People matching Brexit

Jacob Rees-Mogg

Conservative MP for North East Somerset ( 6 May 2010 – current)

Paul Blomfield

Labour MP for Sheffield Central ( 6 May 2010 – current)

Lord Dodds of Duncairn

DUP Peer (18 Sep 2020 – current)

Sammy Wilson

DUP MP for East Antrim ( 5 May 2005 – current)

Hywel Williams

Plaid Cymru MP for Arfon ( 7 Jun 2001 – current)


Results 1–20 of 20000 for brexit

Spring Budget 2024 - Motion to Take Note (18 Mar 2024)

Lord Livermore: ..., Britain has found itself acutely exposed due to the choices this Government have made over 14 years: the austerity mentioned by the noble Lord, Lord Skidelsky, which choked off investment; then Brexit without a plan; and then the disastrous mini-Budget, which crashed the economy, sending interest rates soaring to a 15-year high, and saw mortgage payments rise by an average of £220 every...

UK Tradeshow Programme Closure - Question (18 Mar 2024)

Lord Razzall: My Lords, will the Minister acknowledge that there has been a significant reduction in export sales by SMEs and small businesses since Brexit? Will he also acknowledge that, to take advantage of the limited number of trade deals that his department has managed to sign since Brexit, it is necessary to give significant help to SMEs and small businesses, if the gap is going to be closed?

Written Answers — Department for Business and Trade: UK Trade with EU: Productivity (18 Mar 2024)

Lord Taylor of Warwick: ...'s Government what assessment they have made of the impact of the fall in the UK goods trade on national productivity, particularly in sectors affected by any barriers to trade resulting from Brexit.

Public Procurement (British Goods and Services) Bill (15 Mar 2024)

Lloyd Russell-Moyle: ...but of destroying jobs in this country. Some Government Members—not all, but some— would say, “Well, that is an example of why we need to deregulate. That is why we should embrace our Brexit freedoms to ensure that we never get to a place where we are anti-competitive compared with the rest of the world.” The problem is that that is a race to the very bottom. First, it is a race to...

Animal Welfare (Import of Dogs, Cats and Ferrets) Bill (15 Mar 2024)

Seema Malhotra: ...this. These issues were also raised by the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee in 2016, 2019 and 2021. Given that the Government have been so enthusiastic about taking advantage of Brexit bonuses when they relate to sacking striking nurses, scrapping consumer rights or undermining environmental protections, it beggars belief that it has taken so long for us to have proposals on...

Asylum and Migration (14 Mar 2024)

Patrick Grady: ...under successive Governments of whatever hue. The Scottish Government have printed commendable papers explaining what a humane asylum, immigration and migration policy would look like. Of course, Brexit has only added to all these costs. For generations, people have left Scotland to make their homes elsewhere in the world because they were cleared from their land to make way for sheep,...

Asylum and Migration (14 Mar 2024)

Patrick Grady: ...under successive Governments of whatever hue. The Scottish Government have printed commendable papers explaining what a humane asylum, immigration and migration policy would look like. Of course, Brexit has only added to all these costs. For generations, people have left Scotland to make their homes elsewhere in the world because they were cleared from their land to make way for sheep,...

Housing: Young People - Motion to Take Note (14 Mar 2024)

Lord Young of Cookham: ...residual resistance to social housing. The old norms that trade unionists and council tenants voted Labour while home owners and professional people voted Tory have been blown out of the water by Brexit and the 2019 election. In 1953, 250,000 council houses were built and my party won the next two elections. What regime encouraged the local authorities, now going bankrupt, to invest in...

Backbench Business: St Patrick’s Day: Irish Diaspora in the UK — [Dame Siobhain McDonagh in the Chair] (14 Mar 2024)

Mark Logan: ...up in the past three years and is serving the whole north of England. That is great to see, because the bilateral relationship between the United Kingdom and Ireland hit many bumps during the Brexit years. It was a very difficult time, and there was a huge decrease in trust between the two sides. We saw that a couple of years ago at a British-Irish Association event in Oxford, where there...

Backbench Business: St Patrick’s Day: Irish Diaspora in the UK — [Dame Siobhain McDonagh in the Chair] (14 Mar 2024)

Mark Logan: ...up in the past three years and is serving the whole north of England. That is great to see, because the bilateral relationship between the United Kingdom and Ireland hit many bumps during the Brexit years. It was a very difficult time, and there was a huge decrease in trust between the two sides. We saw that a couple of years ago at a British-Irish Association event in Oxford, where there...

United Kingdom: Union - Motion to Take Note (14 Mar 2024)

Baroness Chapman of Darlington: ...about respect, pragmatism and the importance of personal political relationships was valuable and very well made. It is sensible to acknowledge that the past decade has presented its challenges. Brexit, nationalism and, at times, the approach of the UK Government have all put the union under stress. The noble Baroness, Lady Foster of Aghadrumsee, reminded us that independence is not...

Business of the House (14 Mar 2024)

Deidre Brock: ...get the answers that the Leader of the House does not want to—and indeed never does—supply to our sticky, inconvenient questions. I will begin with the dream that dare not speak its name here: Brexit. The Resolution Foundation tells us that the UK’s goods exports and imports have contracted by far more than those of any other G7 country, largely due to Brexit. Things are now so dire...

Business of the House (14 Mar 2024)

Deidre Brock: ...get the answers that the Leader of the House does not want to—and indeed never does—supply to our sticky, inconvenient questions. I will begin with the dream that dare not speak its name here: Brexit. The Resolution Foundation tells us that the UK’s goods exports and imports have contracted by far more than those of any other G7 country, largely due to Brexit. Things are now so dire...

Written Answers — Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs: Fisheries (14 Mar 2024)

Mark Spencer: ...Centre of Excellence in Fraserburgh. Scotland will also benefit from an increase in fishing opportunities this year compared to 2023, as Scottish fisheries continue to see the benefits of our post-Brexit deal for fishing.

Written Answers — Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs: Sugar Beet: Production (14 Mar 2024)

Lord Douglas-Miller: ...of supply. Domestically, the Government has committed to broadly maintain the current level of food we produce. This includes sustainably boosting production in sectors where there are post-Brexit opportunities, including horticulture and seafood, and the Agriculture Act imposes a duty on the Secretary of State to have regard to the need to encourage environmentally sustainable food...

Scottish Parliament: Housing (14 Mar 2024)

Paul McLennan: ...proof its capital budget, which has resulted in nearly a 10 per cent real-terms cut in our capital funding. The financial transactions budget has also been cut by 62 per cent. That is on top of Brexit and UK Government financial mismanagement that has caused inflationary pressures and supply and labour shortages in the construction industry. As I have mentioned previously, we are working...

Environment, Food and Rural Affairs: Food Prices (14 Mar 2024)

Patrick Grady: That has nothing to do with the question on the Order Paper. The London School of Economics found that Brexit has added £250 to the average household bill. The healthcare certificates that are now required will add even more. Is the reality not that the cost of living crisis is a cost of Westminster crisis, fuelled by Brexit?

Environment, Food and Rural Affairs: Food Prices (14 Mar 2024)

Patrick Grady: That has nothing to do with the question on the Order Paper. The London School of Economics found that Brexit has added £250 to the average household bill. The healthcare certificates that are now required will add even more. Is the reality not that the cost of living crisis is a cost of Westminster crisis, fuelled by Brexit?

National Insurance Contributions (Reduction in Rates) (No. 2) Bill: New Clause 2 - Review of effects of frozen thresholds (13 Mar 2024)

Kirsty Blackman: .... We believe it should be properly funded to deliver our vital public services, and we do not believe that they can cope with more cuts on the back of 14 years of austerity and the trials of Brexit and the pandemic. We want excellent public services for all, and we are not scared to make that absolutely clear. Question put, That the Bill be now read the Third time.

Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Bill - Report (2nd Day): Amendment 104 (13 Mar 2024)

Baroness Hayman: ...of accountability for this work at the centre of government. Responsibilities are split between at least three departments. The Department for Business and Trade is engaged in relation to post-Brexit product safety standards. Defra ostensibly owns waste and resource management policies across the board, but all responsibility for the repair of electrical and electronic products now rests...


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