Results 1141–1160 of 6000 for speaker:Mr Neil Hamilton OR speaker:Mr Neil Hamilton OR speaker:Mr Neil Hamilton OR speaker:Mr Neil Hamilton OR speaker:Mr Neil Hamilton

1. 1. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Local Government: <p>External Advisory Panel on EU Withdrawal</p> (21 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: I’m sure the Minister will agree with me that, if this advisory panel is to be stuffed full of faint-hearted Remainers, it will be of very limited use. Therefore, there ought to be a role for Brexiteers such as myself and Andrew R.T. Davies, for example, who have a more optimistic view of the future than some of those that I’ve just mentioned. Although we might engage in what I might call...

3. 3. Statement: The Programme for Government — ‘Taking Wales Forward’ (20 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: In one thing, at least, I agree with the leader of the opposition, in that what we’ve heard today from the Welsh Government is a potpourri of platitudes. The one thing it will do is at least help the Government meet its recycling targets, because we’ve heard it all before many times—twice previously since I’ve been in this place from the beginning of May. If you look through the...

1. 1. Questions to the First Minister: <p>Questions Without Notice from the Party Leaders</p> (20 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Everybody agrees with that general principle and it has nothing whatever to do with the EU because we’re signed up to international conventions under the UN and the Geneva convention. Of course it’s right that refugees should be given asylum and protection from the countries where they can’t live in safety. But economic migration is a fact of life in Europe. Millions of people are...

1. 1. Questions to the First Minister: <p>Questions Without Notice from the Party Leaders</p> (20 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Can I bring the First Minister back to today, rather than 30 years ago, which is rather more relevant? By the way, Gareth Bennett did not take the view that people coming from Syria are all economic migrants, but the whole point about the law on refugees is that you’re entitled to refugee status in the first country to which you go for protection from the country from which you’re coming,...

1. 1. Questions to the First Minister: <p>Questions Without Notice from the Party Leaders</p> (20 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Diolch yn fawr, Lywydd. Well, I’m delighted to welcome the First Minister to signing up to UKIP policy on immigration. We’re making progress. But I’m sure the First Minister is looking forward with as much relish as I am to the result of the Labour Party leadership election being announced on Saturday. Does he agree with me that the election of Jeremy Corbyn as leader of the Labour...

7. 7. UKIP Wales Debate: Brexit and the Economy (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: [Continues.]—executed by people who we can elect and unelect and throw out if we don’t like the decisions they take. That is something that we can’t do in the EU.

7. 7. UKIP Wales Debate: Brexit and the Economy (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: I’ve come to the end of my speech, Madam Presiding Officer, and so I commend this motion to the house today in the spirit of optimism in which it is written.

7. 7. UKIP Wales Debate: Brexit and the Economy (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Well, I spoke too soon earlier on—we’ve heard the same chorus of Jeremiahs as we’ve heard over the years; the First Minister’s even refighting the 1981 budget. The Labour Party is stuck in a mindset of the past. The reason we had to have the 1981 budget was because of the 1979 winter of discontent when Labour last ruined the country in a big way. But we’re not here to refight the...

7. 7. UKIP Wales Debate: Brexit and the Economy (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Yes, certainly.

7. 7. UKIP Wales Debate: Brexit and the Economy (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Well, I wonder if Lee Waters is old enough to remember the 364 economists who predicted disaster after the 1981 budget, which proved to be the kick-start to the British economy, which gave us the massive growth—[Interruption.] Which gave us the massive growth that then took place in the British economy in the 1980s. Economics has traditionally been known as ‘the dismal science’ and for...

7. 7. UKIP Wales Debate: Brexit and the Economy (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Well, it’s true that the European Commission will be the body that does the negotiating, but anybody who knows anything about the EU knows who calls the shots within it. I have been a member of the European Council of Ministers, albeit some time ago, but, if you think that Germany will have little influence in these decisions, I’m afraid you’re not living in the same world as the rest...

7. 7. UKIP Wales Debate: Brexit and the Economy (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Sure.

7. 7. UKIP Wales Debate: Brexit and the Economy (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Diolch yn fawr iawn, Lywydd. As we approach the end of another hard day at the ‘wordface’, Members may be forgiven for thinking, as we have another debate on Brexit, that the subject may be inexhaustible but we are not. But, I rise to propose our motion that the National Assembly for Wales believes that Brexit gives Wales a great opportunity to boost trade, industry and employment;...

1. 1. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Environment and Rural Affairs: <p>Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople</p> (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: I’m well aware, of course, that that Cabinet Secretary was on the losing side of the argument with the Welsh people over whether it was a good thing for Wales to remain in the EU. It was notable that the biggest pro-Brexit votes were in seats that Labour has traditionally regarded as their strongest heartland seats, which shows you how out of touch with their own traditional supporters the...

1. 1. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Environment and Rural Affairs: <p>Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople</p> (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: At 740 new herds, in numerical terms, that’s 740 new sets of tragedy and I don’t regard that as in any way acceptable. As regards the Brexit negotiations that are going on, does the Cabinet Secretary not understand that this could be absolutely fatal in these negotiations for the interests of Welsh farmers? Because we all remember what happened with BSE, that even long after BSE ceased to...

1. 1. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Environment and Rural Affairs: <p>Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople</p> (14 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Of course, talk is one thing and action is another. We’ve seen lots of talk and no action. Actually, the position is even worse, I’m afraid, than that which Paul Davies pointed out because today the figures have been announced for the next month after May and they’re even worse. In the 12 months to June 2016, there were 9,476 cattle slaughtered in Wales—a 43 per cent increase on the...

5. 3. Statement: EU Transition (13 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: As regards the various models of the future that the First Minister referred to, it’s always dangerous when middle-aged men, of course, get involved with models—it usually ends in a rather bad way. [Interruption.]

5. 3. Statement: EU Transition (13 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: But I was encouraged by what the First Minister said in his reply to the leader of the opposition, because there is no need for us to adopt any models that are already in existence. What we want is a British-designed solution to the future.

5. 3. Statement: EU Transition (13 Sep 2016)

Mr Neil Hamilton: Or a Welsh one for that matter, yes, except that your own party doesn’t even believe in independence anymore, so that’s not on offer. So, the opportunity that this gives us is not just, of course, to do a free trade deal with the EU but also free trade deals with the rest of the world, and they are queuing up to do these deals with us. I can’t understand the First Minister’s pessimism...


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