enormous experience, and it is exactly the MHRA that we need to look at. This is not a medical device, yet it is being treated as such. I want to pay tribute to the brave young girl who has shared with me the letter sent to her by Enough. She is not a journalist or a campaigner, and she does not have the protections that I enjoy as a Member of Parliament, so Enough thought it could silence her. The first letter, signed personally by both founders, Katie White and Tom Allchurch
Mon 18 May
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Ms Nusrat GhaniappearanceConservative
Spoke in debate: Backing Business to Create Economic Growth
Parliamentary appearance by Ms Nusrat Ghani
Mon 18 May