Debates between Chris Hinchliff and Chris McDonald during the 2024 Parliament

Oral Answers to Questions

Debate between Chris Hinchliff and Chris McDonald
Thursday 21st May 2026

(3 weeks, 1 day ago)

Commons Chamber
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Chris Hinchliff Portrait Chris Hinchliff (North East Hertfordshire) (Lab)
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4. What steps he is taking to develop an industrial strategy.

Chris McDonald Portrait The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Business and Trade (Chris McDonald)
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We have just heard from the Secretary of State about our active industrial strategy. This question is timely, because we are one year on from setting out our industrial strategy. We have announced our British industrial competitiveness scheme, expanding its scope to support 10,000 businesses with their energy costs, a £500 million sovereign AI fund, and the creation of 19 new technical excellence colleges, giving opportunities for young people across the country.

Chris Hinchliff Portrait Chris Hinchliff
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If climate breakdown accelerates, many of the international supply chains that we have relied upon for essential goods and resources for far too long will cease to exist. We are sleepwalking towards a situation in which this country can no longer guarantee the basic needs of its people. At that point, no amount of AI slop or casino capitalism will be an alternative to actually making things. Before ecological collapse makes it too late, will Ministers use their industrial strategy to pivot our economy back to producing more of the essentials that we use in our daily lives?

Chris McDonald Portrait Chris McDonald
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My hon. Friend knows that when he talks about reindustrialisation and improving the manufacturing base of this economy he finds a very sympathetic ear in me. Certainly, we have all seen over the course of the past few years, through multiple crises, how the resilience of global supply chains has been reduced. Increasing the share of our economy that is dedicated to manufacturing will serve the ecological aims that he has mentioned, improve our national resilience and provide good, well-paid and high-productivity manufacturing jobs in our industrial heartlands across the whole of the country.