Results 1-5 of 5 for terrorism speaker:Nick Brown
- Points of Order: Defence in the World (1 Feb 2007)
Nick Brown: ...threat facing Britain is not an enemy state with a strategic nuclear deterrent of its own threatening Britain alone, but not our NATO partners—the main security threat facing Britain is terrorism. The Select Committee on Defence recently concluded that the "strategic nuclear deterrent could serve no useful or practical purpose in countering this kind of threat." The money that the...
- National Health Service (31 Jan 1995)
Mr Nick Brown: ...particular crisis in London which is not being met by the Government. The Secretary of State claimed that under the previous Labour Government when the financial year came to an end there was fear and terror throughout the NHS as people tried to get the budgets to balance for the year. I can tell her that that has not changed but is still going on now. I have an example from my own...
- Orders of the Day — Adjournment (Easter) (1 Apr 1993)
Mr Nick Brown: ...would cost everybody £20 a week, or that we would have no way of raising money to reduce the deficit, but it does not seem fair to make both points. The hon. Member for Basildon (Mr. Amess) spoke about the red terror that had pertained there and the debt that the local authority had inherited from what he described as an eastern bloc type regime. He made it absolutely clear that...
- Defence Projects and Exports (12 Dec 1986)
Mr Nick Brown: ...a public scandal, the more so because it betrays the privatisation that the Government say that they believe in. Undoubtedly the most serious point of all is that the Government are appeasing the terrorism that they say that they are committed to fighting.
- Auxiliary Oiler Replenishment Vessels (24 Apr 1986)
Mr Nick Brown: ...work now. The Secretary of State has made no announcement about fabrication work for the yard. His statement will be seen as a betrayal of privatisation on Tyneside and as appeasement of terrorism in Ulster.
