Part of the debate – in the House of Commons at 3:02 pm on 27 March 2025.
I am grateful to all colleagues who have taken part in this debate. I thank my hon. Friends the Members for Mid and South Pembrokeshire (Henry Tufnell), for Hammersmith and Chiswick (Andy Slaughter) and for Stafford (Leigh Ingham) and Dame Karen Bradley for their interventions.
I am grateful to Jim Allister for taking part. I am sorry that he did not like my speech. I have not been called “fuzzy” or “bleary-eyed”, but I have been called warm, so I shall take that. He gave a speech very much in the spirit in which he tends to speak, and I am sure his colleagues up at Stormont miss him very much indeed.
I pay tribute to Seamus Logan, who gave a very good speech. He shared some stories, and I suspect there are a few more that we will hear some other time. My hon. Friend Rachel Hopkins showed herself to be the tenacious champion that we know she is for the Irish community in her constituency.
Andrew Rosindell ought not to do away with his inner Irishness—blood is thicker than water. He made a very strong case for the restoration of the order of St Patrick, and auditioned very well to be one of its first recipients. My father shares a birthday with him on
I thank the shadow Minister, Jerome Mayhew, for his contribution and for putting a target on my back, which is a great way to get my colleagues on this side of the Chamber to be my friends. I thank him none the less, and I pay tribute to his late father, who was of course Secretary of State for Northern Ireland. I thank the Minister for her remarks; I also thank the Liberal Democrats spokesperson, Marie Goldman, who perhaps merged two speeches from this week in her contribution, which we welcome none the less.
This has been an excellent debate. I look forward to all hon. Members coming together for a similar one in March 2026, as we celebrate Northern Ireland and the relationship between our United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House
has considered St Patrick’s day and Northern Irish affairs.