All 2 Debates between Lord Patten of Barnes and Lord True

Fri 6th Sep 2019
European Union (Withdrawal) (No. 6) Bill
Lords Chamber

Report stage (Hansard): House of Lords

European Union (Withdrawal) (No. 6) Bill

Debate between Lord Patten of Barnes and Lord True
Lord True Portrait Lord True
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If the noble Baroness is telling me that those six people are now the new governing group driving remainer policy, that is very interesting—but I rather suspect that others are involved. There may be one or two of them in this House, and I think we should know their names.

Lord Patten of Barnes Portrait Lord Patten of Barnes (Con)
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Perhaps I may ask my noble friend one simple question. Why did he leave out of the list of those who run the country Mr Dominic Cummings?

Lord True Portrait Lord True
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My Lords, yet again, my noble friend, despite his distinguished Oxford degree, clearly was not listening. I was referring to those driving the policy of the remainer faction—and the public outside know this to be true—and seizing control of the conduct of our affairs without a general election.

Business of the House

Debate between Lord Patten of Barnes and Lord True
Wednesday 4th September 2019

(5 years, 2 months ago)

Lords Chamber
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Lord True Portrait Lord True
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I rise to second and support the proposition put by my noble friend. The coercion, or the instinct to coerce, could never have been put with more charm, eloquence and mildness than it has just been put by the noble Lord, Lord Newby. He made everything sound so reasonable, so normal and so in line with what we always do—that nothing we have here has never happened before. But when I went to the Table Office and saw that Motion in black and white, the like of which has never been tabled in this House in its history—by a Government, still less an Opposition—I must confess that, to appropriate a phrase, it was a dagger in my heart. It was the same thing that the Lord Hart of Chilton, who we all esteemed—

Lord Patten of Barnes Portrait Lord Patten of Barnes (Con)
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I am jolly concerned about my noble friend’s heart. I wonder what his cardiologist would have said when he learned about the longest Prorogation since the 1930s, at a time when this Parliament is engaged in extraordinarily important discussions about the national interest? Is that not a rather larger dagger—a rather larger guillotine—than anything we are talking about today?

--- Later in debate ---
Lord True Portrait Lord True
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I thank my noble friend for that. I was not expecting such a vigorous attack. I said that I am not used to the courts or the law, but perhaps that is the way in which business is conducted in the courts of law; I would rather that it were not so in Parliament.

Lord Patten of Barnes Portrait Lord Patten of Barnes
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I am not sure that my noble friend Lord Dobbs was defending my noble friend Lord True. I think he was saying that the Labour Party has filibustered in the past, so its Members cannot grumble tonight about my noble friend filibustering; that is what he seemed to be saying. My noble friend has a very good degree from Cambridge—not everyone is perfect—so perhaps he can explain this to us: if this is not a filibuster, what is?