Tag: Margaret Curran

  • Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Ministry of Defence

    Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Ministry of Defence

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Margaret Curran on 2014-04-03.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Defence, which companies have been awarded sub-contracts for construction of HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales since June 2013; at which sites he expects work under each such contracts to be carried out; and what the monetary value is of each such contract.

    Mr Philip Dunne

    I refer the hon. Member to the answer I gave on 6 June 2013 (Official Report, column 1279W).

  • Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office

    Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Margaret Curran on 2014-04-03.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, what support the First Minister of Scotland has received from (a) the British embassy in Washington and (b) consular offices in the US ahead of his upcoming visit to that country.

    Mr David Lidington

    The British Embassy in Washington, and the New York Consulate, have provided support for the visit this week of the First Minister of Scotland, Alex Salmond, to the US. The Consul General in New York hosted a lunch at his residence on 7 April, in association with Scottish Development International (SDI), for the First Minister and 17 Scottish companies from the First Minister’s accompanying trade mission, to which key business figures were invited. The British Embassy in Washington worked with the New York Consulate to organise port courtesies for the First Minister, upon arrival in New York ,to allow the Scottish Affairs Office (based in the British Embassy Washington) to greet the First Minister at the airport and expedite customs and immigration procedures.

  • Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Home Office

    Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Home Office

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Margaret Curran on 2014-04-03.

    To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the annual cost to her Department is of providing UK border control services at (a) Paris Gare Du Nord station, (b) Bruxelles Midi station and (c) Calais port and Eurotunnel terminus.

    James Brokenshire

    The annual costs of providing UK border control services are as follow:
    Paris Gare Du Nord station – £4.6 million
    Bruxelles Midi station – £3.3 million
    Calais port – £21.8 million
    Eurotunnel terminus (Coquelles) – £21.2 million

    The above resource costs are based on the last financial year’s data(2013/14)
    and are taken from the Home office accounting system Adelphi. These have not
    yet been audited. Publication of the annual set of accounts will not present
    these costs in this level of detail.

  • Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Speaker’s Committee on the Electoral Commission

    Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Speaker’s Committee on the Electoral Commission

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Margaret Curran on 2014-04-03.

    To ask the hon. Member for South West Devon, representing the Speaker’s Committee on the Electoral Commission, which parliamentary constituencies in Scotland are part of local authority areas whose electoral registration officers did not reach the required performance indicators on Standard 3 in respect of electors who failed to register to vote.

    Mr Gary Streeter

    The Electoral Commission informs me that no EROs in Scotland reported not meeting standard 3 at the recent 2013 canvass. The Commission is in the process of conducting a detailed analysis of EROs’ electoral registration data from the 2013 canvass, following which it will publish its final assessment of EROs’ performance.

  • Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Cabinet Office

    Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Cabinet Office

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Margaret Curran on 2014-04-07.

    To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many and what proportion of people in England and Wales identified themselves as (a) British, (b) Scottish and (c) British and Scottish in the 2011 census.

    Mr Nick Hurd

    The information requested falls within the responsibility of the UK Statistics Authority. I have asked the Authority to reply.

  • Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Cabinet Office

    Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Cabinet Office

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Margaret Curran on 2014-04-07.

    To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many people aged under 25 years in each parliamentary constituency in Scotland have claimed jobseeker’s allowance for more than (a) one and (b) two years in each year since 2010.

    Mr Nick Hurd

    The information requested falls within the responsibility of the UK Statistics Authority. I have asked the Authority to reply.

  • Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Scotland Office

    Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Scotland Office

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Margaret Curran on 2014-04-07.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland, how many people of pensionable age there were in each parliamentary constituency in Scotland at the most recent date for which figures are available.

    Mr Alistair Carmichael

    The information below is arranged by UK Parliamentary constituency.

    Constituency

    Aged 65+

    Aberdeen North

    12,983

    Aberdeen South

    14,123

    Airdrie and Shotts

    12,923

    Angus

    17,127

    Argyll and Bute

    19,487

    Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock

    19,258

    Banff and Buchan

    16,356

    Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk

    20,180

    Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross

    12,654

    Central Ayrshire

    17,069

    Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill

    13,775

    Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East

    13,344

    Dumfries and Galloway

    21,175

    Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale

    18,492

    Dundee East

    16,407

    Dundee West

    14,357

    Dunfermline and West Fife

    15,018

    East Dunbartonshire

    16,838

    East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow

    17,375

    East Lothian

    17,911

    East Renfrewshire

    16,362

    Edinburgh East

    12,577

    Edinburgh North and Leith

    12,750

    Edinburgh South

    13,427

    Edinburgh South West

    13,364

    Edinburgh West

    16,712

    Falkirk

    17,690

    Glasgow Central

    8,907

    Glasgow East

    13,738

    Glasgow North

    7,990

    Glasgow North East

    13,032

    Glasgow North West

    13,025

    Glasgow South

    12,824

    Glasgow South West

    12,735

    Glenrothes

    15,450

    Gordon

    15,582

    Inverclyde

    14,837

    Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey

    17,346

    Kilmarnock and Loudoun

    16,649

    Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath

    17,637

    Lanark and Hamilton East

    17,516

    Linlithgow and East Falkirk

    17,744

    Livingston

    14,189

    Midlothian

    14,074

    Moray

    17,370

    Motherwell and Wishaw

    14,490

    Na h-Eileanan an Iar

    6,021

    North Ayrshire and Arran

    18,939

    North East Fife

    16,492

    Ochil and South Perthshire

    18,394

    Orkney and Shetland

    8,065

    Paisley and Renfrewshire North

    14,930

    Paisley and Renfrewshire South

    14,708

    Perth and North Perthshire

    19,760

    Ross, Skye and Lochaber

    13,424

    Rutherglen and Hamilton West

    15,782

    Stirling

    15,656

    West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine

    14,336

    West Dunbartonshire

    14,988

    Source: General Register Office for Scotland, December 2013

    More information can be found on the following link:

    http://www.gro-scotland.gov.uk/statistics/theme/population/estimates/special-area/ukpc.html.

  • Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the HM Treasury

    Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the HM Treasury

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Margaret Curran on 2014-04-03.

    To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, when the next meeting of the Finance Ministers Quadrilateral will take place; and what will be discussed at this meeting.

    Danny Alexander

    The last Finance Quadrilateral was held on 18 November 2013.

    No formal minutes of the meeting were taken, but Ministers present discussed the general economic outlook for the UK and for each of the devolved administrations, as well as looking forward to the forthcoming Autumn Statement. Agreement was reached at the meeting regarding the framework under which the devolved administrations could carry forward Financial Transactions capital into future years.

    The Chief Secretary to the Treasury and Finance Ministers from the devolved administrations aim to meet regularly in Quadrilateral format, complimenting bi-lateral meetings and conversations throughout the year. It is anticipated the next Quadrilateral will take place over the coming months. No date or agenda has yet been set.

  • Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Cabinet Office

    Margaret Curran – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Cabinet Office

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Margaret Curran on 2014-03-12.

    To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, how many people aged 18 to 24 years old in Scotland have been unemployed for (a) six months, (b) one year, (c) two years and (d) more than two years.

    Nick Hurd

    The information requested falls within the responsibility of the UK Statistics Authority. I have asked the Authority to reply.

  • Margaret Curran – 2013 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Below is the text of the speech made by Margaret Curran, the Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland, to the 2013 Labour Party conference in Brighton.

    Conference,

    On 18th September next year, people in Scotland will decide their future.

    And they will decide the future of Britain too.

    This is a decision that matters to every Scot, but it also matters to every person here today.

    And to each one of you, who have campaigned, leafleted, made the case and taken the argument to the SNP.

    I say thank you.

    This is your campaign, and I pay tribute to each and every one of you today.

    Because what we are fighting for;

    – a future of working together and not apart,

    – a future of shared hopes,

    Is based on the same values that brought together in 1900 the men and women who created the British Labour Party.

    A gathering of people from Glasgow, from Cardiff and Liverpool, from the north of England to the valleys of Wales.

    They watched Kier Hardie – a proud Scot – make the case for the creation of our party.

    Hardie believed passionately in a Scottish Parliament but he knew then, as we know now, that to advance the cause of working people, to overcome those who would divide and rule, we had to work together across Britain.

    Not split along national or regional borders and compete against each other, but work shoulder to shoulder for our cause.

    And, friends, time after time, the Labour Party – influenced, shaped and led by Scots – guided by those values of solidarity, fairness and equality have built lasting monuments to what we can achieve together.

    Social housing and equal pay,

    The welfare state,

    The National Health Service.

    These are the pillars that support our society and join the Labour Party of Hardie, Wheatley and Jennie Lee with the Labour Party of Brown, Dewar and John Smith.

    Labour giants who we pay tribute to today.

    Conference, I don’t look to our past because I think the best times are behind us.

    I do it because it reminds me of what we have achieved together.

    And it tells me how much we can still do in the future, if we stay together, and work together as a united Labour Party and a united people.

    Because we aren’t like Salmond’s Nationalists who think that a problem pushed over the border is a problem solved.

    Nor like David Cameron’s Tories who want to set us all against each other in a race to the bottom.

    But, Conference, if the SNP have their way their plan will mean the breakup of the Labour Party.

    And I want to send a clear message from this conference.

    That after 113 years, Alex Salmond is not going to bring our movement to an end.

    Because, Conference, we are the party of Scotland.

    Whose values are the values of the Scottish people.

    The party that shaped a generation and made good on the promise of a Parliament.

    That didn’t sit through 18 years of Tory rule nursing a grievance, but became the true voice of our nation.

    Conference,

    Don’t let Alex Salmond fool you or the SNP delude you.

    They are nationalists and their entire mission is independence.

    To them, the only division that matters is the one they think exists between Scotland and the rest of the UK.

    Every action they have taken since the start of this campaign has been with separation in mind.

    Not the people of Scotland.

    So Alex Salmond will attack the Tories one day.

    And then he’ll turn on Labour the next.

    He tells people that he wants to continue all the best policies we started.

    But we could never call on his support when we were in power.

    He’ll promote every other union, like the EU and NATO.

    But won’t support the union on our own doorstep even when jobs and opportunities are threatened.

    Conference, don’t be fooled.

    The SNP have many masks, but behind them all there is nationalism.

    Conference, you’ve probably heard that Johann Lamont has been taking on the SNP with energy and focus.

    She’s taking Alex Salmond down a peg or two every week in the Scottish Parliament.

    Now, Conference, I’ve known Johann for a long time.

    And I really should have warned Alex Salmond that her specialty has always been sorting out arrogant men whose self-regard knows no bounds.

    Under Johann’s focus arguments for separation are beginning to wither.

    The realities are being exposed.

    We now know the SNP say one thing in public, and another in private.

    And they’ll go to any length to keep the truth away from the Scottish people.

    Remember, this is a government, when challenged about their legal advice on Scotland’s EU membership, went to court, using taxpayers money, to cover up advice they were forced to reveal didn’t even exist.

    This is a government that tells us in public that when we’re independent our state pensions will be guaranteed, but in a leaked paper admit they don’t know how they will be funded.

    This is a government that can’t answer the shop stewards at Rosyth and Govan when they say independence will cost thousands of jobs in Scottish shipbuilding.

    And, Conference, unbelievably, the Nationalists can’t even make up their mind about what currency an independent Scotland should use.

    Alex Salmond says the Pound, but the head of the Yes Campaign wants something different.

    Conference, we all know Alex Salmond likes a day at the races, but don’t let him gamble with the future of Scotland.

    We all want to change Scotland.

    We want to see a better future for our country.

    But Alex Salmond is putting his party’s interests above those of the Scottish people.

    It’s now time to make our Governments understand what is really happening in our homes, our businesses, and our communities.

    Families struggling, looking in disbelief, as they see that bankers’ bonuses are back but their wages are going down.

    Young people who can only see a life of short term contracts ahead of them.

    Businesses with shattered confidence and empty order books.

    Parents across the country who fear that they won’t be able to give their children what only a few years ago they took for granted.

    These are the realities that both the UK and Scottish Governments can’t address.

    That’s why people are looking to Labour to set out a new way.

    And this week in Brighton, people across Scotland will see our alternative.

    An alternative that demonstrates we have the plan to deal with the cost of living crisis facing hard working families.

    And a plan that shows it’s only One Nation Labour that can rid Scotland, and Britain, of the Tories.

    Conference, this week people in Scotland will see there is a clear choice.

    A clear choice between Labour and the Tories.

    And between Labour and the SNP.

    You have to ask yourself – who do you trust with your future?

    Ed Miliband – a Prime Minister who will repeal the bedroom tax?

    Or a Scottish National Party who want to slash tax for big corporations?

    Johann Lamont who fights for carers and college students?

    Or Alex Salmond who fights for constitutional change?

    Do you trust a Labour Party whose story is the story of Scotland’s communities?

    Or a Scottish National Party who, after eighty years, can’t even get their story straight?

    Conference, this is the choice we face.

    And at this key moment in Labour’s story and Scotland’s history.

    With Johann Lamont in Scotland.

    And Ed Miliband across the UK.

    We will reject the division of nationalism.

    And fight together united for a better future for all of Scotland’s people.