Did you mean "been"OR"pob"OR"bba"OR"alchohol"OR"ar"?
Baroness Kidron: ...-ranging design changes to tech platforms to protect children’s privacy, an exemption is made for schools and education settings. In many cases, edtech providers do not have to provide the high bar of privacy by design afforded by the AADC, the impact of which I set out last week in debate and can be found in Hansard. In short, there is an eyewatering flood of children’s personal and...
Andrew Jones: ...there have been far too many instances of behaviour by my political opponents that have failed any definition of acceptable standards, or even legal ones. Can we have a debate about how we raise the bar throughout our political system, including local party associations and candidates for office?
Clutha Bar (Tributes)
Ariane Burgess: ...to comply with, guided by a co-produced code of practice. That will ensure that the majority of businesses that currently follow the law can continue to operate above suspicion while raising the bar for those who persist in undertaking illegal management practices. I am particularly pleased that the Government has committed to bringing forward additional provisions at stage 2 to extend the...
Lord Londesborough: ...to invest in the nation’s infrastructure. The Chancellor is rightly concerned about our low productivity, especially in the public sector, yet there is little in this Statement to address that, bar reducing the size of the Civil Service. If we are serious about the “long term”, which is an expression that the Prime Minister and the Chancellor keep harping on about, we need relentless...
Lord Londesborough: ...to invest in the nation’s infrastructure. The Chancellor is rightly concerned about our low productivity, especially in the public sector, yet there is little in this Statement to address that, bar reducing the size of the Civil Service. If we are serious about the “long term”, which is an expression that the Prime Minister and the Chancellor keep harping on about, we need relentless...
James Evans: ...far beyond the rugby field. I personally met my best friends that were made on the rugby field, and I thoroughly enjoy catching up with them at training and on a Saturday after the game over a beer, divulging the whole game. From the latest available data, there are between 250 and 300 rugby clubs spread right across the length and breadth of Wales—
Jim Fairlie: ...a Scotland without gender-based violence? What would that look and feel like? It might look like this: women not having to walk with keys in their hand; not having to have a safe word to use with bar staff; not having to worry about walking home alone or about being too provocative in the way they dress; not having to go into public toilets in pairs; not having to ensure that they are...
Richard Graham: ...quick examples of spiking that we do know about. The first is an example sent to me this morning by a colleague whose friend, a male in his 60s, was here in London on business. He dropped “into a pub near his hotel and had his drink spiked.” The guy who spiked the drink “supposedly ‘helped’ him back to his hotel where the assault and rape happened.” The individual who was raped...
Richard Graham: ...quick examples of spiking that we do know about. The first is an example sent to me this morning by a colleague whose friend, a male in his 60s, was here in London on business. He dropped “into a pub near his hotel and had his drink spiked.” The guy who spiked the drink “supposedly ‘helped’ him back to his hotel where the assault and rape happened.” The individual who was raped...
Lord Hampton: ..., the suspicion is that cyclists and pedestrians would disproportionately bear the brunt of casualties from the initial trials of the vehicles. In this I share Cycling UK’s concern that the safety bar is too low in that the definition of safety for a vehicle that travels autonomously is “acceptable” rather than “high”, and the definition of it travelling legally is if it travels...
Lord Hampton: ..., the suspicion is that cyclists and pedestrians would disproportionately bear the brunt of casualties from the initial trials of the vehicles. In this I share Cycling UK’s concern that the safety bar is too low in that the definition of safety for a vehicle that travels autonomously is “acceptable” rather than “high”, and the definition of it travelling legally is if it travels...
Jacob Young: ...situation for either party. Nor is it fair to ask landlords to bear significant arrears for longer, as applying the new clause to grounds 8 or 8A might. These mandatory grounds already set a high bar for eviction. Asking landlords to bear the cost of significant arrears for longer puts them under unsustainable financial pressure. The Government believe that the new clause strikes an...
Simon Jupp: .... We need to strike a fairer balance so that local people can work in vital local industries such as tourism and hospitality without having to travel miles to get to work. Without workers behind the bar, in the kitchen or at the high street till, the hospitality and tourism industries simply would not exist in constituencies such as mine. Today’s debate goes to the heart of the...
Rebecca Long-Bailey: ...and, indeed, that a register and master record were kept; yet to my knowledge the register and master record have not been released, nor has specific documentation relating to each individual, bar one or two exceptions. It should also be noted that thousands of the released documents relating to this period reference the AB and ES series of files, which I understand were withdrawn from the...
Christopher Chope: ...they will be offending by not registering their dog as being an XL bully type? In my view, this is one of the worst pieces of legislation brought forward by this Government—that is quite a high bar to get over, given what has happened since the 2019 general election. I thought my hon. Friend the Member for Don Valley (Nick Fletcher) introduced the debate in such a mild, rational way...
Sarah Edwards: ...not to brag about my constituency, so I will refrain from telling the House that we are also home to the Tamworth Tap, which this year was named by the Campaign for Real Ale as the country’s best pub. But a high street cannot flourish without people visiting and feeling safe. Concern about antisocial behaviour and a desire to have a closer relationship with local police has made my...
Jill Mortimer: ...all those who would qualify for asylum under existing rules. The world is facing troubled times and more mass migration. Will my right hon. Friend assure me that he will do all he can to raise the bar for those migrating or seeking asylum here and look at other solutions to stop people leaving their homelands, so that those countries can make better futures for themselves without the loss...
Lee Rowley: ...amended, makes explicit reference to public houses: ‘3 (6) (p) public houses, wine bars and drinking establishments’. Planning permission is always required for the material change of use of a pub.
Gareth Davies: ...energy security. Businesses are vital for our high streets, so we have extended the 75% business rates discount for retail, hospitality and leisure businesses for another year, saving the average pub more than £12,800 next year. I pay tribute to my hon. Friend the Member for Broxtowe (Darren Henry) not just for the speech he made, but for the campaign he led on that measure. Businesses...