Rupert Lowe Alert Sample


Alert Sample

View the Parallel Parliament page for Rupert Lowe

Information between 5th February 2026 - 15th February 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.


Division Votes
11 Feb 2026 - Local Government Finance - View Vote Context
Rupert Lowe voted No and against the House
One of 2 Independent No votes vs 3 Independent Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 279 Noes - 90
11 Feb 2026 - Local Government Finance - View Vote Context
Rupert Lowe voted No and against the House
One of 2 Independent No votes vs 3 Independent Aye votes
Tally: Ayes - 277 Noes - 143


Speeches
Rupert Lowe speeches from: Court Reporting Data
Rupert Lowe contributed 2 speeches (77 words)
Tuesday 10th February 2026 - Commons Chamber
Ministry of Justice
Rupert Lowe speeches from: Oral Answers to Questions
Rupert Lowe contributed 2 speeches (120 words)
Monday 9th February 2026 - Commons Chamber
Home Office
Rupert Lowe speeches from: Standards in Public Life
Rupert Lowe contributed 1 speech (87 words)
Monday 9th February 2026 - Commons Chamber
Cabinet Office


Written Answers
Asylum: Contracts
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what Key Performance Indicators are commonly applied across asylum contracts.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

KPI schedules and performance measures are set out in the contracts which are available on Contracts Finder and can be found in the links below:

Wales - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract Wales - Contracts Finder

South - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract South - Contracts Finder

NW - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NW - Contracts Finder

MEE - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract MEE - Contracts Finder

NEYH - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NEYH - Contracts Finder

Scotland - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract Scotland - Contracts Finder

NI - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NI - Contracts Finder

CTM - CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract - Contracts Finder

Asylum: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to contract “Support Payment Card”, procurement reference 429018/1483183, how many staff delivering services are subject to Security Clearance (SC); and what the average cost of clearance is per staff member.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The Home Office does not incur costs for Security Clearance (SC) under the Support Payment Card contract, as these are not charged through the contract, and we therefore do not hold data on the average cost per staff member.

The number of staff subject to SC is also not held by the department, as staffing levels and clearance requirements sit with the provider, who is responsible for ensuring that the appropriate number of suitably cleared personnel are in place to deliver the services in accordance with contractual requirements.

Asylum: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to contract “Support Payment Card”, procurement reference 429018/1483183, how many replacement cards were received; and what was the total cost to the public purse of the replacement.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The requested information is commercially sensitive.

Asylum: Contracts
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the total value of all active asylum-related contracts currently held by her Department is, broken down by supplier and contract type.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The contract values for asylum contracts are available in the public domain and can be viewed at:

Serco  -

AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NW - Contracts Finder

AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract MEE - Contracts Finder

Mears  -

AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NEYH - Contracts Finder

AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract Scotland - Contracts Finder

AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NI - Contracts Finder

CRH  -

AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract Wales - Contracts Finder

AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract South - Contracts Finder

CTM  -

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract - Contracts Finder

Contract for the Provision of Asylum Accommodation and Travel Services - Contracts Finder

PFS  -Support Payment Card - Contracts Finder

Migrant Help  - AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Elligibility - Contracts Finder

Mitie Limited - Provision of Security Services at Home Office Contingency Accommodation - Contracts Finder

British Refugee Council - Independent Unaccompanied Asylum-seeking Children (UASCs) Support Service - Contracts Finder

The Big Word Group Limited - Contract for the provision of Language Analysis Services - Contracts Finder

VF Services (UK) Limited - Contract for the provision of Home Office and Asylum Interviews - Contracts Finder

Asylum: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, With reference to contract “Support Payment Card”, procurement reference 429018/1483183, whether alternative delivery models were considered prior to awarding the contract, including in-house provision.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Alternative delivery models, including in-house provision, were considered.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, if she will publish the minutes of all Monthly Operational Review meetings.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The information requested is considered confidential and commercially sensitive and is therefore not publicly released.

The Home Office operates a rigorous contract management regime, which includes monthly Contract Management Group meetings and Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings to discuss contract management issues and oversee performance. Two Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings have been held.

The minutes of the monthly and quarterly performance meetings and other review meetings are treated as commercially sensitive and are not publicly released.

The Home Office also conducts regular reviews of its contracts to ensure that they deliver maximum value for money, but the minutes, notes, and outcomes of this work are commercially sensitive and not made publicly available.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract “Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services”, procurement reference CCTM22A01, if she will publish the minutes of the Quarterly Commercial Review meetings.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The information requested is considered confidential and commercially sensitive and is therefore not publicly released.

The Home Office operates a rigorous contract management regime, which includes monthly Contract Management Group meetings and Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings to discuss contract management issues and oversee performance. Two Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings have been held.

The minutes of the monthly and quarterly performance meetings and other review meetings are treated as commercially sensitive and are not publicly released.

The Home Office also conducts regular reviews of its contracts to ensure that they deliver maximum value for money, but the minutes, notes, and outcomes of this work are commercially sensitive and not made publicly available.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, if she will publish the minutes of the Benchmark Review.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The information requested is considered confidential and commercially sensitive and is therefore not publicly released.

The Home Office operates a rigorous contract management regime, which includes monthly Contract Management Group meetings and Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings to discuss contract management issues and oversee performance. Two Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings have been held.

The minutes of the monthly and quarterly performance meetings and other review meetings are treated as commercially sensitive and are not publicly released.

The Home Office also conducts regular reviews of its contracts to ensure that they deliver maximum value for money, but the minutes, notes, and outcomes of this work are commercially sensitive and not made publicly available.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, if he will publish all performance reports.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The information requested is considered confidential and commercially sensitive and is therefore not publicly released.

The Home Office operates a rigorous contract management regime, which includes monthly Contract Management Group meetings and Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings to discuss contract management issues and oversee performance. Two Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings have been held.

The minutes of the monthly and quarterly performance meetings and other review meetings are treated as commercially sensitive and are not publicly released.

The Home Office also conducts regular reviews of its contracts to ensure that they deliver maximum value for money, but the minutes, notes, and outcomes of this work are commercially sensitive and not made publicly available.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, how many Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings have taken place.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The information requested is considered confidential and commercially sensitive and is therefore not publicly released.

The Home Office operates a rigorous contract management regime, which includes monthly Contract Management Group meetings and Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings to discuss contract management issues and oversee performance. Two Quarterly Commercial Review Meetings have been held.

The minutes of the monthly and quarterly performance meetings and other review meetings are treated as commercially sensitive and are not publicly released.

The Home Office also conducts regular reviews of its contracts to ensure that they deliver maximum value for money, but the minutes, notes, and outcomes of this work are commercially sensitive and not made publicly available.

Asylum: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to contract “Support Payment Card”, procurement reference 429018/1483183, what controls exist to prevent (a) unnecessary and (b) duplicate payments being issued.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The Home Office has robust controls in place to ensure Support Payment Card transactions are accurate and appropriate, including system led instructions that issue the correct support level, active monitoring of ongoing eligibility, and prompt discontinuation of payments when an asylum seeker is no longer entitled.

Asylum: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to contract “Support Payment Card”, procurement reference 429018/1483183, which officials and Ministers approved the final award decision, and on what dates.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The final award followed all internal approval processes, including appropriate governance committees. Ministerial approval was not required due to the value of the contract award.

Asylum: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract Support Payment Card, procurement reference 429018/148318, if she will make an assessment of the potential impact of commercial confidentiality under that contract on provision of information to Parliament that helps facilitate scrutiny of value for money.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The Support Payment Card contract was awarded to Prepaid Financial Services Limited (PFS) on 24 May 2020 as a Call-Off to Lot 2 (Prepaid Cards) of the RM 3828 Crown Commercial Services Framework Contract for the provision of the Support Payment Card Service.

PFS successfully secured a place on Lot 2 of the Framework Agreement along with four other suppliers. The Home Office determined which supplier could deliver the best value for money solution to the Home Office’s requirement. The evaluation considered both quality and price. Therefore, at the time of contract award, PFS’ solution offered the best value for money.

As these services were compliantly procured, and we undertake regular reviews of Supplier performance and assessments of financial and commercial data via established governance forums, value for money is scrutinised on an ongoing basis.

The risks of disclosing information that is considered confidential and commercially sensitive outweigh the benefits of disclosure. Release would impact on the Home Office’s ability to obtain maximum value for money for taxpayers. Disclosure of PFS’ commercially sensitive information could also impact upon their ability to compete for future services of this nature.

Asylum: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to contract “Support Payment Card”, procurement reference 429018/1483183, what the administrative cost is for each card, excluding the value of payments loaded onto cards.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Information on the allowances provided to asylum seeking cohorts is publicly available: Asylum support: What you'll get - GOV.UK

Administrative costs related to the provision of payment cards are commercially sensitive and not for publication.

Asylum: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to contract “Support Payment Card”, procurement reference 429018/1483183, why parts of the documentation relating to the contract are marked official sensitive; and what criteria are used to determine redactions.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Information considered commercially sensitive, containing personal information or other sensitive topics or information is not routinely published and is therefore redacted by the Home Office.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what the annual cost is of the requirement that transport requests will be taken at short notice, all day every day.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what expenditure has been incurred on the booking of transport services for those who wish to travel beyond the local area.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what was the total number of contracts between the Department and Corporate Travel Management (North) Limited in the last ten years.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what the cost is of providing adequate transport links to enable service users to access the local area.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract entitled Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services with procurement reference CCTM22A01, what the annual cost is of the requirement that service users are taken to and returned from medical appointments.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what the cost is of providing assistance to service users to make contact with a local GP surgery and dentist.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what the annual cost is of the house-keeping laundry service with a maximum 48-hour turnaround.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what the annual cost is of delivering a programme of organised recreational activities.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what cost is incurred by the requirement that where a service user arrives late and misses the evening meal, a light snack must be provided.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what the annual cost is of the cleaning programme delivered to the standards set by the British Institute of Cleaning Science required under the contract.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what the per-person daily cost is of providing a varied daily menu, taking into account all religious needs as specified.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what the cost per service user is of the requirement that cabins are cleaned on a twice weekly basis.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what due diligence was undertaken on Corporate Travel Management (North) Limited, including financial capacity, relevant experience, and subcontracting arrangements, prior to contract award.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, on what date Corporate Travel Management (North) Limited was notified that it had been awarded the contract, and which Minister approved the award.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 6th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the contract, Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services, procurement reference CCTM22A01, what procurement route was used to award the contract; and whether it was subject to open competition, emergency procurement, or direct award.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award this contract supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained prior to the contract award. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is published on gov.uk at: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK.

The final contract signature was completed on 24 March 2023.

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust checks are carried out on suppliers’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract was a direct award under the CCS Travel and Venue Solutions Framework Agreement (RM6217) – Lot 2. CTM were the sole supplier within Lot 2.

Financial information cannot be provided in the granular detail requested.

Department for Work and Pensions: Equality
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Monday 9th February 2026

Question to the Department for Work and Pensions:

To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, how many civil servants employed by their Department work in roles primarily focused on (a) transgender policy, (b) diversity, (c) equity and (d) inclusion; and at what annual salary cost.

Answered by Andrew Western - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Work and Pensions)

Dedicated EDI staff help DWP comply with equality legislation, making sure that vulnerable customers are supported. Proactive EDI initiatives can help prevent issues related to discrimination or exclusion, reducing grievances and costly disputes.

As of December 2025, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) employed 84,373.2 paid full-time equivalent (FTE) staff. There are no roles within the Department that are primarily focused on transgender policy.

Roles considered to be primarily focused on Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) are as follows:

  • 1 x Grade 6 – 0.86 FTE
  • 8 x Grade 7 – 8 FTE
  • 6 x Senior Executive Officers (SEO) – 5.3 FTE

This constitutes a total of 14.16 FTE staff, which represents approximately 0.02% of the Department’s total Paid FTE workforce as being EDI focused.

The annual expenditure associated with the salaries for staff whose roles are primarily focused on Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (based on People & Capability Annual Average Salary and including employer pension and NI contributions) amounts to approximately £1,121,565.

Ministry of Defence: Hotels
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 13th February 2026

Question to the Ministry of Defence:

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence, how many nights were spent in hotels by Departmental staff in financial year 2024-25 by the star rating of the hotel.

Answered by Luke Pollard - Minister of State (Ministry of Defence)

All business/duty hotel accommodation booked by Ministry of Defence (MOD) staff must be made using the Global Business Travel (GBT) online booking tool. The GBT tool does not record the star rating of hotels, but MOD policy stipulates that bookings must align with the Department’s Hotel Capitation Rates.

Department for Business and Trade: Hotels
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 13th February 2026

Question to the Department for Business and Trade:

To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, how many nights were spent in hotels by Departmental staff in financial year 2024-25 by the star rating of the hotel.

Answered by Kate Dearden - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Business and Trade)

For the financial year 2024-25, 21,691 hotel nights were booked through the Department's travel booking platform.

The department’s reports do not contain the star rating of the hotels booked, therefore cannot provide an answer.

Department for Energy Security and Net Zero: Hotels
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 13th February 2026

Question to the Department for Energy Security & Net Zero:

To ask the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, how many nights were spent in hotels by Departmental staff in financial year 2024-25 by the star rating of the hotel.

Answered by Michael Shanks - Minister of State (Department for Energy Security and Net Zero)

The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero does not hold this information centrally. The information can only be obtained at disproportionate cost.

Repatriation: Syria
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 13th February 2026

Question to the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs, how many people who married members of the so-called Islamic State have been repatriated to the UK from Syria.

Answered by Hamish Falconer - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office)

I refer the Hon Member to the answer provided on 6 February 2025 in response to Question 27530.

Asylum: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Wednesday 11th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the value, annual spend to date and forecast annual spend are for the contract entitled Support Payment Card held with Prepaid Financial Services Limited with contract start date 27 February 2021; and what the per-transaction and per-card cost structure is.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The total contract value is publicly available at: Support Payment Card - Contracts Finder

Information on spend to date, forecast spending and the per-transaction and per-card cost structure is commercially sensitive.

Asylum: Contracts
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Wednesday 11th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the role of Ministers is in approving or reviewing the award of high-value asylum contracts.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

Prior to receiving internal, Home Office Commercial approvals, to award these contracts, supplier performance was reviewed and due diligence was carried out. Necessary external approvals from Cabinet Office Spend Controls were also obtained. The guidance for Cabinet Office Spend Controls applies to commercial activities costing £20 million or more, and is available here: Commercial spend controls (version 7) - GOV.UK

Details of the Principles for Ministerial involvement in commercial activity and the contacting process are included here: Principles for Ministerial involvement in commercial activity and the contracting process - GOV.UK

Home Office: Procurement
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Wednesday 11th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what checks are undertaken by her Department on bidders’ prior performance on other public sector contracts, including any history of underperformance or contract failure, during the bidding process for contracts with her Department.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

All Home Office contracts are procured in line with public sector procurement regulations. As part of these regulations, robust due diligence checks are carried out on the bidders’ ability to deliver the contract in question and, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary to exclude bidders in line with relevant regulations.

Asylum: Contracts
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Wednesday 11th February 2026

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, whether the Department will publish a consolidated annual report setting out total asylum contract expenditure, performance outcomes, and value-for-money assessments.

Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office)

The Home Office Annual Report and accounts contain details of asylum spending and information relating to asylum processing and the asylum system. There are no current plans to expand this reported information.

Question Link
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Thursday 12th February 2026

Question to the Attorney General:

To ask the Solicitor General, how many prosecutions for human trafficking or sexual exploitation offences in each of the last three calendar years involved two or more defendants charged as part of the same case.

Answered by Ellie Reeves - Solicitor General (Attorney General's Office)

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) holds management information which shows the number of prosecuted defendants flagged with the modern slavery (human trafficking) monitoring flag where 2 or more defendants have been prosecuted on the same case. The data is derived using a manual process as the CPS Case Management Information System does not report this information. As with any manual exercise, the data may be subject to errors in processing and the information is for operational use only.

The table below shows the flagged prosecution data (where 2 or more defendants have been prosecuted on the same cases) for the last three calendar years ending 31st December 2024.

Prosecuted defendants flagged with the modern slavery monitoring flag

2022

2023

2024

Modern slavery flagged defendants with a completed prosecution outcome on cases with 2 or more defendants

281

263

314

Data Source: CPS Case Management Information System

The CPS define modern slavery as the following – for offences committed prior to 31st July 2015 ss57-59A Sexual Offences Act 2003, s4 Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of Claimants) Act 2004, s71 Coroners and Justice 2009 and for offences committed after the Modern Slavery Act 2015 came into force on the 31st July 2015, s1, 2 and 4 of the Act. Included in the definition are the inchoate versions of the listed offences.

Treasury: Hotels
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Thursday 12th February 2026

Question to the HM Treasury:

To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer, how many nights were spent in hotels by Departmental staff in financial year 2024-25 by the star rating of the hotel.

Answered by Lucy Rigby - Economic Secretary (HM Treasury)

The information requested is not held by hotel star rating. HM Treasury does not centrally record hotel star ratings. All hotel bookings must represent value for money and comply with Civil Service and departmental travel and subsistence policies.

Department of Health and Social Care: Equality
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 13th February 2026

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, how many civil servants employed by their Department work in roles primarily focused on (a) transgender policy, (b) diversity, (c) equity and (d) inclusion; and at what annual salary cost.

Answered by Karin Smyth - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)

While the Department employs civil servants whose roles include work on transgender policy, diversity, equality, and inclusion, there are currently no civil servants who work in roles primarily focused on all these areas. As such, the total annual salary cost is £0.

Ministry of Justice: Hotels
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 13th February 2026

Question to the Ministry of Justice:

To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many nights were spent in hotels by Departmental staff in financial year 2024-25 by the star rating of the hotel.

Answered by Jake Richards - Assistant Whip

This information is not held centrally.

Department for Science, Innovation and Technology: Hotels
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 13th February 2026

Question to the Department for Science, Innovation & Technology:

To ask the Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, how many nights were spent in hotels by Departmental staff in financial year 2024-25 by the star rating of the hotel.

Answered by Ian Murray - Minister of State (Department for Science, Innovation and Technology)

The Department uses a travel management company to book hotel accommodation for staff. The star rating of the hotel is not recorded but the nightly cost of hotel accommodation has maximum cost levels set and are only breached when there is no suitable accommodation available within these limits.

Attorney General's Office: Hotels
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 13th February 2026

Question to the Attorney General:

To ask the Solicitor General, how many nights were spent in hotels by Departmental staff in financial year 2024-25 by the star rating of the hotel.

Answered by Ellie Reeves - Solicitor General (Attorney General's Office)

In 2024-25 there were a total of 61 nights spent in hotels by departmental staff where overnight stays were essential for departmental business. These are broken down in the following table.

Star rating

Stays

3 Star

2

4 Star

11

5 Star

1

Not rated

47

For the hotels that do not have a star rating, these are classed as budget hotels.

Department for Education: Hotels
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
Friday 13th February 2026

Question to the Department for Education:

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how many nights were spent in hotels by Departmental staff in financial year 2024-25 by the star rating of the hotel.

Answered by Olivia Bailey - Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State (Department for Education) (Equalities)

The department has access to records of hotel accommodation used by employees; however, this information is not collected or categorised by hotel star rating. In 2024/25, employees booked 8,367 hotel nights, equivalent to an average 1.06 nights per employee.

The department’s travel and expenses policy ensures value for money by setting clear limits for hotel costs: £160 per night in London and £110 per night elsewhere. Employees are expected to book within these caps through approved channels.

Where accommodation cannot reasonably be secured within these limits, any higher‑cost booking must receive prior approval from a Senior Civil Servant (Deputy Director or above). Such approval is granted only where there is a clearly evidenced business or critical operational need.



Early Day Motions
Tuesday 10th February

Rape gang overseas trafficking

15 signatures (Most recent: 25 Feb 2026)
Tabled by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth)
That this House expresses grave concern at evidence presented during recent independent hearings into organised child sexual exploitation indicating that a number of women and girls may have been trafficked overseas to Pakistan and elsewhere by those responsible for their abuse; notes that the Rape Gang Inquiry has received multiple …


Early Day Motions Signed
Thursday 5th February
Rupert Lowe signed this EDM on Friday 6th February 2026

Public inquiry into Epstein links

89 signatures (Most recent: 27 Feb 2026)
Tabled by: Nadia Whittome (Labour - Nottingham East)
That this House stands with Jeffrey Epstein’s victims whose relentless courage and pursuit of justice has led to the publication of the Epstein files; notes with concern the number of British public figures included in these files; recognises that child sexual abuse on this scale is likely to have involved …



Rupert Lowe mentioned

Live Transcript

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

9 Feb 2026, 3:18 p.m. - House of Commons
" We now. >> Come to topicals. Rupert Lowe topical question number one Mr Speaker Justice Secretary. "
Rt Hon Shabana Mahmood KC MP, The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Birmingham Ladywood, Labour) - View Video - View Transcript
9 Feb 2026, 3:19 p.m. - House of Commons
" Rupert Lowe. >> Thank you, Mr. Speaker. As the Minister knows, our independent rape gang inquiry hearings ongoing. "
Rupert Lowe MP (Great Yarmouth, Independent) - View Video - View Transcript
10 Feb 2026, 1:40 p.m. - House of Commons
" Rupert Lowe. "
Rupert Lowe MP (Great Yarmouth, Independent) - View Video - View Transcript


Select Committee Documents
Friday 13th February 2026
Correspondence - Correspondence from Rebecca Paul MP relating to e-petition 751839

Petitions Committee

Found: sincerely, Rebecca Paul MP Member of Parliament for Reigate Rosie Duffield MP Rupert Lowe

Friday 13th February 2026
Report - 67th Report - NS&I’s transformation programme

Public Accounts Committee

Found: Warrington South) Lloyd Hatton (Labour; South Dorset) Chris Kane (Labour; Stirling and Strathallan) Rupert Lowe

Thursday 12th February 2026
Oral Evidence - National Audit Office, National Audit Office, and National Audit Office

Public Accounts Committee

Found: Watch the meeting Members present: Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (Chair); Mr Clive Betts; Anna Dixon; Rupert Lowe

Wednesday 11th February 2026
Report - 66th Report - Tackling fraud and error in benefit expenditure 2024-25

Public Accounts Committee

Found: Warrington South) Lloyd Hatton (Labour; South Dorset) Chris Kane (Labour; Stirling and Strathallan) Rupert Lowe

Monday 19th January 2026
Oral Evidence - Home Office, Ministry of Justice, Home Office, Ministry of Justice, and Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government

Public Accounts Committee

Found: Q5 Rupert Lowe: I think my question is for Simon Ridley.




Rupert Lowe - Select Committee Information

Calendar
Thursday 19th March 2026 9:30 a.m.
Public Accounts Committee - Oral evidence
Subject: NAO financial audit insights 2024-25
View calendar - Add to calendar


Select Committee Documents
Thursday 5th February 2026
Written Evidence - The Moorland Association
ENR0024 - Environmental regulation

Public Accounts Committee
Friday 6th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Permanent Secretary of the Cabinet Office regarding Civil Service Pensions, 11 November 2025

Public Accounts Committee
Friday 6th February 2026
Written Evidence - Dr Becky Ogundele , Dr Sarah Longwell, Dr Emily Holdsworth, Dr Liam Gabb, Dr Alex Oyon , Dr Anna Grundy, Dr Iain Murphy, and Dr Alice Gray
AHE0006 - Financial sustainability of adult hospices in England

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 9th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Chair of the Public Accounts Committee to the Permanent Secretary at the Cabinet Office relating to the Administration of the Civil Service Pensions Scheme, 09 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 9th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Permanent Secretary at the Cabinet Office relating to the Civil Service Pensions Scheme recovery plan, 02 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 9th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the National Secretary at UNISON relating to home-to-school transport, 22 January 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 9th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Defence relating to recommendations 4 and 5b of the Committee’s Report on the MoD’s oversight of Reserve Forces’ and Cadets’ Association, 03 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 9th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the General Secretary at the Civil Service Pensioners’ Alliance relating to the administration of the Civil Service Pension Scheme, 27 January 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 9th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Director for Finance Strategy and Partnerships at the Ministry of Justice relating to the Committee’s evidence session on 26 January 2026 on Accountability in small government bodies, 04 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 9th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Minister for Children and Families at the Department for Education relating to the Committee’s Report on the Financial sustainability of children’s care homes, 03 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 9th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Justice relating to the Committee’s evidence session on 19 January 2026 on an Analysis of the asylum system, 30 January 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Professor Fliss Murtagh
AHE0020 - Financial sustainability of adult hospices in England

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 2nd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Chair of the Public Accounts Committee to the Permanent Secretary of the Department for Business and Trade regarding the DRIVE35 Automotive programme, 30 January 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Professor Sylvester Kaczmarek
GDA0014 - Government's use of external consultants

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - British Geriatrics Society
SPF0005 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - FairGo CIC
SPF0001 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Loughborough University, University of Nottingham, University of Nottingham, Iona Bateman, Maria Luisa Pereira Vargas, Professor Denise Kendrick, Professor Jo Leonard-Bee, and Professor Joanne Morling
SPF0006 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Aston University
SPF0004 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 9th February 2026
Oral Evidence - Department of Health and Social Care, NHS England, Professor Chris Whitty, and NHS England

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - National Pharmacy Association
SPF0010 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Advanced Care Research Centre, University of Edinburgh
SPF0011 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Greater Manchester Combined Authority
SPF0014 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - University of the West of England
SPF0012 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Stiltz
SPF0013 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 9th February 2026
Oral Evidence - Department of Health and Social Care, NHS England, Department of Health and Social Care, Department of Health and Social Care, and Department of Health and Social Care

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Northern Health Science Alliance
SPF0009 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - University of Southampton
SPF0007 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Community Pharmacy England
SPF0008 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Sirona care and health
SPF0017 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Care Quality Commission
SPF0019 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - The Spinal Injuries Association
SPF0018 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - NHS, Sport England, London Borough of Tower Hamlets
SPF0002 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Spen Health and Wellbeing Primary Care Network
SPF0003 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - University of Surrey and UK Dementia Research Institute Care Research & Technology Centre, and University of Surrey and UK Dementia Research Institute Care Research & Technology Centre
SPF0015 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Health Sciences University
SPF0016 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - University of the West of England
SPF0012 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Advanced Care Research Centre, University of Edinburgh
SPF0011 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Greater Manchester Combined Authority
SPF0014 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - University of Surrey and UK Dementia Research Institute Care Research & Technology Centre, and University of Surrey and UK Dementia Research Institute Care Research & Technology Centre
SPF0015 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Stiltz
SPF0013 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Northern Health Science Alliance
SPF0009 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - National Pharmacy Association
SPF0010 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Community Pharmacy England
SPF0008 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Sirona care and health
SPF0017 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - The Spinal Injuries Association
SPF0018 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Health Sciences University
SPF0016 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Care Quality Commission
SPF0019 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - NHS, Sport England, London Borough of Tower Hamlets
SPF0002 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Spen Health and Wellbeing Primary Care Network
SPF0003 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Aston University
SPF0004 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - FairGo CIC
SPF0001 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - FairGo CIC
NHP0001 - New Hospital Programme update

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - NHS Providers
NHP0003 - New Hospital Programme update

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - British Geriatrics Society
SPF0005 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - University of Southampton
SPF0007 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Tuesday 10th February 2026
Written Evidence - Loughborough University, University of Nottingham, University of Nottingham, Iona Bateman, Maria Luisa Pereira Vargas, Professor Denise Kendrick, Professor Jo Leonard-Bee, and Professor Joanne Morling
SPF0006 - Supporting people with frailty outside hospitals

Public Accounts Committee
Wednesday 11th February 2026
Report - 66th Report - Tackling fraud and error in benefit expenditure 2024-25

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 19th January 2026
Oral Evidence - Home Office, Ministry of Justice, Home Office, Ministry of Justice, and Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government

Public Accounts Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Chair to the Chair of the Public Accounts Commission relating to National Audit Office proposed Main Estimate 2026–27, 12 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter to the Chief Executive of NS&I regarding Notification of two contingent liabilities – operational and fraud losses, 12 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter to the First Permanent Secretary and Chief Executive of HM revenues and Customs regarding Investigation into managed service companies and offshore tax gap, 12 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Chief Executive NHS England regarding Indicative Activity Plans (IAPs) and their impact on waiting list, 23 January 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Managing Director of Restoration & Renewal Client Team regarding the Delivering restoration and renewal of the Palace of Westminster: the costed proposals report, 5 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Friday 13th February 2026
Report - 67th Report - NS&I’s transformation programme

Public Accounts Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Oral Evidence - National Audit Office, National Audit Office, and National Audit Office

Public Accounts Committee
Thursday 12th February 2026
Oral Evidence - Capita Public Services, and Capita Public Services

Public Accounts Committee
Friday 13th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Chair to the Permanent Secretary at the Cabinet Office relating to ‘Administration of the Civil Service Pension Scheme: Hardship loans’, 13 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Report - 68th Report - Excess Votes 2024-25

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Permanent Secretary at the Cabinet Office relating to a follow-up to the Administration of the Civil Service Pensions Scheme, 23 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Baroness Amos relating to timelines of the Independent National Maternity and Neonatal Investigation, 11 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Permanent Secretary at the Cabinet Office relating to the interim arrangements for the role of the Cabinet Secretary, 13 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Chief Executive Officer of the Environment Agency relating to the Committee’s evidence session on 02 February 2026 on Environmental Regulation, 06 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Chief Executive of Natural England relating to the Committee’s evidence session on 02 February 2026 on Environmental Regulation, 13 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Second Permanent Secretary at the Home Office relating to a follow-up to the Committee’s evidence session 19 January 2026 on the Analysis of the Asylum System, 06 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Chair to the Director General for Strategy and Water at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and the Interim Chief Executive Officer of Ofwat relating to The Work of Ofwat, 23 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Permanent Secretary at the Cabinet Office relating to a follow-up to the Administration of the Civil Service Pensions Scheme, 16 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Chief Executive Officer of the College of Policing relating to a follow-up to the Committee’s evidence session on 24 November 2025 on Increasing police productivity, 18 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Interim Chief Executive of Ofwat relating to a follow-up to the Committee’s evidence session on 22 January 2026 on the Work of Ofwat, 19 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Interim Permanent Secretary at the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero relating to Recommendation 3 of the Committee’s Report on Faulty energy efficiency installations, 06 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Chief Executive of UK Research and Innovation relating to the Committee’s Forty-first Report on UK Research and Innovation, 17 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Permanent Secretary at the Department for Business and Trade relating to the DRIVE35 automotive programme, 10 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Minister for Courts and Legal Services at the Ministry of Justice relating to the consultation on criminal legal aid fees for solicitors, 06 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee
Monday 23rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Permanent Secretary at the Department for Education relating to proposals for consolidated academy financial reporting, 03 February 2026

Public Accounts Committee