BB
647 MPs·389 Bills·£2.9T

May 2026

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Events for Thursday, 21 May 2026(8124 total)

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Kate DeardenspeechLabour (Co-op)
Employment Rights Act 2025
The legal framework for the right of access in the Employment Rights Act 2025 provides an enforcement mechanism that applies to all parties involved in an access agreement. The Government are clear that the enforcement mechanism must be fair, proportionate and adaptable, and we have set out the factors that the Central Arbitration Committee must consider when setting the value of penalties, acknowledging that some breaches will have a greater impact than others. Those factors will include the gr
Thu 21 May
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Kate DeardenspeechLabour (Co-op)
Employment Rights Act 2025
My hon. Friend was an advocate for such legislation long before it was introduced in the House last year. I know how passionate he is about our wider Make Work Pay agenda, as I am too. The Employment Rights Act 2025 is bringing employment rights legislation into the 21st century. We have already repealed burdensome trade union legislation, strengthened statutory sick pay, introduced day one rights to paternity leave and launched the Fair Work Agency. We are implementing the Act over a two-year p
Thu 21 May
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Marsha De CordovaspeechLabour
Middle East: Economic Response
I thank the Chancellor for her statement and welcome the measures she has announced, which will have a huge impact and support many of my constituents and businesses in Battersea. She is very welcome to visit Battersea; we have wonderful hospitality there. As we live in an increasingly unpredictable global landscape, it is vital that we work with some of our closest allies. That is why I welcome the European partnership Bill announced in the King’s Speech last week. Will the Chancellor continue
Thu 21 May
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Paul DaviesspeechLabour
Women’s Health and Wellbeing: Online Censorship
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Stringer. I strongly back this Government’s commitment to tackling online gender-based harms. I am pleased by the progress that has been made, which includes making intimate image abuse, cyber-flashing and choking priority offences under the Online Safety Act and fast-tracking legislation to ban the creation of non-consensual intimate deepfakes. Recognising the growing threat of technology-enabled abuse is vital for the Government’s targets t
Thu 21 May
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Mims DaviesspeechConservative
Imprisonment of Craig and Lindsay Foreman in Iran
The Minister is being very generous in giving way. Will he confirm on the Floor of the House that Craig and Lindsay Foreman are not spies?
Thu 21 May
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Mims DaviesspeechConservative
Imprisonment of Craig and Lindsay Foreman in Iran
I congratulate the hon. and learned Gentleman on securing the debate and thank him for the cross-party nature of his approach. I also thank the all-party parliamentary group on arbitrary detention and hostage affairs for its work on the concerning case of Craig and Lindsay Foreman. This is a crucial moment for the UK Government and hon. Members in the Chamber to ascertain whether the support given to Craig and Lindsay is satisfactory. The tourists Craig and Lindsay were formerly my constituents.
Thu 21 May
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Patricia FergusonspeechLabour
Costs for Motorists
Does the Chief Secretary to the Treasury agree that it is right that we did not rush into the Iran war and that our Government’s plans and actions to support households are responsive to changing events, rather than being knee-jerk reactions that end up causing more damage to our economy in the longer term?
Thu 21 May
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Gareth DaviesspeechConservative
Industrial Strategy
I am grateful for the update on the Minister’s tiling skills, but I did not hear a number showing how he is making progress on the £625 million commitment. Perhaps he can write to me on how they are making progress. One of the existing schemes that supports training is the Construction Industry Training Board, but many industry leaders believe that it is no longer working or delivering. Construction firms are facing significant bills as a direct result of the levy, all while the CITB is reducing
Thu 21 May
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Gareth DaviesspeechConservative
Industrial Strategy
The Government’s industrial strategy rightly states that improving skills in the construction sector is essential to keeping our country building. In fact, on page 44, there is a commitment to invest “£625 million to train…60,000 more skilled workers”. It has been one year since publication, so how many more skilled workers have entered the construction workforce as a result of that commitment?
Thu 21 May
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Mr Hamish FalconerspeechLabour
Middle East
They were, as they have been in every engagement with the Israeli Government since the signature of the 20-point plan. It is vital that aid gets in at the scale and in the manner envisaged under the 20-point plan.
Thu 21 May
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Emily DarlingtonspeechLabour
Women’s Health and Wellbeing: Online Censorship
Yes, they would be. I am trying to say that the OSA does not limit this, but it does limit some of the other material. It is important that there is a place for the Government to say what platforms should or should not be able to publish, but they should not micromanage. I agree on that. It should not be like the Lord Chamberlain saying, “Here are the words that you are allowed to use”, or, “The Queen does not approve of those phrases”, but we should be clear that we limit free speech where it h
Thu 21 May
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Emily DarlingtonspeechLabour
Women’s Health and Wellbeing: Online Censorship
I thank everyone who joined us for the debate. As the hon. Member for Runnymede and Weybridge (Dr Spencer) said, it is one that we needed to have because so many people do not know about this issue. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Glasgow South West (Dr Ahmed) for reaffirming that this Government recognise medical misogyny. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Colne Valley (Paul Davies) for reminding us about health advice. We both participated in a debate about endometriosis and adenomyo
Thu 21 May
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Emily DarlingtonspeechLabour
Women’s Health and Wellbeing: Online Censorship
I completely agree with my hon. Friend. I met some survivors of vulval cancer this morning. Even though they included a former midwife, a health advocate and other people who were well-informed, they told me about their struggle they experienced when advocating for themselves and to be taken seriously by their GP. They knew something was wrong with their vulvas, but they could not get through to their GP. Luckily, they all did; they are all doing well and have responded to their cancer treatment
Thu 21 May
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Emily DarlingtonspeechLabour
Women’s Health and Wellbeing: Online Censorship
I absolutely agree with my hon. Friend. He makes a really important point. It is so ingrained in us to go first to the internet to search for information. We have agreed ways to make sure health information is proper health information and that we are not getting bad science, but even when using the ticks that are supplied by various platforms, advice is still being shadow-banned. The online world is where women ask questions when they are often too embarrassed to ask elsewhere about period pain
Thu 21 May
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Emily DarlingtonspeechLabour
Women’s Health and Wellbeing: Online Censorship
I beg to move, That this House has considered the matter of the censorship of women’s health and wellbeing content online. It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Stringer. I want to flag at the beginning of this debate that I will be using a selection of words that big tech deems too sexual for its platforms. I hope everyone in this room can hold their composure and not get too flustered when I mention “sexual” terms such as vaginal atrophy and pelvic prolapse. To reassure the Cha
Thu 21 May
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Sir Nicholas DakinspeechLabour
Steel Industry (Nationalisation) Bill
I would like to know more.
Thu 21 May
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Judith CumminsspeechLabour
Steel Industry (Nationalisation) Bill
With a six-minute time limit, I call the Chair of the Business and Trade Committee.
Thu 21 May
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Judith CumminsspeechLabour
Steel Industry (Nationalisation) Bill
Order. A lot of Members with a direct constituency interest rightly want to put their remarks on the record. There will be an immediate six-minute time limit for Back-Bench speeches, but we will very swiftly move to three minutes to enable as many Members as possible to speak on this important topic. I call the shadow Minister.
Thu 21 May
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Judith CumminsspeechLabour
Steel Industry (Nationalisation) Bill
The reasoned amendment in the name of the Leader of the Opposition has been selected.
Thu 21 May
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Judith CumminsspeechLabour
Middle East: Economic Response
I call the Liberal Democrat spokesperson.
Thu 21 May