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Daisy Cooper
Current MP
Daisy Cooper
· 2020–present
507 speeches on record Last active 24 Feb 2026
LD · Lib Dem
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor24 Feb 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
Specifically on this point, I am grateful that the Minister is willing to comply with the terms of this motion and that he is trying to manage expectations about the speed with which the Government may act. None the less, he will know that there will still be some members of the public who will…
Hansard · 24 Feb 2026 · parliament.uk
Engagements28 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
On behalf of my party, may I join the Deputy Prime Minister in marking Holocaust Memorial Day? We will not forget. We also honour the service of Captain Philip Gilbert Muldowney, who died on Sunday. While the Chinese regime still holds British citizen Jimmy Lai captive in prison, and while the Chinese regime continues to…
Hansard · 28 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Support for Businesses27 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
Thank you, Mr Speaker, and I wish you a speedy recovery. We know that pubs have been badly hit by these business rates changes, but businesses right across retail, hospitality and leisure have made investment and hiring decisions based on the expectation raised by this Government that they would get a full 20p discount on…
Hansard · 27 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Business Rates27 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
If the Government are serious about saving the high street, then these measures can only be the start. Since the Government’s first Budget, we Liberal Democrats have been warning that high streets were at risk if the Government did not make the various changes that they have made over the past 18 months. A number…
Hansard · 27 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Business Rates: Retail, Hospitality and Leisure19 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
These business rates changes will hammer high streets, and with the jobs tax on top, many businesses have already decided to shut up shop. Getting data out of the Government has been like getting blood from a stone; every question I am about to ask, I have asked before, but let me try again. Why…
Hansard · 19 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Clause 63 - Tax to be charged on certain pension interests13 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
This is a retrospective tax without transitional protection. It upends plans for those who have already made sacrifices to build up their pensions, undermines confidence in pensions planning, reduces long-term investment and causes people to rush to withdraw money from their pensions. As has been mentioned, the chartered institute and the ATT have raised concerns…
Hansard · 13 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Clause 83 - Rate of remote gaming duty13 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
We Liberal Democrats have long campaigned for the doubling of remote gaming duty, and we are grateful to the Government, who have finally listened and taken that on board. This measure will raise vital revenue in a fair way, while addressing the eye-watering profits of the big online gambling companies and standing up for the…
Hansard · 13 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Clause 86 - Rates of duty13 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
Clause 86 increases the rate of alcohol duty in line with RPI inflation. On paper, that measure might look like a normal, simple uprating policy, but it must be seen for what it really is: in the broader context, it is yet another tax on struggling hospitality businesses and financially stretched customers. Hospitality is being…
Hansard · 13 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Clause 1 - Income tax charge for tax year 2026-2712 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
I will speak to clauses 1 to 8 and schedules 1 and 2. Overall, the tax changes increase complexity, raise the tax burden on small businesses and savers, and raise the risk of serious unintended consequences on the property market. They all have the hallmarks of a Treasury tax grab without proper the consideration of…
Hansard · 12 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Clause 9 - Freezing starting rate limit for savings for tax years 2026-27 to 2030-3112 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
These stealth taxes were started by the Conservatives and are being continued by Labour. When the Liberal Democrats were in government, we made sure to raise the income tax thresholds, taking people out of paying tax, but it is clear that the two biggest parties continue to drag more people into paying tax. According to…
Hansard · 12 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Agricultural Property Relief and Business Property Relief5 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
Happy new year to you, Mr Speaker, and to House staff and all Members in the Chamber. This policy was a disaster from the get-go. It came with no warning, no consultation and no clue. The Liberal Democrats were the first party to point out the damage it would do to family farms. We have…
Hansard · 5 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Venezuela5 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
President Trump’s actions are not about drugs; they are about oil. They are not about regional stability; they are about regional dominance. They are not about upholding the law; they are about breaking it. The Foreign Secretary has said that the Government have been clear, but she has not been clear on any of those…
Hansard · 5 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Point of Order5 Jan 2026
DC
Daisy Cooper
On a point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker. Can you advise me on how I might elicit satisfactory responses to a series of written questions I have tabled to the Treasury on the impact of business rates on retail, hospitality and leisure businesses? I asked for very specific figures relating to the number of businesses…
Hansard · 5 Jan 2026 · parliament.uk
Finance (No. 2) Bill16 Dec 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
If this Finance Bill represents anything, I am sorry to say that it represents the fact that the Government know the cost of everything and the value of nothing. We Liberal Democrats have tabled a reasoned amendment against this Bill, setting out all the reasons why we are against it. Ultimately, this Bill is a…
Hansard · 16 Dec 2025 · parliament.uk
Conduct of the Chancellor of the Exchequer10 Dec 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
It is a real delight to speak in this debate, because I honestly thought that I would not get the chance. There was a risk, I thought, that the shadow Chancellor might even filibuster in his own Opposition day debate, much as I enjoy his poetry readings and so forth. We all know that the…
Hansard · 10 Dec 2025 · parliament.uk
EU Exit: Economic Growth9 Dec 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
The botched Brexit deal has wrapped up British businesses in red tape and blown a hole in the public finances to the tune of £90 billion a year. The Chancellor insists that her No. 1 mission remains to get economic growth. If that is the case, will she and her Ministers vote with the Liberal…
Hansard · 9 Dec 2025 · parliament.uk
Hospitality Sector and SMEs9 Dec 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
High street hospitality businesses are on a knife edge—this is a disaster in the making. The Government say that they have rebalanced business rates, but that is not the case. UKHospitality says that the average increase for hospitality businesses will be 76% over the next three years, compared with warehouses, offices and large supermarkets, which…
Hansard · 9 Dec 2025 · parliament.uk
Office for Budget Responsibility Forecasts1 Dec 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I understand that the Minister says he does not have all the answers to the questions about the incredibly serious security failings at the OBR, but has he requested or received any advice on whether the attempts to access the information might have reached a criminal threshold under the Criminal Justice Act 2003 or a…
Hansard · 1 Dec 2025 · parliament.uk
Income tax (charge)27 Nov 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
This time last year, Government Ministers told us repeatedly that their No. 1 mission was growth, but after Labour’s second Budget, it is clear that growth is nowhere to be seen. The OBR makes it clear that the Budget has almost no meaningful growth measures at all. The Confederation of British Industry has concluded that…
Hansard · 27 Nov 2025 · parliament.uk
G20 and Ukraine25 Nov 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I thank the Prime Minister for advance sight of his statement. If this is the end game for Putin’s illegal and murderous war, we have one chance to get it right and to safeguard the future of Ukraine and Europe. The stakes could not be higher. Many of us fear that President Trump is gearing…
Hansard · 25 Nov 2025 · parliament.uk
Budget: Press Briefings17 Nov 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
These leaks are not just Westminster tittle-tattle; they have a real impact on people’s lives and livelihoods. The cold weather has now reached all corners of Britain, and households do not know if they can afford to put the heating on, because they do not know if their taxes are going up or down or…
Hansard · 17 Nov 2025 · parliament.uk
Business of the House13 Nov 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
In June, I met the Under-Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, the hon. Member for Kingston upon Hull West and Haltemprice (Emma Hardy) , to press the Government to adopt the measures in my Chalk Streams (Sewerage Investment) Bill. I was delighted by her commitments, namely that she would investigate whether Ministers…
Hansard · 13 Nov 2025 · parliament.uk
Engagements5 Nov 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
On behalf of my party, may I join the Deputy Prime Minister in expressing our horror at the terrifying knife attack at the weekend and pay tribute to all those, including the emergency services, who put themselves in harm’s way to protect others? As we approach Remembrance Sunday, may I also join him in remembering…
Hansard · 5 Nov 2025 · parliament.uk
Agricultural and Business Property Relief: Impact on Farmers4 Nov 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
On Friday I sat with farmers and their families in Brecon and Radnor, and they are desperate. If they are 65 or over, they have no time to plan for the family farm tax, they cannot get insurance, and they will be put in an impossible position if the Government go ahead with the tax…
Hansard · 4 Nov 2025 · parliament.uk
Employer National Insurance Contributions: Business Impact4 Nov 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Analysis by UKHospitality suggests that more than half the job losses in the UK since last year’s Budget have come from its sector. That is further evidence that the jobs tax has been bad for growth and bad for job opportunities. We Liberal Democrats have set out fairer ways of raising revenue and going for…
Hansard · 4 Nov 2025 · parliament.uk
Stamp Duty Land Tax28 Oct 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Our tax system is a mess. It is complicated and unfair. It is riddled with cliff edges that distort behaviours and create inequities, and there are exemptions that have not been reviewed for years. Council tax is outdated and hated. Inheritance tax and capital gains allow the super-wealthy to exploit loopholes while the squeezed middle…
Hansard · 28 Oct 2025 · parliament.uk
Engagements15 Oct 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
May I associate myself and my party with the tributes to David Amess? On behalf of my party, may I also pay tribute to Ming Campbell, who is being laid to rest today? That is the reason why my right hon. Friend the Member for Kingston and Surbiton (Ed Davey) cannot be here. I thank…
Hansard · 15 Oct 2025 · parliament.uk
Employer National Insurance Contributions: Economic Growth9 Sep 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
The jobs tax has hit small businesses the hardest, with statistics from the Office for National Statistics showing that vacancies among small businesses alone have dropped by 18%. This proves that the jobs tax is not only crushing growth but crushing opportunity, especially in hospitality. Have Treasury Ministers commissioned their officials to look at any…
Hansard · 9 Sep 2025 · parliament.uk
Agricultural Property Relief and Business Property Relief: Impact on Farming9 Sep 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
We Liberal Democrats oppose the family farm tax, but in the spirit of constructive opposition, last November I recommended and requested that Ministers look at the idea of a family farm test, such as the ones used in France and Ireland. Such a test would ensure that they could close the loophole on big equity…
Hansard · 9 Sep 2025 · parliament.uk
Property Taxes3 Sep 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I begin by adding my voice and that of my party to the others who have welcomed the hon. Member for Chipping Barnet (Dan Tomlinson) to the Front Bench. Like so many other things, property taxes in this country are broken and hopelessly out of date. Council tax is regressive; stamp duty is a transaction…
Hansard · 3 Sep 2025 · parliament.uk
Financial Services Reform16 Jul 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
There is much to welcome in the statement. I hope that it sends a strong signal to the fintech sector and sustainable finance that UK plc is open for business, but it is important to get the balance right between growth and risk. We Liberal Democrats welcome the announcement of a scale-up unit. Will it…
Hansard · 16 Jul 2025 · parliament.uk
Government Performance against Fiscal Rules7 Jul 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
We all know the Government had a terrible inheritance from the previous Government, whether it was the incompetence of covid contracts, the mini-Budget or the botched Brexit deal. But at the same time, last year’s Labour Budget was a Treasury tax grab with no vision for the economy and no regard to the impact on…
Hansard · 7 Jul 2025 · parliament.uk
Women’s State Pension Age: Financial Redress3 Jul 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I, too, congratulate the hon. Member for Salford (Rebecca Long Bailey) on securing the debate, on campaigning on this issue, and on making sure that this debate came to the main Chamber. I thank all hon. Members for their contributions this afternoon. As well as hearing the very strong and powerful case around this particular…
Hansard · 3 Jul 2025 · parliament.uk
Employer National Insurance Contributions1 Jul 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Non-profit businesses and charities have been hit really hard by the jobs tax. Last week, my local meals on wheels service told me that businesses like theirs around the country are having to make redundancies and put up prices for vulnerable people. In the context of today’s welfare reforms that the Government are pursuing, can…
Hansard · 1 Jul 2025 · parliament.uk
Topical Questions1 Jul 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
More than 50% of local authorities are having to overspend on the dedicated schools grant to cover the rising costs of SEND services, and the increasing demand for inter-authority borrowing has pushed up interest rates. May I urge the Chancellor to consider, as a matter of urgency—even before the Government publish their White Paper on…
Hansard · 1 Jul 2025 · parliament.uk
Engagements25 Jun 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I associate myself and my party with the remarks of the Deputy Prime Minister in calling for de-escalation in the middle east, the release of hostages and urgent aid to get into Gaza. We Liberal Democrats oppose the Government’s cut to personal independence payments and carer’s allowance. With a growing rebellion on the Government Benches,…
Hansard · 25 Jun 2025 · parliament.uk
Schedule 2 - Assisted Dying Review Panels20 Jun 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Will the right hon. Gentleman give way on that point?
Hansard · 20 Jun 2025 · parliament.uk
Engagements18 Jun 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
On behalf of my party, may I associate myself with the Deputy Prime Minister’s remarks about the Air India crash? In a week that we remember the murder of Jo Cox and David Amess, our party’s thoughts are with their friends and families and all those in this House who lost their beloved friends. We…
Hansard · 18 Jun 2025 · parliament.uk
Spending Review 202511 Jun 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
It has been almost a year since Labour swept to power with the promise of change, but we are still not seeing the scale of ambition needed to turn the country around. We welcome the announcement of investment in the NHS, but it will not work unless the Government invest in social care too. We…
Hansard · 11 Jun 2025 · parliament.uk
Regional Growth4 Jun 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
We Liberal Democrats believe that when the economy is growing, every nation, every region and every person should feel and see the benefits, so we are pleased to see investment in public transport and public infrastructure, but I must ask the Minister: where is the plan and the money for rural areas? He will remember…
Hansard · 4 Jun 2025 · parliament.uk
Business Costs: Impact of Autumn Budget20 May 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
In the Budget the Government reduced business rates relief, which is hitting small businesses hard. Under current plans, in the next financial year small independent businesses could see their rates go up by 80% and chains could see theirs go down by 40%. I have shared that analysis with Ministers; will the Chancellor please promise…
Hansard · 20 May 2025 · parliament.uk
Topical Questions20 May 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Yesterday the Chancellor said that she understands the concerns that some people have about the limit at which the winter fuel payment is removed. Does she therefore now agree that restricting the eligibility so tightly was a mistake?
Hansard · 20 May 2025 · parliament.uk
New Clause 10 - No obligation to provide assistance etc16 May 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
On that point, will the hon. Lady give way?
Hansard · 16 May 2025 · parliament.uk
United States Film Tariff7 May 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Film studios are a really important part of our economy in Hertfordshire and give opportunities, jobs, apprenticeships and work experience to people in my constituency. As the Minister has recognised, it is not remotely clear yet how the tariffs will operate, and many have said that they are unworkable, but if America goes ahead and…
Hansard · 7 May 2025 · parliament.uk
Hospitals23 Apr 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
My hon. Friend mentions the inordinate delays that occur with regard to applications for capital funds. I have watched with horror as my local hospital trust in West Hertfordshire has had to submit business case after business case while watching the costs rack up. Does she agree that one way to spend the allocated money…
Hansard · 23 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk
Sewage23 Apr 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
The Secretary of State referred to rare ecological rivers that can be damaged by sewage pollution. In my constituency, we have a very rare chalk stream, the River Ver. Thames Water says that many of the sewage spills happen because the pipes are old and porous. Part of the solution is to line them, but…
Hansard · 23 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk
Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill12 Apr 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Recalling Parliament today was absolutely the right thing to do, but to be frank, it is extraordinary that we find ourselves in a situation in which our sovereign steel industry is in such peril as a result of the Conservatives’ failings and the Labour Government are now trying to give themselves unprecedented powers. It is…
Hansard · 12 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk
Speaker’s Statement8 Apr 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
People up and down the country will be incredibly concerned about what Trump’s trade war means for their living standards and their communities. At the same time, people want to show that Britain is not going to take Donald Trump’s trade tariffs lying down. We welcome the Chancellor’s announcement that the Government will be working…
Hansard · 8 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk
High Streets: Liverpool Riverside8 Apr 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
To follow on from what the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon) said, high streets up and down the land, be they in Liverpool Riverside, St Albans or anywhere else, have just been hit with the double whammy of the jobs tax and higher business rates bills. What steps are Ministers taking to prevent an…
Hansard · 8 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk
Topical Questions8 Apr 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I welcome the fast action by the Government to convene the automotive industry in reaction to President Trump’s damaging tariffs, but the measures in and of themselves will not create new export markets or stimulate demand here in the UK. Will Ministers look at Liberal Democrat calls to reintroduce the plug-in car grant and equalise…
Hansard · 8 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk
Horizon Redress and Post Office Update8 Apr 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
We Liberal Democrats welcome the progress that the Government have made, but the redress payment processes are still too slow. First, victims claiming under the Horizon shortfall scheme continue to face significant up-front complexity without legal advice. I welcome the Minister’s announcement that the Government will be writing to that group, but could he please…
Hansard · 8 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk
Business of the House3 Apr 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
On 6 February , I asked the Leader of the House if she would “use every lever in her power” to ensure that this House had a debate on the climate emissions framework “before any new airport expansion is given the green light”, including at Luton airport. The Leader of the House replied, saying “I…
Hansard · 3 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk
UK-US Trade and Tariffs3 Apr 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I thank the Secretary of State for advance sight of his statement. Donald Trump has launched a destructive trade war that threatens the jobs and living standards of people across the UK and around the world. Let us be clear: this is not about reciprocity or a level playing field. The US is conflating our…
Hansard · 3 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk
NHS Pensions1 Apr 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I have a constituent who is suffering both financial and emotional distress as a result of these circumstances. I wrote to the NHS Business Services Authority, and it took four months to get a response. In written questions to the Government, I have asked how I might make representations about my constituent being affected by…
Hansard · 1 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk
Spring Statement26 Mar 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
The people of this country are crying out for change, but they feel they are just getting more of the same. Of course, it was the Conservative party that wrecked the public finances, but we are eight months into the new Government and people are left wondering, “Where is the change that was promised?” The…
Hansard · 26 Mar 2025 · parliament.uk
Topical Questions25 Mar 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Following my long-running campaign, I am grateful to the Government for finally updating the outdated Treasury rules that were preventing local health boards from spending more money on keeping city centre GP locations. Will the Government now issue guidance to local health boards and NHS trusts to accelerate the pooling of resources, so that we…
Hansard · 25 Mar 2025 · parliament.uk
After Clause 1 - Exemptions from the changes made by section 1: NHS and social care25 Mar 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I rise to speak to Lords amendments 1B, 5B, 8B and 21B. Even before the Budget, there were rumours that the Government were thinking of introducing a hike to national insurance contributions. We Liberal Democrats issued a stark warning to the Government. We challenged them at Prime Minister’s questions and in questions to the Deputy…
Hansard · 25 Mar 2025 · parliament.uk
Clause 1 - Rate of secondary Class 1 contributions19 Mar 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Notwithstanding what was said by the hon. Member for Loughborough (Dr Sandher) , the Lords amendments were clearly not designed with the aim of creating a simpler tax system. They have been sent to us to consider because they may create a fairer society, and that, in my view, should be a driving force in…
Hansard · 19 Mar 2025 · parliament.uk
New Clause 39 - Trade union recognition12 Mar 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I rise to speak to parts 4 and 5 of the Bill, and specifically to new clause 19, tabled by my hon. Friend the Member for Torbay (Steve Darling) , and new clauses 110, 111 and 112, which stand in my name. I wish to put on record my thanks to my two Liberal Democrat…
Hansard · 12 Mar 2025 · parliament.uk
NICs Increase: Impact on Economic Growth4 Mar 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Health and wealth are two sides of the same coin, and we will not get economic growth without a healthy population. But as a result of the national insurance contribution changes, the Care Provider Alliance reports that 73% of social care providers will have to refuse new care packages from local authorities or the NHS,…
Hansard · 4 Mar 2025 · parliament.uk
Building Safety Documentation3 Mar 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
What steps she is taking to help people impacted by EWS1 fire safety certificates issued by Tri Fire.
Hansard · 3 Mar 2025 · parliament.uk
New Clause 1 - Review of impact of section 1 on recipients of the full rate of the new state pension3 Mar 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Does the hon. Gentleman agree that one thing that could be done very quickly is that the Government could legislate so that all Airbnb properties need planning permission? That would release a lot of short-term lets back into the market as longer-term lets for younger people.
Hansard · 3 Mar 2025 · parliament.uk
Grenfell Tower Inquiry: Phase 2 Report26 Feb 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I welcome the Deputy Prime Minister’s statement. I particularly welcome the Government’s acceptance of the recommendation on professionalising and regulating fire engineers and assessors, not least because five years ago, in the Committee on the Fire Safety Act 2021, I tabled new clause 2, which would have created a public register of fire risk assessors.…
Hansard · 26 Feb 2025 · parliament.uk
Family Businesses26 Feb 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I have been invited to make an intervention, so I will very quickly say that while the right hon. Gentleman was reasonably outspoken on the mini-Budget, the same cannot be said of his colleagues on the Front Bench.
Hansard · 26 Feb 2025 · parliament.uk
Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill10 Feb 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
On that point, will the hon. Gentleman give way?
Hansard · 10 Feb 2025 · parliament.uk
Business of the House6 Feb 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
The Government’s expressed political support for Heathrow airport expansion has sparked concerns that they might be getting ready to expand Luton airport too, despite the fact that the Government’s own climate advisers say that no net expansion of airports should go ahead until there is a climate emissions framework in place. Have any Ministers indicated…
Hansard · 6 Feb 2025 · parliament.uk
Growing the UK Economy29 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
The Government are absolutely right to focus on economic growth, but their blinkered approach on Europe is holding back British businesses and stifling the very growth that we need to fund our public services. By ruling out negotiations with the EU on a bespoke customs union and a youth mobility scheme, the Chancellor’s dash for…
Hansard · 29 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
Charter for Budget Responsibility29 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
The shadow Minister talks fondly about the importance of family farms. Where were his comments on that topic when his party was negotiating trade deals with Australia and New Zealand that have sorely impacted farms around the country?
Hansard · 29 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
Welfare Cap29 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
When I visited the jobcentre in St Albans last year I, too, was struck by the fantastic support given by some of the work coaches. However, I was also struck by what some of the jobseekers had to say. One said that she had been in full employment, but had to give up her job…
Hansard · 29 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
Climate and Nature Bill24 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I agree with the hon. Member’s point about the kind of growth we want. Does he agree that if the Government were to proceed with expanding Luton airport, as rumours suggest, that would fly in the face of advice from the Government’s own climate experts and economists, who say that it would not deliver the…
Hansard · 24 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Money)22 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Members in this House who have spoken against the money resolution say they are doing so because they have so many unanswered questions about the costs. Does the right hon. Lady agree that if Members vote against the resolution, they will never get those answers? That is precisely why the Bill should move forwards.
Hansard · 22 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
Bank Resolution (Recapitalisation) Bill [Lords]22 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
All of our constituents are still feeling the cost of living crisis very acutely, and mortgage holders are still suffering from the misery of the mini-Budget, so the very last thing that taxpayers want to worry about is whether public money will be used to bail out banks that have gone bust. That is why…
Hansard · 22 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
Servicing Government Debt21 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
The rising cost of borrowing will bring more misery to mortgage holders, with reports suggesting that some mortgage holders could pay an extra £500 a year. Given that potential global trade tensions could further affect the UK’s financial stability, what assurances will the Government provide that UK lenders remain in a strong position to support…
Hansard · 21 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
Supporting SMEs, Retail, and Hospitality and Tourism21 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
A number of small high street businesses will be hit hard by the Government’s jobs tax and the dramatic reduction in business rates relief, and House of Commons Library research that I commissioned shows that from April 2026 the Government’s reforms to business rates could leave small and independent businesses in effect subsidising the big…
Hansard · 21 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
New Hospital Programme Review20 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
The previous Conservative Government promises the people of west Hertfordshire that we would have a new hospital, and they even claimed that it was fully funded, so our sense of betrayal is incredibly acute. Today, the Labour Government have announced that the rebuild start for Watford general hospital has been pushed back by seven to…
Hansard · 20 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
New Clause 1 - Review of impact on businesses, high streets and economic growth15 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
My hon. Friend is giving an impassioned speech about the importance of business rates reform. Does she agree that there is a risk of unintended consequences in what the Government are proposing? At the moment, the 75% relief is capped at £110,000, but when the relief goes to zero in two years’ time, that cap…
Hansard · 15 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
UK-China Economic and Financial Dialogue14 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
I thank the Chancellor for advance sight of her statement. Let us be blunt: the Budget has not worked. The Chancellor says that the Government’s No. 1 mission is growth, but to date there are no signs that the Government are going to deliver it. The national insurance contributions rise is self-defeating. It undermines growth—it…
Hansard · 14 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
New Clause 13 - Prohibition of rent in advance after lease entered into (except initial rent)14 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
The shadow Minister talks about situations in which tenants must leave a property. A constituent of mine had a terrible ordeal. She moved into a new rental property, but after three months it became uninhabitable, and she spent a further 11 weeks going in and out of eight Airbnbs. She was left thousands of pounds…
Hansard · 14 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill8 Jan 2025
DC
Daisy Cooper
Will the hon. Member give way?
Hansard · 8 Jan 2025 · parliament.uk
Clause 1 - Rate of secondary Class 1 contributions17 Dec 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
Part-time workers, especially in the hospitality sector, will be very badly affected. Before these changes a person could work 14 hours a week without incurring employers’ national insurance contributions, but that has now been reduced to eight hours, which will be very disruptive to weekend shifts in particular. Does the hon. Lady agree that that…
Hansard · 17 Dec 2024 · parliament.uk
Clause 50 - Increased rates for additional dwellings: transactions before 1 April 202511 Dec 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
We Liberal Democrats have long campaigned against what has become, in some places, the scourge of second homes. In too many cases they disrupt or destroy local communities. However, I argue, as does my party, that this is not the best way of doing it. Clauses 50 to 53 raise the stamp duty surcharge on…
Hansard · 11 Dec 2024 · parliament.uk
Clause 7 - Main rates of CGT for gains other than carried interest gains10 Dec 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
I commend the Government for looking at capital gains tax as a potential source of revenue to get public services back on their feet, but we Liberal Democrats believe there was a better way of doing it. Right now, capital gains tax is unfair for everyone. Most people already pay too much capital gains tax…
Hansard · 10 Dec 2024 · parliament.uk
Clause 15 - Increase in rate of energy (oil and gas) profits levy10 Dec 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
At the heart of the debate is a stark injustice, understood by every man, woman and child on the streets of Great Britain. In the last few years, oil and gas giants have made eye-watering profits—in many cases, they are profits that they did not expect to make—and they have made them off the back…
Hansard · 10 Dec 2024 · parliament.uk
Employer National Insurance Contributions4 Dec 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
On 23 October , at Deputy Prime Minister’s questions, I warned the Government that an increase in national insurance contributions would impact not only millions of small businesses but social care providers. That was a week before the Budget. Here we are, six weeks on from that exchange, and we are still talking about the…
Hansard · 4 Dec 2024 · parliament.uk
National Insurance Contributions3 Dec 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
Citizens Advice in St Albans supports some of the most vulnerable people to access public services. It says that the changes to national insurance contributions will “hit hard because we employ mostly part-time staff and the change to the threshold means we go from paying nothing to the full amount for each staff member. The…
Hansard · 3 Dec 2024 · parliament.uk
UK Supply Chains: Uyghur Forced Labour3 Dec 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
May I, too, congratulate the hon. Member for Rotherham (Sarah Champion) on securing the urgent question, and welcome the Minister back to Parliament and to his place? Food labelling and food safety are among the most important issues for our diet and for our health. They allow consumers to make informed choices, and to ensure…
Hansard · 3 Dec 2024 · parliament.uk
National Insurance Contributions (Secondary Class 1 Contributions) Bill3 Dec 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
This Saturday is Small Business Saturday. It is an opportunity for every single one of us to celebrate the fantastic small businesses in our constituencies—businesses that are the engine of our economy and the backbone of our communities. We know that behind every single business there is a story. Either it is a family business…
Hansard · 3 Dec 2024 · parliament.uk
Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill29 Nov 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
One group of people who are not often talked about are the learning disabled. Clause 9(3)(b) says that if an assessing doctor has any doubt as to the capacity of the person, they may refer them for a further psychiatric assessment. If the Bill is voted through today, will the hon. Member engage in a…
Hansard · 29 Nov 2024 · parliament.uk
Engagements27 Nov 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
If he will list his official engagements for Wednesday 27 November.
Hansard · 27 Nov 2024 · parliament.uk
Finance Bill27 Nov 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
It is an honour to follow the hon. Member for South Derbyshire (Samantha Niblett) , and I congratulate her on her very heartfelt maiden speech. I commend her for her commitment to the NHS, and for her desire to be a role model for the next generation of women, who will follow up the ladder…
Hansard · 27 Nov 2024 · parliament.uk
Non-Domestic Rating (Multipliers and Private Schools) Bill25 Nov 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
The Great British high street is on life support. Many bricks-and-mortar businesses are barely surviving and, where they are, it is often against the odds. Changes in our trading relationship with Europe, the covid-19 pandemic, energy prices, the cost of living and the Conservatives’ disastrous mini-Budget have all taken their toll, but for years one…
Hansard · 25 Nov 2024 · parliament.uk
Engagements20 Nov 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
May I associate myself and the Liberal Democrats with the Deputy Prime Minister’s remarks on Ukraine? Ahead of the Budget, I warned the Deputy Prime Minister that increasing national insurance contributions on social care providers would make the crisis in social care worse. Now, OBR figures suggest that the increase in NICs will cost more…
Hansard · 20 Nov 2024 · parliament.uk
Financial Services: Mansion House Speech18 Nov 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
We welcome any reforms that will provide an effective route to growth without putting undue pressure on people’s savings, so we look forward to seeing more details from the Government. In the meantime, I press Ministers on their broader goal of getting investment in innovation. Constituents in St Albans report that their small and medium-sized…
Hansard · 18 Nov 2024 · parliament.uk
Income Tax (Charge)6 Nov 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
It is a pleasure to follow the hon. Member for Vauxhall and Camberwell Green (Florence Eshalomi) , who has given another customarily powerful speech and reminded us of the injustices facing those who fall between the cracks. We live in an uncertain and unstable world, and the US election result makes it more so. As…
Hansard · 6 Nov 2024 · parliament.uk
Pension Credit: Processing of Applications29 Oct 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
As the newly appointed Treasury spokesperson for the Liberal Democrats, this is my first opportunity to welcome the Chancellor and Ministers to their places. Notwithstanding that, on the winter fuel payment, the Government need to think again. I recently spoke with representatives of Citizens Advice in St Albans, who are deeply concerned that letters from…
Hansard · 29 Oct 2024 · parliament.uk
Economic Investment and Growth29 Oct 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
Small businesses are the engine of our economy, but many of them are penalised for investing in their businesses because of the broken business rates system. Will the Chancellor ensure that investment is exempted from business rates, and will she ensure that the Budget tomorrow is the final Budget in which business rates are a…
Hansard · 29 Oct 2024 · parliament.uk
Fiscal Rules28 Oct 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
Under the Conservatives, the fiscal rules changed five times in seven years, so a change to fiscal rules is not that unusual in and of itself. However, does the Minister agree that what would be completely unforgivable is a repeat of the Conservatives’ disastrous mini-Budget, in which they tried to pursue £40 billion of unfunded…
Hansard · 28 Oct 2024 · parliament.uk
Engagements23 Oct 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
May I associate myself and the Liberal Democrats with the Deputy Prime Minister’s remarks about Chris Hoy, and about all those involved in the train crash? Our NHS is bracing itself for a winter crisis. One of the causes of the winter crisis every year is that there are thousands of people in hospitals who…
Hansard · 23 Oct 2024 · parliament.uk
Business of the House17 Oct 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
Two days ago, the Conservative administration at Hertfordshire county council filibustered during a debate, preventing a Liberal Democrat motion on improving special educational needs and disabilities services in Hertfordshire from being debated at all. May we have a debate in Government time about the importance of scrutiny and constructive opposition at all levels of government,…
Hansard · 17 Oct 2024 · parliament.uk
International Investment Summit17 Oct 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
I welcome the Minister to her place. I also thank her for her support when she was not in this place and I was further back on these Benches, and we worked together on some of the issues under focus today. We Liberal Democrats want Britain to be one of the most attractive places in…
Hansard · 17 Oct 2024 · parliament.uk
Carer’s Allowance16 Oct 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
This Government have talked about a duty of candour. Can the Minister give an assurance that if people working at the DWP have information about maladministration and poor management of the service that they have witnessed and wish to come forward with that information, they will be protected as whistleblowers?
Hansard · 16 Oct 2024 · parliament.uk
Access to Primary Healthcare16 Oct 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
The Minister may be aware that I lobbied Health and Treasury Ministers in the previous Government for the best part of a year and a half to review outdated Treasury rules that prevent GP practices that want to move from staying within a city centre—the outdated rules force them to move to ring-road locations, away…
Hansard · 16 Oct 2024 · parliament.uk
Renters’ Rights Bill9 Oct 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
The hon. Member is making an excellent speech, and I am delighted to see that no-fault evictions will finally be banned. On the point about local government, does she agree with my party that it is imperative that local authorities are given the powers to regulate the numbers and locations of Airbnbs? We know that…
Hansard · 9 Oct 2024 · parliament.uk
Anniversary of 7 October Attacks: Middle East7 Oct 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
The House knows that when events unfold abroad they often reverberate on our streets here at home. Despite the trauma of the last 12 months, I am incredibly proud that rabbis, imams and other religious leaders in St Albans have worked hand in glove to make a bold statement called “Five principles for dialogue: why…
Hansard · 7 Oct 2024 · parliament.uk
Parliamentary Debate12 Sep 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
Much of the content of Lord Darzi’s report has been known for some years. None the less, today’s report is a scathing summary of the complete devastation that the Conservatives have wrought on our health services and on the health of our communities. We Liberal Democrats have long argued that we need to shift healthcare…
Hansard · 12 Sep 2024 · parliament.uk
NHS: Independent Investigation12 Sep 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
Much of the content of Lord Darzi’s report has been known for some years. None the less, today’s report is a scathing summary of the complete devastation that the Conservatives have wrought on our health services and on the health of our communities. We Liberal Democrats have long argued that we need to shift healthcare…
Hansard · 12 Sep 2024 · parliament.uk
Grenfell Tower Inquiry Phase 2 Report4 Sep 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
The inquiry report is damning, and the testimony that we heard is utterly devastating. First and foremost, all our thoughts are with the victims, the survivors, the bereaved and everybody affected. In the last Parliament, many of us fought tooth and nail on a cross-party basis to improve the Fire Safety Bill and the Building…
Hansard · 4 Sep 2024 · parliament.uk
Building Homes30 Jul 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
I welcome you to your place, Madam Deputy Speaker. I also thank the Deputy Prime Minister for giving me advance sight of her statement, and associate myself and my party with her remarks about the devastating and senseless attacks in Southport. Our thoughts and prayers are with all those affected. For too long under the…
Hansard · 30 Jul 2024 · parliament.uk
Public Spending: Inheritance29 Jul 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
The legacy of the Conservatives’ new hospitals programme is dire, but the Chancellor will know that there is also a cost to delay. We have life-expired buildings that will continue to need to be patched up until they are replaced, so I urge the Chancellor, as I urged the Secretary of State for Health and…
Hansard · 29 Jul 2024 · parliament.uk
New Hospital Programme23 Jul 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
I welcome the Secretary of State and his Ministers to their roles, but let me gently warn him that if he intends to run a contest on which Member can harangue him the most on crumbling hospitals, our 72 Liberal Democrat MPs say, “Challenge accepted.” Under the Conservatives, the new hospital programme ground to a…
Hansard · 23 Jul 2024 · parliament.uk
Health and Social Care Reform23 Jul 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
The Liberal Democrats spoke about care a great deal during the general election campaign. At the heart of our plans was our pledge to introduce free personal care. Will Ministers please confirm whether they intend to open cross-party talks and, if so, whether free personal care will be on the table as one potential option?
Hansard · 23 Jul 2024 · parliament.uk
CrowdStrike: IT Outage22 Jul 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
This is my first opportunity to welcome Ministers to their places. I thank the Minister for advance sight of the statement. I want to focus on the impact on the NHS. My thanks, and I am sure those of the entire House, go to all NHS staff who have been scrambling to deal with urgent…
Hansard · 22 Jul 2024 · parliament.uk
Economy, Welfare and Public Services22 Jul 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
I congratulate the hon. Member for North Durham (Luke Akehurst) on an excellent maiden speech that highlighted the values of equality and fairness—principles that many of us can agree on—and on demonstrating his stamina by being the last Member to be called. With that level of stamina, I am sure that he will give the…
Hansard · 22 Jul 2024 · parliament.uk
Israel and Gaza20 May 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
It is the position of the Liberal Democrats that the UK Government should give their backing to the ICC. If the Conservative Government do not believe the ICC has jurisdiction, which international institution or legal mechanism do they intend to look to in order to ensure that any breaches of the law of war on…
Hansard · 20 May 2024 · parliament.uk
Engagements24 Apr 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
On behalf of the Liberal Democrats, I offer our condolences to the friends and family of the late Lord Frank Field, and wish a happy Passover to all those in the Jewish community. Unpaid carers have shared heartbreaking stories of how they have been hounded by the Department for Work and Pensions and told to…
Hansard · 24 Apr 2024 · parliament.uk
Topical Questions23 Apr 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
West Hertfordshire Hospital Trust is at the front of the queue for the new hospital programme. We have the land, planning permission, building design, political and staff support, and enabling works are under way. But, like many other trusts around the country, the hospital trust is being asked to submit business case after business case.…
Hansard · 23 Apr 2024 · parliament.uk
Tobacco and Vapes Bill16 Apr 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
First, I want to put on record my thanks to the public health Minister the right hon. Member for South Northamptonshire (Dame Andrea Leadsom) and the chief medical officer Sir Chris Whitty, who spent time answering my questions and those of some of my colleagues. It was a very collegiate exercise and I am grateful…
Hansard · 16 Apr 2024 · parliament.uk
Primary Care5 Mar 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
I have been corresponding with the Primary Care Minister, the right hon. Member for South Northamptonshire (Dame Andrea Leadsom) , and her predecessors about urgently needing to protect general practice locations in city centres from outdated Treasury rules that potentially force them to move to ring-road locations. The Minister’s latest reply suggested that the ICB…
Hansard · 5 Mar 2024 · parliament.uk
Engagements7 Feb 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
Two weeks ago, I challenged the Prime Minister on his Government’s broken promise on building new hospitals by 2030, including in my own area. Now it seems the Government are downgrading existing hospitals too. Children and parents in Eastbourne will be forced to travel for miles if the proposed downgrade of the hospital’s paediatric services…
Hansard · 7 Feb 2024 · parliament.uk
NHS Dentistry: Recovery and Reform7 Feb 2024
DC
Daisy Cooper
It is estimated that more than 12 million people are waiting for dental treatment, but the Government’s announcement says that it will help just 1 million. The Government’s underspend last year was £400 million, and it is expected to be the same this year, but only £200 million has been announced. This plan is a…
Hansard · 7 Feb 2024 · parliament.uk
Daisy Cooper — Hansard Social