Results 761–780 of 2000 for speaker:Mr Neil Hamilton

9. 8. The General Principles of the Abolition of the Right to Buy and Associated Rights (Wales) Bill (18 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: It’s a pleasure to follow two combative speakers in comparison with which I can be made to look moderate and consensual. [Laughter.] It’s a curiously retrogressive Bill, this, because one of the policies that made Labour unelectable in the 1980s was its determined opposition to the introduction of the right to buy. Of course, the numbers are very different now so possibly it may not have...

5. 4. Debate: The European Union (Withdrawal) Bill (18 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: I’m afraid I can’t. I’m over the time already and I have to sit down. So, what I would say to the First Minister—

5. 4. Debate: The European Union (Withdrawal) Bill (18 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Yes, what I would say to the First Minister—in conclusion, Llywydd. What I would say to the First Minister, in conclusion, is: get with this, rather than trying to fight against it, because you will not be taken seriously if you carry on trying to resist a process that is inexorable and that the Welsh people themselves have voted for.

5. 4. Debate: The European Union (Withdrawal) Bill (18 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Diolch Llywydd. The First Minister frequently says that he accepts the referendum result, but, of course, he doesn’t really. He’s like those Japanese soldiers who used occasionally to be found in the Borneo jungles years after 1945 still fighting the war as though it had never been ended. This is another opportunity for the First Minister to grandstand on an issue where the Welsh people...

1. 1. Questions to the First Minister: <p>Questions Without Notice from the Party Leaders</p> (18 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Well, of course, it has been said by the developers all along that the great advantage of this facility was to be the centre of a much larger collection of firms that would generate jobs in the real economy of manufacturing for many, many years to come. Those jobs are now more speculative than before, but instead of a Government guarantee, which might never be called upon, we now have an...

1. 1. Questions to the First Minister: <p>Questions Without Notice from the Party Leaders</p> (18 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Well, the technology park will just deliver a set of empty buildings. There is no interest in those buildings that the First Minister can point to that gives any guarantee that they’ll be occupied for any automotive firm, or any other firm, actually, whereas, at least with a world-class race track, in the light of decisions that might be made in Silverstone, where formula 1 could move away,...

1. 1. Questions to the First Minister: <p>Questions Without Notice from the Party Leaders</p> (18 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Diolch, Llywydd. The First Minister will know that the Welsh economy is worth about £60 billion a year, and, of that, £38 billion is accounted for by public expenditure, between the UK Government and the Welsh Government—about two thirds of the total. Does he agree with me that there is an urgent need for greater diversification? We do need to get more private capital into Wales, to...

3. 3. Topical Questions: <p>Closure of Department for Work and Pensions Offices</p> (12 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: When the Minister meets the UK Minister tomorrow, she’ll be able to say that she has the united support of all the Assembly Members for Mid and West Wales, and indeed from my party as well as Plaid Cymru, in what she says. She’s absolutely right, of course, in relation to west Wales—one of the poorest parts not just of the United Kingdom, but in fact western Europe. It’s quite wrong...

2. 2. Questions to the Counsel General: <p>Article 50</p> (12 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: As I understand it, the Labour Party is committed to withdrawal from the European Union, pursuant to the decision of the British people in the referendum last year. So, isn’t this question a bit like those medieval questions, which concerned how many angels could dance on the head of a pin?

2. 2. Questions to the Counsel General: <p>The 1964 London Fisheries Convention</p> (12 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: It is of course the case that the United Kingdom is the signatory of the 1964 treaty, and therefore it is the UK Minister who will take the decision to withdraw from it, but I do agree with the implication of Simon Thomas’s question, that as fishing is a devolved matter, there ought to have been some consideration for the views of this Assembly and the Welsh Government. But I do hope that...

1. 1. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Education: <p>The Global Futures Plan</p> (12 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Diolch, Llywydd. When I was in school, the best part of 100 years ago, the policy was that everybody learnt at least one foreign language up to the age of 16. Things are radically different now, and I’m pleased to hear the figures that the Cabinet Secretary announced a moment ago and the emphasis that the Welsh Government is placing upon learning modern foreign languages. But one of the big...

QNR: Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Education (12 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Will the Cabinet Secretary make a statement on university tuition fees in Wales?

6. 5. Statement: The Welsh Language Strategy (11 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: I would like to give a warm welcome to this report as well, and the general approach that the Minister has brought to this. This is a series of measured and practical steps, I think, to go towards achieving the ultimate ambition of 1 million Welsh speakers by 2050, but I’d also like to commend him on the eloquence with which he concluded his statement about the reasons for supporting the...

2. 1. Questions to the First Minister: <p>Questions Without Notice from the Party Leaders</p> (11 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Well, I’ve made my point on that, but the EU comprises another 27 member states. With almost all of them, we have a trade deficit. In Germany’s case, for example, we have a trade deficit that amounts to £25 billion a year. One in 10 of every car made in Germany is exported to the United Kingdom. There is a massive interest in Germany in retaining the maximum possible free trade with...

2. 1. Questions to the First Minister: <p>Questions Without Notice from the Party Leaders</p> (11 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: The First Minister’s obfuscating here. He knows perfectly well that the aim of the UK Government is the same as the aim of the Welsh Government, and that is to achieve the maximum possible degree of free trade between the UK and the EU. But this is a reciprocal process. If we are not granted free trade to Europe, we will not grant the EU free trade with us, and, given that they have a trade...

2. 1. Questions to the First Minister: <p>Questions Without Notice from the Party Leaders</p> (11 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Llywydd, I agree absolutely 100 per cent with everything that the leader of Plaid Cymru has just said—[Interruption.] There are occasions when UKIP can be ecumenical. In the interests of the Welsh people, this is one of them, and it’s something that, perhaps, we can follow up in the Public Accounts Committee, if not in a public inquiry, if that be not granted. But I want to ask about the...

10. 10. Short Debate: Hate Crime — Is It on the Rise in Wales? ( 5 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Diolch yn fawr, Llywydd. I’m very pleased to have this opportunity to introduce an important short debate. In 14 years in the House of Commons, I never took advantage of the opportunity to have an adjournment debate at the end of the day, but they tended to be perhaps rather later in the day than short debates take place in the more enlightened atmosphere of the National Assembly. We hear...

8. 8. Plaid Cymru Debate: A Million Welsh Speakers ( 5 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Diolch yn fawr, Llywydd.There is a great deal in Plaid Cymru’s motion that we can agree with, and the reason why we put ‘delete all’ in our amendment is because that’s what Plaid Cymru always does when it tries to amend our motions. So, I’m afraid that we are just repaying them in kind. But we have never yet succeeded in having an amendment passed, so, therefore, I think this is a...

7. 7. Welsh Conservatives Debate: Regeneration Projects ( 5 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: I can supplement that further with another statement that occurred in the Cabinet Secretary’s most recent statement to this Assembly, where he said also that the level of financial risk borne by the private sector being less than 50 per cent, he explained: This is because the £210 million underwriting element would carry a higher risk than other parts of the financial package’, which...

7. 7. Welsh Conservatives Debate: Regeneration Projects ( 5 Jul 2017)

Mr Neil Hamilton: I don’t think that I could improve upon the devastating demolition that Adam Price conducted of the Government’s case on this, so I shan’t even attempt to do that, but I hope I’ll be able to add to it. This is, in addition, a devastating blow to industrial confidence in Wales and I can’t think that any potential investor in the future could rely upon the word of a Government...


Create an alert

Advanced search

Find this exact word or phrase

You can also do this from the main search box by putting exact words in quotes: like "cycling" or "hutton report"

By default, we show words related to your search term, like “cycle” and “cycles” in a search for cycling. Putting the word in quotes, like "cycling", will stop this.

Excluding these words

You can also do this from the main search box by putting a minus sign before words you don’t want: like hunting -fox

We also support a bunch of boolean search modifiers, like AND and NEAR, for precise searching.

Date range

to

You can give a start date, an end date, or both to restrict results to a particular date range. A missing end date implies the current date, and a missing start date implies the oldest date we have in the system. Dates can be entered in any format you wish, e.g. 3rd March 2007 or 17/10/1989

Person

Enter a name here to restrict results to contributions only by that person.

Section

Restrict results to a particular parliament or assembly that we cover (e.g. the Scottish Parliament), or a particular type of data within an institution, such as Commons Written Answers.

Column

If you know the actual Hansard column number of the information you are interested in (perhaps you’re looking up a paper reference), you can restrict results to that; you can also use column:123 in the main search box.