Sentences with phrase «raab mp»

Not exact matches

15:41 - Dominic Raab (Con, eligible) is up - one of the few Tory MPs who wants to speak.
Tory MPs to have expressed unease about the policy include Iain Duncan Smith; John Redwood; Jacob Rees - Mogg; Dominic Raab; Andrew Bridgen; Anne - Marie Trevelyan; Bob Neill; Tom Tugendhat; Andrew Murrison; Nigel Mills; Martin Vickers; Anna Soubry; Bob Blackman; Matthew Offord; Anne Marie Morris; Stephen McPartland and Guto Bebb.
They are disparate collection of Conservative MPs, of whom the most interesting, influential and ideologically - coherent group is the «class of 2010», which includes Kwasi Kwarteng, Priti Patel, Dominic Raab, Chris Skidmore and Liz Truss.
Likewise, some younger MPs with a rebellious streak, like Dominic Raab and Tracey Crouch, have been forgiven.
Thursday, January 24, 2013 in Bill Cash MP, David Nuttall MP, Dominic Raab MP, Iain Duncan Smith MP, Jacob Rees - Mogg MP, John Redwood MP, Lord Howard of Lympne, Mark Pritchard MP, Mark Reckless MP, Norman Lamont (Lord), Owen Paterson MP, Peter Bone MP, Richard Shepherd MP, Sir Peter Tapsell MP, Theresa Villiers MP, Tory MPs Groups, Zac Goldsmith MP Permalink Comments
The five MPs are Kwasi Kwarteng, Priti Patel, Dominic Raab, Chris Skidmore and Elizabeth Truss.
Ministers are set for a showdown with Tory rebels over the immigration bill after it was confirmed a crucial amendment backed by restive backbenchers will be debated in the Commons.The amendment, supported by dozens of Tory MPs, would give ministers rather than judges the final say over whether deportation would breach the human rights of foreign criminals.Commons Speaker John Bercow selected the amendment tabled by Esher and Walton MP Dominic Raab in the first group for debate, meaning there will be time for a vote.
Labour's decision means that the Raab amendment, which the government believes to be unlawful and unworkable, now faces defeat when MPs vote at 4 pm.
Raab amendment to immigration bill is defeated despite 97 MPs, many of them Conservative backbenchers, voting in favour
Lib Dem MPs are planning to vote against but, if Labour abstain, the Raab amendment is likely to be passed.
Among those promoted were MPs seen as rising stars within Conservative ranks such as Dominic Raab, who took over at housing, Alok Sharma, the new employment minister, Caroline Dinenage at health and Margot James, who moved to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.
«Andrew Bridgen MP discovers that Labour spent # 5 million of taxpayers» money on preparations to join the $ uro Main Raab's proposed motion demanding a review of the extradition treaty between the UK and US, is backed by MPs»
Paul Owen: MPs Kwasi Kwarteng, Priti Patel, Dominic Raab and Chris Skidmore explain their vision for the British workforce: work harder and work longer
And after a lively debate, MPs have voted by 234 to 22 in favour of the status quo, passing the following motion tabled by Tory MPs David Davis, Dominic Raab, Stephen Phillips, Philip Hollobone and John Baron along with former Labour Home Secretary Jack Straw:
It includes many of the new MPs currently identified by Tory - watchers as potential party leaders, including Raab, Kwasi Kwarteng, Priti Patel and Elizabeth Truss.
In dramatic scenes in the Commons, Tory rebels shouted «too late» as justice minister Dominic Raab outlined his concession and Government whips buzzed around the chamber in an attempt to win over rebel MPs.
«MPs vote to extend 28 - day detention for terrorist suspects for another six months Main Dominic Raab and David Davis want to know whether the Government will sign up to the European Investigation Order»
Thursday, January 24, 2013 in Bill Cash MP, David Nuttall MP, Dominic Raab MP, Iain Duncan Smith MP, Jacob Rees - Mogg MP, John Redwood MP, Lord Howard of Lympne, Mark Pritchard MP, Mark Reckless MP, Norman Lamont (Lord), Owen Paterson MP, Peter Bone MP, Richard Shepherd MP, Sir Peter Tapsell MP, Theresa Villiers MP, Tory MPs Groups, Zac Goldsmith MP Permalink
MPs also present in the gods were Tories Priti Patel, Eleanor Laing, Dominic Raab, Chloe Smith, Jesse Norman and Bernard Jenkin.
In addition to former shadow home secretary Davis and former defence secretary Fox, prominent MPs backing the group include Dominic Raab, Priti Patel and Robert Halfon.
Hearing that Tory whips were preventing Tory MPs voting against Raab Amdt even though Gov said it was illegal - shambles
Others MPs ranked high by national newspaper mentions include Dominic Raab, the former lawyer who has made impressive interventions on issues like the European Court of Human Rights and industrial relations.
Mr Raab's amendment, which has the backing of more than 100 MPs, was given time by the Speaker this morning.
Dominic Raab claimed a lot of things were said in the «heat of the referendum debate», but MPs must not a rush through an «unsustainable» deal.
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