Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick Alert Sample


Alert Sample

View the Parallel Parliament page for Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick

Information between 10th February 2026 - 2nd March 2026

Note: This sample does not contain the most recent 2 weeks of information. Up to date samples can only be viewed by Subscribers.
Click here to view Subscription options.


Calendar
Thursday 12th February 2026
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)

Oral questions - Main Chamber
Subject: Assessment of the role of changing weather patterns in the occurrence of recent floods and future mitigation
View calendar - Add to calendar


Division Votes
10 Feb 2026 - Sustainable Aviation Fuel Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 173 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 186 Noes - 251
10 Feb 2026 - Sustainable Aviation Fuel Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 169 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 188 Noes - 258
25 Feb 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 127 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 43 Noes - 131
25 Feb 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 156 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 205 Noes - 188
25 Feb 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 143 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 213 Noes - 150
25 Feb 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 141 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 59 Noes - 152
25 Feb 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and against the House
One of 143 Labour No votes vs 1 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 172 Noes - 148
25 Feb 2026 - Crime and Policing Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 154 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 86 Noes - 178
24 Feb 2026 - Tobacco and Vapes Bill - View Vote Context
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick voted No - in line with the party majority and in line with the House
One of 153 Labour No votes vs 0 Labour Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 78 Noes - 246


Speeches
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick speeches from: Duty Relief Exemption: Small Parcels
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick contributed 1 speech (58 words)
Thursday 26th February 2026 - Lords Chamber
HM Treasury
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick speeches from: Electronic Travel Authorisation: Dual Nationals
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick contributed 1 speech (116 words)
Thursday 26th February 2026 - Lords Chamber
Home Office
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick speeches from: Changing Weather Patterns and Floods
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick contributed 2 speeches (129 words)
Thursday 12th February 2026 - Lords Chamber
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs


Written Answers
Schools: Allergies
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Thursday 12th February 2026

Question to the Department for Education:

To ask His Majesty's Government what guidance they issue to schools in England on preventing, recognising, and responding to anaphylaxis.

Answered by Baroness Smith of Malvern - Minister of State (Department for Work and Pensions)

Schools are required under Section 100 of the Children and Families Act 2014 to make arrangements to support pupils with medical conditions, including allergies. They must have regard to the 'Supporting pupils with medical conditions at school' statutory guidance which sets expectations for training and emergency procedures. The guidance can be read in full here: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/supporting-pupils-at-school-with-medical-conditions--3.

Governing bodies should ensure that staff receive suitable training to identify and respond to severe allergic reactions, such as anaphylaxis, and that policies and systems are effectively implemented. Ofsted assesses the effectiveness of these arrangements as part of school inspections.

Shingles: Vaccination
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Monday 16th February 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government, further to the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation’s (JCVI’s) advice in November 2024 to expand eligibility for the shingles vaccination programme to include people aged 80 and over, what assessment they have made of the impact of delays in implementation on those with comorbidities who are at highest risk of severe shingles disease; what steps they are taking to prioritise protection for these high-risk individuals; and whether they will commit to implementing the JCVI advice before this winter.

Answered by Baroness Merron - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

Currently, adults become eligible for their shingles vaccination when they turn 65 or 70 years of age, and they remain eligible until their 79th birthday. Adults who are severely immunosuppressed, and therefore most at risk of serious illness and complications from shingles, are eligible from 18 years old and do not have an upper age limit.

The shingles vaccination programme has been in place since 2013, and therefore there will be a significant portion of adults currently aged 80 years old and over who were offered, and received, Zostavax, the previous shingles vaccine. All those who were born after 1 September 1933 would have been offered a vaccine in the programme.

In November 2024, the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation provided advice to the Government on eligibility for the shingles vaccination programme. This included advice that the Government should consider expanding the shingles vaccination offer to include older adult cohorts aged 80 years old and over. The Government is carefully considering this advice as it sets the policy on who should be offered shingles vaccinations in the future.

Vaccination
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Monday 16th February 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of the economic and societal costs of maintaining a health technology assessment framework for vaccines that does not explicitly account for wider impacts beyond the health system, including potential losses to productivity.

Answered by Baroness Merron - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

The Government recognises the value in improving our understanding of the impact that vaccines have on wider society. Demonstrating the impact that childhood vaccines can have on the number of days of education that children may miss, for example, could encourage greater uptake of childhood vaccination. We have recently been able to say that childhood chickenpox costs the United Kingdom’s economy £24 million every year in lost income and productivity, and the chickenpox vaccination programme launched last month is expected to reduce that loss.

Vaccine appraisals play a particular role within the process of understanding that value, using the best robust evidence available across all vaccination programmes to focus investment of the health budget on programmes that deliver the greatest health benefit to the greatest number of people. Focusing our appraisal process on health benefits and costs, which have better evidence than socio-economic impacts, follows the process used by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.

If this process were to change, and wider socio-economic benefits were to be formally included, this could have unintended consequences. For example, it could have the effect of prioritising investment in vaccines for working populations over those who are not or will not be economically active. Additionally, the available data on socio-economic benefits is robust for only a small number of vaccines. Factoring this data into appraisals for only a small number of vaccines would create a bias for these programmes with better quality data. Conversely, if this data on wider benefits were to be factored into appraisals for all vaccination programmes, the use of lower quality data risks increasing uncertainty in appraisals and reduces our ability to ensure responsible and effective spending of public funds.

Vaccination
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Monday 16th February 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government what evidence, analysis or expert advice Ministers relied on in concluding that broadening the scope of health technology assessments for vaccines to include wider economic and societal impacts is unnecessary; and whether this conclusion was informed by any assessment of the capability and remit of the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence and the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation in areas beyond pure health system cost-effectiveness, such as macro-economics, public finance, and social and welfare analysis.

Answered by Baroness Merron - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

We are proud to have one of the most comprehensive vaccination programmes in the world. Our approach to evaluating vaccination programmes, underpinned by recommendations and advice from the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), is grounded in rigorous and evidence-led cost-effectiveness analysis, and ensures that decisions are objective, consistent, and based on high-quality data on health benefits and costs.

Basing our approach on these factors avoids the uncertainty of less direct benefits, where the evidence and therefore the decision is likely to be less defensible. This approach is also informed by previous work on this topic.

For example, earlier work by the independent Cost-Effectiveness Methodology for Immunisation Programmes and Procurement (CEMIPP) considered, amongst other things, whether wider socio-economic impacts should be included in the framework used to assess the cost-effectiveness of vaccines. CEMIPP conducted a consultation as part of their wider work and drew upon a broad body of expert opinion. The group concluded that wider socio-economic impacts should not be included in vaccine cost-effectiveness assessments unless doing so becomes standard practice across all health technology assessments.

Additionally, in 2022, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) undertook a detailed appraisal of whether it should broaden the perspective it uses in its economic evaluations, including consideration of wider societal impacts. Following this review, and after examining both international comparisons, and the significant methodological and ethical challenges involved, NICE’s Board concluded that it should retain its current approach of using a health-sector perspective routinely, but with the flexibility to include wider societal benefits when they are especially relevant.

Whilst the expertise of the JCVI rightly centres on disease burden, vaccine efficacy, health outcomes and health-related costs, as outlined this is not a key reason for why the cost-effectiveness methodology for vaccines does not formally take into consideration wider socio-economic benefits.

Vaccination
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Monday 16th February 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government what steps they are taking to strengthen the evidence base for assessing the wider economic and societal impacts of vaccination; and what assessment they have made of the potential benefits for evidence generation of explicitly incorporating such impacts into health technology assessment frameworks.

Answered by Baroness Merron - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

The Government recognises the value in improving our understanding of the impact that vaccines have on wider society. Demonstrating the impact that childhood vaccines can have on the number of days of education that children may miss, for example, could encourage greater uptake of childhood vaccination. We have recently been able to say that childhood chickenpox costs the United Kingdom’s economy £24 million every year in lost income and productivity, and the chickenpox vaccination programme launched last month is expected to reduce that loss.

Vaccine appraisals play a particular role within the process of understanding that value, using the best robust evidence available across all vaccination programmes to focus investment of the health budget on programmes that deliver the greatest health benefit to the greatest number of people. Focusing our appraisal process on health benefits and costs, which have better evidence than socio-economic impacts, follows the process used by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.

If this process were to change, and wider socio-economic benefits were to be formally included, this could have unintended consequences. For example, it could have the effect of prioritising investment in vaccines for working populations over those who are not or will not be economically active. Additionally, the available data on socio-economic benefits is robust for only a small number of vaccines. Factoring this data into appraisals for only a small number of vaccines would create a bias for these programmes with better quality data. Conversely, if this data on wider benefits were to be factored into appraisals for all vaccination programmes, the use of lower quality data risks increasing uncertainty in appraisals and reduces our ability to ensure responsible and effective spending of public funds.

Vaccination
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Monday 16th February 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of the quantified economic and societal benefits omitted from vaccine appraisals under the existing health technology assessment framework, including impacts on economic inactivity, workforce participation, productivity and long-term growth.

Answered by Baroness Merron - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

The Government recognises the value in improving our understanding of the impact that vaccines have on wider society. Demonstrating the impact that childhood vaccines can have on the number of days of education that children may miss, for example, could encourage greater uptake of childhood vaccination. We have recently been able to say that childhood chickenpox costs the United Kingdom’s economy £24 million every year in lost income and productivity, and the chickenpox vaccination programme launched last month is expected to reduce that loss.

Vaccine appraisals play a particular role within the process of understanding that value, using the best robust evidence available across all vaccination programmes to focus investment of the health budget on programmes that deliver the greatest health benefit to the greatest number of people. Focusing our appraisal process on health benefits and costs, which have better evidence than socio-economic impacts, follows the process used by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.

If this process were to change, and wider socio-economic benefits were to be formally included, this could have unintended consequences. For example, it could have the effect of prioritising investment in vaccines for working populations over those who are not or will not be economically active. Additionally, the available data on socio-economic benefits is robust for only a small number of vaccines. Factoring this data into appraisals for only a small number of vaccines would create a bias for these programmes with better quality data. Conversely, if this data on wider benefits were to be factored into appraisals for all vaccination programmes, the use of lower quality data risks increasing uncertainty in appraisals and reduces our ability to ensure responsible and effective spending of public funds.

Vaccination
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Monday 16th February 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of the potential benefits of incorporating wider societal impacts into health technology assessments on the assessment of value for money and long term return on investment for vaccination programmes.

Answered by Baroness Merron - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

The Government recognises the value in improving our understanding of the impact that vaccines have on wider society. Demonstrating the impact that childhood vaccines can have on the number of days of education that children may miss, for example, could encourage greater uptake of childhood vaccination. We have recently been able to say that childhood chickenpox costs the United Kingdom’s economy £24 million every year in lost income and productivity, and the chickenpox vaccination programme launched last month is expected to reduce that loss.

Vaccine appraisals play a particular role within the process of understanding that value, using the best robust evidence available across all vaccination programmes to focus investment of the health budget on programmes that deliver the greatest health benefit to the greatest number of people. Focusing our appraisal process on health benefits and costs, which have better evidence than socio-economic impacts, follows the process used by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.

If this process were to change, and wider socio-economic benefits were to be formally included, this could have unintended consequences. For example, it could have the effect of prioritising investment in vaccines for working populations over those who are not or will not be economically active. Additionally, the available data on socio-economic benefits is robust for only a small number of vaccines. Factoring this data into appraisals for only a small number of vaccines would create a bias for these programmes with better quality data. Conversely, if this data on wider benefits were to be factored into appraisals for all vaccination programmes, the use of lower quality data risks increasing uncertainty in appraisals and reduces our ability to ensure responsible and effective spending of public funds.

Respiratory Syncytial Virus: Babies
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Tuesday 17th February 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government, further to the Written Answer by Baroness Merron on 29 January (HL13801), whether they plan to collect data on respiratory syncytial virus related hospital admissions of infants under one year old in weekly surveillance reports; if not, for what reason this data is being omitted.

Answered by Baroness Merron - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

Numbers of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) admissions in infants are reported by a sentinel network of approximately 15 to 20 National Health Service trusts in England to the Severe Acute Respiratory Infections-Watch Surveillance at the UK Health Security Agency. Participation in this surveillance is completely voluntary for NHS trusts. Therefore, the number of participating trusts can vary from week to week, and comparisons based on simple counts may be misleading.

To provide appropriate context for reported weekly data, weekly admission rates are calculated to monitor trends over time. This uses trust catchment populations published by the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities, which are estimated for under five-year-olds, but which have not been estimated specifically for the under one year old age group, or infants.

Therefore, published rates are based on the available denominator data for the under five-year-olds, and these are publicly available in the national surveillance weekly reports and corresponding datafile at the GOV.UK website.

Further surveillance data and a programme impact assessment will be included in the annual surveillance report on RSV, due to be published in summer 2026. Please refer to the 2024/25 annual surveillance report for a summary of the previous winter season, which is available at the GOV.UK website.

Surveillance reports use hospital admission data and the Office for National Statistics’ mid-year estimates to model catchment populations for hospital trusts. Modelled catchment populations use hospital data, aggregated over three years and resident populations in five-year age bands.

Medical Treatments
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Monday 23rd February 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of the recent decisions by countries such as Germany, Sweden, and Norway to incorporate wider societal impacts within their health technology assessment methodologies; and whether Ministers have considered adopting similar approaches in England.

Answered by Baroness Merron - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

In 2022, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) undertook a detailed appraisal of whether it should broaden the perspective it uses in its economic evaluations, including consideration of wider societal impacts. NICE found that robust methods for quantifying wider societal effects are not yet sufficiently developed, and that evidence on the wider societal benefits of interventions, and of the services that might be displaced, is limited. NICE has also noted that expanding assessments to capture socio‑economic impacts could introduce ethical challenges, such as advantaging interventions for populations with higher workforce participation over those for children, older adults, or people unable to work.

Following this review, and after examining both international comparisons, and the significant methodological and ethical challenges involved, NICE’s Board concluded that it should retain its current approach of using a health-sector perspective routinely but with the flexibility to include wider societal benefits when they are especially relevant.

Drugs: Prices
Asked by: Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick (Labour - Life peer)
Tuesday 24th February 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government what the Department of Health and Social Care and NHS England have spent on work relating to Part IX of the Drug Tariff and the MedTech Commercial Strategy.

Answered by Baroness Merron - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

Across the Department and NHS England, £1,067,157.34 has been spent directly on Part IX of the Drug Tariff, including VAT where applicable. This does not include Department and NHS England staff time. This covers the period 2024/25, and 2025/26. This includes planned spend up until the end of the 2025/2026 financial year.

For the MedTech Commercial Strategy, across the Department and NHS England, planned direct spend up until the end of the 2025/26 financial year is £120,000. This does not include Department and NHS England staff time and includes VAT.




Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick mentioned

Live Transcript

Note: Cited speaker in live transcript data may not always be accurate. Check video link to confirm.

12 Feb 2026, 11:46 a.m. - House of Lords
" Fourth Oral Question Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick. question standing in my name on the Order Paper. >> My Lords, the latest national "
Baroness Hayman of Ullock, The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Labour) - View Video - View Transcript
12 Feb 2026, 11:54 a.m. - House of Lords
" I think for the first time ever in this house, I find myself in complete agreement with the noble Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick because agricultural land covers 70% of the UK's land area, meaning "
Lord Blencathra (Conservative) - View Video - View Transcript


Parliamentary Debates
Hughes Report: Second Anniversary
67 speeches (14,111 words)
Wednesday 11th February 2026 - Westminster Hall
Department of Health and Social Care
Mentions:
1: Caroline Johnson (Con - Sleaford and North Hykeham) In January 2025, when asked by Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick, the Government said they were “carefully - Link to Speech



Select Committee Documents
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Declarations of interest - Declarations of interests, 28 January 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee

Found: mother’s birth in Dublin) Baroness O’Loan • No relevant interests to declare Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick




Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick - Select Committee Information

Calendar
Wednesday 25th March 2026 10:30 a.m.
Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee - Private Meeting
View calendar - Add to calendar
Monday 23rd February 2026 2 p.m.
Childhood Vaccinations Committee - Private Meeting
View calendar - Add to calendar
Wednesday 4th March 2026 10:30 a.m.
Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee - Oral evidence
Subject: Follow-up inquiry on Strengthening Northern Ireland's voice in the context of the Windsor Framework
At 10:45am: Oral evidence
Stuart Anderson - Director of Public Affairs and International Relations at Northern Ireland Chamber of Commerce and Industry
Roger Pollen - Head of FSB Northern Ireland at FSB Northern Ireland
Mr Alexander Kinnear - Parliamentary Officer at Ulster Farmers' Union
View calendar - Add to calendar
Monday 2nd March 2026 2 p.m.
Childhood Vaccinations Committee - Private Meeting
View calendar - Add to calendar
Wednesday 11th March 2026 10:30 a.m.
Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee - Oral evidence
Subject: Follow-up inquiry on Strengthening Northern Ireland's voice in the context of the Windsor Framework
At 10:45am: Oral evidence
Neil Johnston - Director at Northern Ireland Retail Consortium
Jonathan Walsh - Director at Fortior Insight Ltd
Claire Sullivan - Head of Policy at CBI Northern Ireland
View calendar - Add to calendar
Monday 9th March 2026 2 p.m.
Childhood Vaccinations Committee - Oral evidence
Subject: Childhood Vaccinations
View calendar - Add to calendar
Monday 16th March 2026 2 p.m.
Childhood Vaccinations Committee - Oral evidence
Subject: Childhood Vaccinations
View calendar - Add to calendar
Wednesday 18th March 2026 10:30 a.m.
Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee - Private Meeting
View calendar - Add to calendar


Select Committee Documents
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Declarations of interest - Declarations of interests, 28 January 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Wednesday 11th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, re: EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, 2 February 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Wednesday 11th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Lord Carlile of Berriew to Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, re: EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, 11 February 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, re: Report of the Independent Monitoring Panel on the first reporting period, 26 January 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Lord Carlile of Berriew to Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP (Secretary of State for Northern Ireland) re Windsor Framework Independent Monitoring Panel report, 11 February 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Lord Carlile of Berriew to Andrew Muir MLA, Minister of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA), 11 February 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Andrew Muir MLA, Minister of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA), 27 January 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Monday 2nd March 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Rt Hon Nick Thomas-Symonds, Minister for the Cabinet Office re UK-EU Withdrawal Agreement Joint Committee and Trade and Cooperation Agreement Partnership Council (2 February 2026), 10 February 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Wednesday 4th March 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Lord Carlile of Berriew to Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP (Secretary of State for Northern Ireland) and Rt Hon Nick Thomas-Symonds MP (Cabinet Office Minister) re: Government response to Committee report, 4 March 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Wednesday 4th March 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Lord Carlile of Berriew to Baroness Merron (Dept of Health and Social Care) re: Tobacco and Vapes Bill, 4 March 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Wednesday 4th March 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Baroness Merron (Department of Health and Social Care) re Tobacco and Vapes Bill, 11 February 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Wednesday 4th March 2026
Oral Evidence - Northern Ireland Chamber of Commerce and Industry, FSB Northern Ireland, and Ulster Farmers' Union

Follow-up inquiry on Strengthening Northern Ireland's voice in the context of the Windsor Framework - Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Wednesday 11th March 2026
Declarations of interest - Member Declarations of Intrests (5 March 2026)

Childhood Vaccinations Committee
Wednesday 11th March 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Lord Carlile of Berriew to Lord Livermore (Financial Secretary to the Treasury) re: Duty relief exemption for small parcels, 11 March 2026

Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee
Monday 9th March 2026
Oral Evidence - Self-Care Forum, University of Bristol, and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH)

Childhood Vaccinations - Childhood Vaccinations Committee


Select Committee Inquiry
23 Feb 2026
Follow-up inquiry on Strengthening Northern Ireland's voice in the context of the Windsor Framework
Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee (Select)
Not accepting submissions

The Northern Ireland Scrutiny Committee is undertaking a short follow-up inquiry to examine some of the recent announcements made in the Government’s response to the Committee’s Report Northern Ireland after Brexit: Strengthening Northern Ireland’s voice in the context of the Windsor Framework, published in October 2025, and in Lord Murphy’s Independent Review of the Windsor Framework. The Committee will hear evidence from business stakeholders on the One Stop Shop, the new Northern Ireland Business Stakeholder Group, as well as general issues in relation to business experience and engagement with the Windsor Framework.

27 Jan 2026
Childhood Vaccinations
Childhood Vaccinations Committee (Select)
Not accepting submissions

No description available