All 2 Debates between Yvette Cooper and Julie Hilling

Wed 8th Feb 2012

Passport Applications

Debate between Yvette Cooper and Julie Hilling
Wednesday 18th June 2014

(9 years, 10 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Yvette Cooper Portrait Yvette Cooper
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I wish the hon. Gentleman’s constituent a good holiday after the stress she has endured.

Julie Hilling Portrait Julie Hilling (Bolton West) (Lab)
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We are talking about people who are unable to go on their holidays, but my constituents are stuck in India with their newborn babies, unable to get home. They get no response from the helplines. In fact, their passports would have been issued by the Hong Kong office had it been open. They are desperate, running out of money and stuck in a hot hotel room in India.

Yvette Cooper Portrait Yvette Cooper
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My hon. Friend makes an important point on some of the difficult cases and long delays faced by British citizens overseas, not least as a result of the decisions that the Home Secretary has taken. I, too, have constituents who are abroad who are waiting for passports to be returned because they depend on having up-to-date papers to meet their visa conditions. They are worried that they will be penalised in the country where they are resident because their papers will not be valid unless they get their passports back in time.

Police

Debate between Yvette Cooper and Julie Hilling
Wednesday 8th February 2012

(12 years, 2 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Yvette Cooper Portrait Yvette Cooper
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rose—

Lord Herbert of South Downs Portrait Nick Herbert
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I give way to the shadow Home Secretary.

--- Later in debate ---
Yvette Cooper Portrait Yvette Cooper
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My hon. Friend makes an important point. We saw in the capital and major cities across the country that we needed police officers on the streets to take back the streets, calm the riots and prevent the damage that was being done, and it took 16,000 officers on the streets of London to calm the tensions and deal with the violence and the looting. Sixteen thousand officers is the number that this Government are cutting—the equivalent of every one of those police officers that it took to calm the streets of London on those awful August nights.

Julie Hilling Portrait Julie Hilling
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Does my right hon. Friend agree that it is not only at times of riots, but on a Friday and Saturday, when knife crimes, street robberies and serious crimes of violence are occurring, that we need police officers on the front line? Not just at the acute time of riots, but week in, week out, we need officers on the streets.

Yvette Cooper Portrait Yvette Cooper
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My hon. Friend is right. Communities across the country know that. They want officers on the streets. They want to see police officers doing the job in their area. It is communities that will in the end pay the price for this Government’s decision. Time and again on Monday the Home Secretary told the House not just that there was no simple link, but that there was no direct link between police numbers and crime, yet look at the evidence from the Government’s favoured think-tank, Civitas, which said that

“there is a strong relationship between the size of police forces and national crime rates...A nation with fewer police is more likely to have a higher crime rate.”

The Policing Minister sniggers. Will he snigger, too, at the HMIC, which he quoted today, which said in research published last year that

“a 10 per cent increase in officers will lead to a reduction in crime of around 3 per cent (and vice versa)”?

That is the conclusion of the authoritative HMIC analysis of all the studies and the research that have been done, and this Government decide that they want to cut 16,000 officers at a time when personal crime is already going up by 11%.