Mentions:
1: Lord Hendy (Lab - Life peer) three very short passages, not from Marx and Engels or Sidney and Beatrice Webb but from the highest courts - Speech Link
2: None Given that there is already a crisis in recruiting and retaining on-call firefighters, what impact assessment - Speech Link
3: Lord Ponsonby of Shulbrede (Lab - Life peer) guidance is clear that it is not statutory and that, ultimately, the courts will interpret the law. - Speech Link
4: None of fire spreading and the risk to life cannot be assessed unless their skills are present. - Speech Link
5: None Disruption to fire and rescue services puts lives at immediate risk. - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Lloyd Russell-Moyle (LAB - Brighton, Kemptown) agreement that includes it, so the very fact that this agreement includes ISDS triggers a number of ISDS courts - Speech Link
2: Gareth Thomas (LAB - Harrow West) It is time for a clear-eyed assessment of the risk that the ISDS poses to our interests. - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Lord Young of Cookham (Con - Life peer) Those are justice, with the problems with the prisons and courts; local government, with growing pressure - Speech Link
2: Baroness Goldie (Con - Life peer) It gives an objective assessment of the challenges facing the Chancellor, confirming how tight his envelope - Speech Link
3: Lord Skidelsky (XB - Life peer) Completely ignored in this assessment, however, is the influence of energy prices on inflation. - Speech Link
4: Baroness Sheehan (LD - Life peer) billion of investment and allow the UK to compete globally for green investment.Let us not forget the risk - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Michael Tomlinson (Con - Mid Dorset and North Poole) The courts have not concluded that there is a general risk to the safety of relocated individuals in - Speech Link
2: Michael Tomlinson (Con - Mid Dorset and North Poole) on general safety.On amendment 7, we need a strong deterrent to stop people putting their lives at risk - Speech Link
3: None Has the National Audit Office done an assessment of those additional costs? - Speech Link
4: Michael Tomlinson (Con - Mid Dorset and North Poole) I agree with his assessment of amendments 2 and 3. - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: None However, the Government will seek to mitigate the risk of people receiving financial redress when they - Speech Link
2: None be clear that this does not set a precedent, and neither is it a criticism of the judiciary or the courts - Speech Link
3: None today that anyone who chooses not to take that offer, and instead submits a full claim for individual assessment - Speech Link
4: Lord McNicol of West Kilbride (Lab - Life peer) The flip side of that is that there are many other scandals that courts, reviews and government are working - Speech Link
5: Lord Johnson of Lainston (Con - Life peer) I cannot speak on behalf of the courts; it is essential that they retain their independence on that front.I - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Toby Perkins (Lab - Chesterfield) Many schools are supporting parents and their special needs children, but are unable to get assessment - Speech Link
2: Robin Walker (Con - Worcester) Member for Chesterfield (Mr Perkins) pointed out, many more are awaiting assessment or have their needs - Speech Link
3: Robin Walker (Con - Worcester) The principal of the school has recently written to local politicians to highlight that and the risk - Speech Link
4: Catherine McKinnell (Lab - Newcastle upon Tyne North) Research by the Disabled Children’s Partnership found that lost cases cost councils and courts £60 million - Speech Link
5: Catherine McKinnell (Lab - Newcastle upon Tyne North) At the risk of focusing on an issue that is a distraction, let me emphasise that we need to invest in - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Diana Johnson (Lab - Kingston upon Hull North) Does the Minister think that the permanent secretary is wrong in his assessment that there is insufficient - Speech Link
2: Priti Patel (Con - Witham) That one-stop shop—the immigration courts and tribunals—would have gone a long way towards reducing costs - Speech Link
3: Alison Thewliss (SNP - Glasgow Central) the legislation can pass, but sufficiently scary to serve as a deterrent to those desperate enough to risk - Speech Link
4: Tim Loughton (Con - East Worthing and Shoreham) the French authorities to try to regularise their position in France, because they did not want to risk - Speech Link
5: Joanna Cherry (SNP - Edinburgh South West) Nobody was able to give me any examples of anyone being able to exercise their rights through the courts - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Lord Inglewood (Non-affiliated - Excepted Hereditary) As has been said already, it should be left to Parliament and the courts and independent regulators to - Speech Link
2: Baroness Bonham-Carter of Yarnbury (LD - Life peer) regulatory scope in relation to online news channels, and that his department is consulting on the risk - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Craig Tracey (Con - North Warwickshire) What steps his Department is taking to help protect rural communities in flood-risk areas. - Speech Link
2: Robert Goodwill (Con - Scarborough and Whitby) What recent assessment he has made of UK food security. - Speech Link
3: Barry Sheerman (LAB - Huddersfield) In that context, could coroners courts and the coroner system be modernised? - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Lord Sharpe of Epsom (Con - Life peer) preserves the democratic accountability that underpins the PCC model and at the same time reduces the risk - Speech Link
2: Lord Shipley (LD - Life peer) This includes appropriate and effective consultation and proper management of scrutiny, audit and risk - Speech Link
3: Lord Scriven (LD - Life peer) I follow the noble and learned Baroness, Lady Butler-Sloss, in her assessment. - Speech Link
4: Lord Sharpe of Epsom (Con - Life peer) public consultation and subsequent decision to transfer the PCC functions to the mayor was heard by the courts - Speech Link