BB
647 MPs·389 Bills·£2.9T
Amanda Hack

Amanda Hack

Labour

MP for North West Leicestershire · Since 2024

50
Votes
7
Speeches
62
Total Events

Speeches (7)

Date:
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Backing Business to Create Economic Growth

My constituency of North West Leicestershire is right in the centre of the UK. It is a constituency of makers and movers, with around 25% working in logistics, and a further 15% in manufacturing, mining and utilities, the latter of which aligns with one of the broader industrial strengths of the east midlands, as one of the most manufacturing-intensive regions in the country. North West Leicestershire is also home to one of three sites in the only inland freeport in the UK. However, the site pro

18 May 2026Hansard →
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Courts and Tribunals Bill (Tenth sitting)

I am finding it difficult to listen to the hon. Member’s speech. I do not believe that we can talk about balance when 68 children have lost their lives because of the presumption. I feel that we have to take forward this clause; it is so important. I want to understand the hon. Member’s terminology and whether she can reflect on the fact that 68 children have already lost their lives because of this presumption.

23 Apr 2026Hansard →
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Courts and Tribunals Bill (Seventh sitting)

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Ms Jardine. My hon. Friend the Member for Birmingham Erdington is a passionate advocate for fairness and equality, as she has demonstrated throughout this Committee and in her work more broadly. By tabling new clause 29, she offers an approach to ensuring that we can build confidence in the system once the changes have been implemented. We have to recognise that the system is not creating fairness at the moment. We have significant backlogs, which

21 Apr 2026Hansard →
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Courts and Tribunals Bill (Second sitting)

Q Thank you for being here. You have already looked at the impact that delays are having on officers, including the impact of managing a larger caseload. How are officers managing the sense that victims feel that they are exposed for such a long time before their case gets to trial? I imagine that the management work that you need to do is quite difficult. How are you dealing with it? Chief Constable Hatchett: A lot of it falls to the witness care units. Those are the individuals who are at the

25 Mar 2026Hansard →
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Courts and Tribunals Bill (Second sitting)

Q Following on from the shadow Minister’s question about what good reform looks like, we have had a period of reform in the justice system. What would be your measure of success? We know the system is creaking under pressure, so what would success look like? Sarah Sackman: There are two tests that I set myself, and neither is going to be easy to achieve within this Parliament. The first essay question is: can you deal with the intolerable delays? Can you ensure swift justice? That does not mean

25 Mar 2026Hansard →
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Courts and Tribunals Bill (First sitting)

Q Thank you for sharing your experiences. It has been incredibly powerful. Jade Blue, you said that change is not optional—we need to reduce the suffering. That has resonated with me. We need to create a system that is bearable. As victims—and you have obviously experienced trials at different places in the system—do you feel that these reforms would have made the system bearable? Is there anything specific in the reforms that you could point to? Jade Blue McCrossen-Nethercott: I guess there is

25 Mar 2026Hansard →
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Courts and Tribunals Bill (First sitting)

Q To put the focus back on victims, Dame Vera explained clearly that it is the defendant who chooses. What would be the victim’s choice? Dame Vera Baird: Is that not part of why this is very odd? We do not give a person alleged to have committed a very serious crime and whose life will be utterly transformed by what happens in the jury a right not to have a jury trial or to pick where he goes at all—and why would we?—but we do give that right to a small cohort of people on relatively small trial

25 Mar 2026Hansard →