Letter Adrian Ramsay Letter Adrian Ramsay

Letter to Chancellor on Tax-Free Childcare Cap

  • Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by Claire Hanna MP.

    Rt Hon Rachel Reeves MP

    Chancellor of the Exchequer

    HM Treasury

    1 Horse Guards Road

    Westminster

    London

    SW1A 2HQ

    25 November 2025

    Dear Chancellor,

    We are writing to you as Members of Parliament and stakeholders from across England, Northern Ireland,

    Scotland and Wales, alongside Pregnant Then Screwed, the leading charity working to end the motherhood

    penalty, to request urgent action to support families who are struggling with the rising cost of childcare.

    As per previous correspondence earlier this year, we are calling for the cap on Tax-Free Childcare, fixed at

    £2,000 per child per year since the scheme was introduced in 2017, to be uprated in line with inflation.

    Since 2017, prices have risen by approximately 34%, yet the cap has never been adjusted. As a result, the

    real value of the support available to families has been significantly eroded.

    During this period, childcare costs across the UK have increased sharply, placing growing pressure on

    households already struggling to make ends meet. Updating the Tax-Free Childcare cap to reflect inflation

    would be a simple, fair and effective way to ease the financial burden on families.

    It is also important to note that many other benefits and forms of support, including tax credits and

    pensions are uprated each year. We therefore believe it is both reasonable and consistent that the same

    principle should be applied to the Tax-Free Childcare cap.

    The forthcoming Budget provides an opportunity to address this. Increasing the cap would offer vital

    support to parents and would strengthen the economy by enabling more parents to enter, remain in or

    return to the workforce.

    We look forward to your response.

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The upcoming budget is a chance to delivering real, lasting improvements for people.

19th of November 2025

Across the country, families are struggling to get by, children are going to bed hungry, and millions cannot keep their homes warm, while the ultra-wealthy continue to get richer, and inequality grows. The Chancellor has a chance to change that in the upcoming budget, by taxing extreme wealth fairly, tackling the cost-of-living crisis, and delivering real, lasting improvements for people.

 

This cannot be viewed in isolation. By continuing real terms cuts to public services, Labour has pushed people who were already struggling even deeper into poverty while those who need support the most are often unable to access it. You only need to look at the scandal in our Special Educational Need (SEND) system to see one example of the consequences.

This is a system that successive governments have failed to get a grip of. Recently, I joined parents and campaigners outside Norfolk County Hall for Every Pair Tells a Story. The steps of County Hall were lined with rows of empty shoes, each pair representing a child who has been failed by the SEND system. It was moving and powerful to hear parents talk about the struggle to secure even the most basic support for their children. At the same time, the number of families in Waveney Valley who rely on foodbanks has grown by 50% since 2019. Meanwhile, the wealthiest in Britain continue to grow richer. Billionaire wealth rose by £35 million a day last year, and the fifty richest families now hold more wealth than half the population combined.

So, I find it hard to believe when Ministers keep insisting there is not enough money to lift children out of poverty, to properly fund our schools, or to provide vital support for people with disabilities. The Chancellor's self-imposed fiscal rules are not putting the markets at ease, nor are they delivering for people, nor helping the economy advance into the greener future we need. For politics to mean anything it must deliver for people. That is why this week I joined other Green Party MPs, our leadership and Council Leaders and Deputy Leaders from around the country in calling on the Chancellor to tax wealth fairly, end the cost-of-living crisis, and deliver real change now.

Our wealth tax measures alone would raise over £30 billion a year and form part of a broader package of reforms to tackle the growing inequality in the UK. This includes introducing a wealth tax of 1 per cent on assets over £10 million and 2 per cent on assets over £1 billion, which could raise at least £14.8 billion annually. It also means changing Capital Gains Tax, currently the lowest in the G7, so that income from work is not taxed more than income from wealth. This change could raise around £12 billion a year. We have also called on the Chancellor to introduce National Insurance on investment income, in line with employment income, which could raise at least £6.1 billion per year. It should not be radical to expect that those with the broadest shoulders pay their fair share.

 

In addition to reforming the tax system to make it fairer, those doing the most damage to our environment should not be subsidised to continue the destruction of our natural world. This is why we would end financial handouts to fossil fuel producers, saving an estimated £2.7 billion each year. We have also called on the Chancellor to tax windfall profits of UK retail banks. This could raise around £11.3 billion this year from Britain’s big four banks alone.  

These tax measures will enable the government to take urgent action to tackle the cost-of-living crisis. We are calling on them to commit to both immediate and long-term measures that meaningfully address rising costs and lift children out of poverty.

Firstly, we would move policy costs off electricity bills. But instead of scrapping funding for home insulation to cover this, like the government is rumoured to be thinking about, we are calling on the Chancellor to pay for these policy costs through taxation, including wealth taxation. This move would cut a household’s electricity bill by around 17%. For a ‘typical’ household this could mean a £156 cut per year.

We would also go further, ending the link between gas and electricity prices which pushes electricity prices up, and means many ordinary people aren’t feeling the full benefits of the growth of cheaper renewables. According to Greenpeace, this could cut bills by £5.1 billion annually within two years. Or £65 per year for the average household.

We should invest in a mass retrofit revolution, led by local authorities, to insulate every home, street by street. This would not only save people money on their bills, but crucially, it would also support local economies by creating good, high-quality jobs across the country.

We would also scrap the cruel two-child benefit cap, lifting 330,000 children out of poverty, and introduce free school meals for all primary and secondary school children. Families from all backgrounds struggle with food insecurity, and this measure would not only save households £490 per child per year but also ensure that every child in the country receives at least one hot meal at school every day.

In politics, it all comes down to choice. We can choose to keep people in poverty while billionaire and multimillionaire wealth grows ever larger, or we can choose to lift people out of poverty and begin addressing the structural issues in our society. In next week’s budget, this Labour government has only one morally right option: tax wealth fairly, tackle the cost-of-living crisis head on, and rebuild our country for the better.

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Every Pair Tells a Story: The Human Cost of a Broken SEND System 

10th of November 2025

Recently, I joined parents and campaigners outside Norfolk County Hall for “Every Pair Tells a Story.” The steps of County Hall were lined with rows of empty shoes, each pair representing a child who has been failed by the Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) system. It was a powerful sight, both moving and enraging. Behind each set of shoes was a story of a family pushed to the edge by a system that has promised help, only to deliver delay and bureaucracy.  

Standing there, surrounded by those empty shoes, I felt a mix of grief and rage at how badly these children have been let down. The SEND crisis is not new. It is not unforeseen. It has been warned about for years, reported on repeatedly. Yet still, children are waiting months or even years for assessments. Schools are still expected to cope with too little funding and too few resources. Still, parents are forced into legal battles to secure the basic support their child is entitled to by law.  

Every one of those shoes told a story that should send a powerful message to those in power. A story of a child denied an Education, Health and Care Plan because of a stretched budget. A story of a pupil struggling without the proper support, then ending up out of school. A story of parents taking time off work, fighting bureaucracy to get their child what the system is supposed to provide. These are not statistics. They are children. And they deserve better. 

Like many MPs, children who have been let down by the SEND system form a big part of my caseload, and I do everything I can to advocate for them. But the truth is that there are major systemic issues that need addressing in order for the situation to change. 

What makes this situation so maddening is that the failures are systemic, predictable, and could be resolved with genuine political will. Successive governments have known for years that SEND provision is collapsing under the weight of rising demand and inadequate funding. Councils like Norfolk and Suffolk have pleaded for fairer settlements and better guidance, while schools juggle impossible workloads and overstretched budgets. The result is a system built on goodwill and desperation, where families are expected to do the heavy lifting while ministers debate policy papers and budgets.  

The anger among parents is not misplaced. They are not asking for special treatment. All they are asking is that the system meet its legal responsibilities. The Children and Families Act 2014 was supposed to guarantee that children with additional needs would receive coordinated, timely, and appropriate support. More than a decade later, for many, those guarantees exist only on paper. Families are left chasing paperwork, fighting for appeals, and explaining their child’s condition again and again to a carousel of professionals who often lack the resources or authority to act. 

It is time for the Government at all levels to stop making excuses and start delivering change. This means urgent investment in early intervention, proper funding for Education, Health and Care Plans, and genuine accountability when councils fail to meet their legal duties. It means ensuring schools have the specialist staff and resources to meet children’s needs and that teachers receive the support and training needed to enable far more children to thrive in mainstream schools. And for those children for whom a mainstream school is not the right setting, we need adequate spaces in alternative provision schools. At its core, we need a system that treats parents as partners, not adversaries, and children as real people whose right to proper support is non-negotiable. 

 

Norfolk and Suffolk’s children deserve better than being represented by empty shoes on cold concrete. They deserve classrooms that welcome them, schools that have the resources to help them, and councils that see them as individuals rather than numbers on a spreadsheet. I will keep pressing both the Government and county councils to deliver the reforms and funding that are long overdue.  

 

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Introduction of a Medal for British Soldiers Injured in Combat

  • Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by Davin Baines MP.

    Re: Introduction of a Medal for British Soldiers Injured in Combat

    Dear Minister,

    I am writing to urge the Government to support the campaign of my constituent Corporal Andy Reid MBE to establish an official medal to recognise British service personnel who have been wounded or injured while serving on active duty.

    In October 2009, Corporal Andy Reid MBE stepped on a Taliban improvised explosive device while on patrol in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. Injured so badly that it was thought he would not survive, he defied the odds to the extent that, within a month, he was able to meet up with members of his patrol again. Since then, as a triple amputee, he has gone on to carry out many arduous challenges to raise money for charity and give back to the associations that helped him and his family through difficult times.

    Through his Standing Tall Foundation, Andy continues to provide invaluable support to injured service personnel and their families, demonstrating remarkable dedication to those who have served and also to the wider community.

    Currently, UK service personnel who are wounded in active service receive no formal medal or honour to reflect the profound physical and mental sacrifices they have made in defence of our country. While the Elizabeth Cross appropriately recognises the families of those who have made the ultimate sacrifice, there is no equivalent recognition for those who bear the wounds of their service. This stands in stark contrast to our international allies: the United States awards the Purple Heart, and India presents the Wound Medal or Parakram Padak to those injured in conflict.

    Andy understands intimately the sacrifices made by our armed forces and is leading the charge for this vital recognition. As Andy eloquently states: "For many injured soldiers that bit of recognition in the form of a medal for

    the mental and physical sacrifices they have made would give them that real boost they might need – a thank you from the nation that might just pull them out of that dark place and move forward with their lives towards a better future."

    This medal would provide something instantly recognisable to the general population – a visible acknowledgement that this individual has paid a sacrifice for their safety and the safety of the nation.

    My colleagues and I look forward to your response and to working with you on this important matter.

    Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by Davin Baines MP.

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Use the Autumn Budget to lower electricity prices

  • Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by the MCS Foundation.

    Dear Chancellor,

    Subject: Use the Autumn Budget to lower electricity prices

    The cost of living crisis is still hitting millions of households across Britain. Prices remain high, and the latest rise in the Energy Price Cap will only make things worse. The public wants to see action to reduce energy bills, which now ranks as the most worrying household expense amongst the population.

    Britain has some of the highest electricity costs in Europe. A significant factor in keeping prices high is the social and environmental levies placed directly on households’ electricity bills. These levies make up 18% of a typical household’s electricity bill and disproportionately affect the most vulnerable. Households reliant on direct electric heating, such as electric radiators and fan heaters, are more likely to be in fuel poverty – yet they pay a far higher proportion of their income funding social and environmental levies.

    Research from The MCS Foundation shows that moving these levies off electricity prices could save households, including those on direct electric heating and those with heat pumps, up to £300 on their bills.

    Reducing the cost of electricity has the dual benefit of tackling fuel poverty while providing a significant financial incentive for households to electrify - a necessity for tackling climate change and meeting our net-zero obligations.

    Social and environmental levies were introduced to raise revenue to support those in fuel poverty and boost renewable energy. While these areas are still in critical need of funding, retaining levies on electricity is now running directly counter to these initial aims, by disincentivising the switch away from fossil fuel heating.

    While we appreciate that there are political and economic challenges that must be overcome, we believe now is the time for bold action. We urge you to use the Autumn Budget to reduce bills and incentivise electrification. There’s no time to waste.

    Yours sincerely,

    Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by the MCS Foundation.

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Every Pair Tells a Story

3rd of November 2025

I was pleased to stand with families at Every Pair Tells a Story outside Norfolk County Hall this morning. Seeing those empty shoes lined up was infuriating, because each one represents a child who has been failed by a system that should protect and support them. We cannot allow these stories to continue. Norfolk and Suffolk's children deserve better, and I will keep pressing both the government and our County Councils to deliver the changes needed to ensure every child gets the support and school place they need.

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Letter to the Prime Minister Ahead of COP30

  • Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this letter along with Sian Berry MP, Carla Denyer MP and Dr Ellie Chowns MP.

    Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP

    Prime Minister

    10 Downing Street

    London

    SW1A 2AA

    31 October 2025

    Dear Prime Minister,

    We are writing ahead of COP30 to urge that you use the UK’s influence to ensure an ambitious outcome consistent with avoiding the most catastrophic climate impacts. This year’s COP summit is taking place at a pivotal moment in history - just past the mid-point in what’s a critical decade for climate and nature action.

    The state of nature, biodiversity and ecosystems are deteriorating more rapidly than ever, and global temperatures continue to climb at a terrifyingly dangerous rate. The combined effect is devastating for the life support systems on which we all depend, and therefore also for our security, for our economic, social and political stability, and for everything from our food supplies to our health and wellbeing.

    The UN Secretary General has called the fossil fuel companies the godfathers of climate chaos and the IPCC warn that emissions from fossil fuels are the dominant cause of global warming. Yet COP30 is taking place against a backdrop of continued financial support from governments for the fossil fuel industry – including an estimated £17.5 billion every year here in the UK.

    At the same time, the poorest peoples of the world, with the least historic responsibility for climate emissions, continue to bear the brunt of climate breakdown. It is vital that the decisions made at COP30 do not further perpetuate climate injustice.

    And with this year marking the start of a new round of Nationally Determined Contributions, COP30 is critical to closing the 1.5°C delivery gap and other gaps – as the UN Secretary General said in his remarks of 27th October 2025:

    We need Nationally Determined Contributions that cut emissions much more deeply and accelerate the transition from fossil fuels to renewables. At COP30 in Brazil, we must go further and faster to close the ambition gap. We need more ambition in adaptation, mitigation and climate financial justice.

    We warmly welcome your attendance at COP30 and hope your leadership will include advocating for:

    • A Climate Damages Tax – a “polluters pay” tax on the extraction of fossil fuels in the world’s richest advanced economies.

    • The Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty – a framework to manage the global transition to safe, renewable & affordable energy for all.

    • Climate Justice – a climate finance package made up primarily of public funded grants funds, accompanied by debt cancellation measures, and that enables countries in the Global South to reduce their emissions, adapt to the impacts of climate change and meet the costs associated with loss and damage.

    • A global Just Transition - negotiators must stop blocking progress towards a Belém Action Mechanism (BAM).

    • An action plan to end forest destruction by 2030 - voluntary initiatives have failed to halt and reverse deforestation or to stop forest degradation, and substantive, structural change is needed to ensure existing forest commitments are met in an efficient, just and equitable way.

    The UK’s global leadership should also be matched with ambitious domestic action as evidence of leading by example.

    So we also call on you to back national measures that are aligned with the priorities of a successful COP30, and signal to the rest of the world that the UK is prepared to do its fair share in closing the gap between what the climate science demands and current emissions projections. Specifically, we urge you to:

    • End handouts to fossil fuel companies - use the forthcoming Budget to stop tax reliefs, investment allowances and subsidies, and to close loopholes in the ban on UK overseas finance supporting fossil fuels.

    • Play fair on climate finance – this must not come at the expense of overseas development aid, must be new government money, must not increase debt burdens, and must reflect the UK’s historic responsibilities.

    • Back the Energy Jobs Bill - to invest in British jobs and a just transition for workers in the oil and gas sector.

    • Deliver climate justice at home – with policies that ensure the poorest in our communities do not bear the financial brunt of climate action.

    • Keep your promise on no new oil and gas – by rejecting Rosebank, Jackdaw, other new extraction proposals and all new use of tie-backs – and go even further by refusing development consent for oil and gas projects that have already been licensed.

    • Step up on climate adaptation – with a national climate resilience plan and a sixth Government mission on adaptation that reflects the CCC’s advice of 15th October 2025.

    Whilst we recognise that the UK and the world are making significant strides towards a carbon free economy, this is still accompanied by plans to produce more than double the quantity of fossil fuels in 2030 than would be consistent with holding global temperature rises to 1.5C above preindustrial levels.

    This collective failure is driving climate breakdown.

    COP 30 is an opportunity to change course – to choose transformative action that tackles injustice and inequality alongside greenhouse gas emissions.

    We trust you will recognise this decisive moment by ramping up your ambition still further, in order to help secure a liveable future for all.

    Yours sincerely,

    Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this letter along with Sian Berry MP, Carla Denyer MP and Dr Ellie Chowns MP.

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Gentoo penguins at Sea Life London

  • Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by David Taylor MP.

    Dear Secretary of State,

    Re: Urgent review of the welfare of Gentoo penguins at SEA LIFE London Aquarium

    We, the undersigned Members of Parliament, are writing to express our deep concern regarding the welfare of fifteen Gentoo penguins currently kept at the SEA LIFE London Aquarium, a short walk from Parliament. In light of the growing public concern, we respectfully request that DEFRA conduct an independent review into whether the current conditions meet the highest standards of animal welfare and, if necessary, intervene to secure a more appropriate environment for these animals.

    Recent reports have highlighted that the penguins are housed in a windowless basement enclosure, with no access to natural light or fresh air, and that the pool depth is around six to seven feet, which is far shallower than the environments Gentoo penguins experience in the wild. Concerns have been raised by respected conservationists, including Chris Packham and Megan McCubbin, who argue that such an environment cannot adequately support the species’ natural behaviours.

    As Members of Parliament from across the political spectrum, we share a collective commitment to animal welfare. All political parties in this great nation value the protection of animals as a reflection of our shared compassion and sense of moral duty. The United Kingdom has a proud record in this area, from the Hunting Act 2004, which banned the hunting of wild mammals with dogs, to the ongoing work to strengthen welfare protections for both domestic and wild animals. The 2024 General Election manifesto commitments to phase out animal testing, ban the use of snares, end the import of hunting trophies, and strengthen protections for wildlife reflect the continued importance placed on these issues across Parliament.

    In that spirit, we respectfully ask that DEFRA:

    Commission an independent welfare assessment of the Gentoo penguin enclosure at SEA LIFE London, involving external veterinary and zoological specialists. Evaluate the facility’s compliance with both the Standards of Modern Zoo Practice and the Animal Welfare Act 2006, as well the likelihood of compliance with the revised zoo Standards entering into force in May 2027, with particular focus on light, air quality, pool depth, and enrichment.

    Consider whether the penguins should be relocated to a more suitable facility better aligned with their behavioural, ecological and physiological needs. Publish the findings of this review to ensure transparency and maintain public confidence in welfare standards.

    We wish to make clear that this is not an adversarial request but a constructive one, recognising the Government’s strong record on animal welfare and DEFRA’s expertise in safeguarding species under human care. This is an opportunity to demonstrate that the United Kingdom continues to lead the world in setting and upholding exemplary welfare standards.

    We would be grateful for your response outlining the Department’s intended course of action and the anticipated timeframe for review.

    Kind Regards,

    Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by David Taylor MP.

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End Starvation as a Weapon of War

  • Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by Action Against Hunger UK.

    The Rt Hon Yvette Cooper MP

    Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs

    Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office

    King Charles Street

    London

    SW1A 2AH

    October 2025

    Dear Secretary of State,

    We are writing to urge the UK Government to ratify the 2019 Amendment to Article 8(2)(e)(xix) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, which criminalises the use of starvation of civilians as a method of warfare in non-international armed conflicts. As you take up this role, we hope you will seize the opportunity to strengthen the UK’s leadership in driving international accountability for such crimes.

    The UK rightly supported the adoption of this amendment at the Assembly of States Parties in December 2019. However, the UK is yet to ratify it, and is therefore failing to implement its support to the ICC’s jurisdiction on this matter. At a time when starvation is being used as a method of warfare in so many conflict zones around the world - from the systematic denial of humanitarian aid to targeting food production and besieging populations - it is vital that the UK strengthens its commitment to ending these abhorrent practices.

    The UK implemented the Rome Statute via the International Criminal Court Act 2001. The Act currently only criminalises starvation as a method of warfare in the context of international armed conflicts. Ratifying the 2019 amendment would send a vital signal of the UK’s intent to uphold international law and to support global accountability efforts to ensure this is illegal in non-international armed conflicts, such as civil wars.

    Ratification would:

    • Reinforce the UK’s long-standing support for accountability and international justice

    • Further implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 2417, which calls for action against the use of starvation in conflict

    • Bolster the rules-based international order and strengthen norms against impunity

    • Underscore the UK’s global leadership in protecting civilians, particularly the most vulnerable

    • Encourage other states to follow suit and build international consensus.

    We note that 21 countries have already ratified this amendment, including Germany, New Zealand, the

    Netherlands, and Spain. UK ratification would send a powerful message of resolve and leadership. Ratification

    will require primary legislation to ensure national compliance. Ratification is a necessary and timely step in

    aligning the UK’s legal framework with the UK Government’s stated values and international commitments.

    We respectfully request that the Government bring forward legislation to enable the UK’s timely ratification.

    We look forward to your response.

    Yours sincerely,

    Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by Action Against Hunger UK.

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Why we urgently need more banking hubs in Suffolk

29th of October 2025

Recently spoke in a debate in Parliament about an issue affecting communities across Waveney Valley and beyond: the urgent need for more banking hubs in rural areas. Nationwide, an average of 53 bank branches have closed every month since 2015 and over 85% of banks across Waveney Valley have shut during that same period. This situation is not sustainable.

With advances in technology, banking has become easier for many people. But not everyone can, or wants to, bank online. Many people still prefer face-to-face contact, and many small businesses depend on handling cash safely. As you all know, getting reliable broadband and mobile signals in parts of the constituency can be hard at the best of times, so it is not realistic to expect everyone to "just use the app".

Access to banking should never depend on owning a smartphone or having a fast internet connection. That is why banking hubs are invaluable. They bring physical access that so many people rely on.

In Halesworth, the recent closure of the post office that was housed in Coopers has really affected access to banking. This will be made worse when Barclays, which has been operating a weekly pop-up at the library for some time, closes its service in December as well. Alongside our Green councillors I have been urging the post office to prioritise the search for potential alternative sites in Halesworth.

Meanwhile, Eye has been left with just one cash point, no banking facility and no post office. Green Councillor Lucy Elkin has been working with local business owners to try to bring a post office back to Eye. These losses show exactly why banking hubs are essential and why the Government must accelerate the rollout of the hubs. Like in Eye, Bungay has lost all banks and the Barclays banking service in the library has also closed.

I frequently hear from residents and business owners that managing everyday banking has become increasingly complex without a local branch. People are struggling to deposit cash, pay bills, or receive in-person advice. Small businesses that handle cash daily are finding it harder to bank their earnings safely. Older residents who do not use online banking are at an extra disadvantage as they must travel to the nearest town. For those without cars and with poor public transport links, the loss of local banking services is a serious barrier to independence.

That is why I have been calling for the Government to accelerate the rollout of banking hubs across the country, prioritising rural areas. A banking hub is a shared space where the post office and several high street banks work together to provide face-to-face services. Customers of different banks can visit on set days to withdraw or deposit cash, pay in cheques, or get advice from a representative of their own bank.

In Harleston, a banking hub has been operating in a temporary location for some time, making an enormous difference. It helps keep people coming into the town centre, supports local shops and cafés, and ensures that vital financial services remain accessible to everyone.

We need the long-term future for existing banking hubs to be secured, and we need more hubs across our region. Banking hubs are not just about convenience. They are about fairness and inclusion. They allow everyone, regardless of age, income, or digital ability, to manage their finances confidently.

It is deeply worrying to see banks withdraw entirely from communities, especially while many report record profits. Access to banking is not a luxury. It is an essential service that underpins local economies. When banks close, the impact is felt across the community. Small businesses lose cash services, older residents lose independence, and high streets lose footfall. A thriving market town needs essential services that keep it connected and alive.

I’ve been worried seeing banks leaving our community, especially as the high street banks are reporting record profits. Access to banking cannot be treated as a luxury for the future. It is an essential service, and when private banks cannot or will not provide it, the Government must ensure that communities are not left behind.

I will continue to raise this issue in Parliament and with both the Post Office and the Treasury. We cannot allow rural East Anglia to become a patchwork of communities without access to cash or local banking. Halesworth, Eye, Bungay and other rural towns deserve better, and I will keep fighting to make sure they get it.

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Adrian is proud that he & his staff are Dementia Friends

14 October 2025

Local MP Adrian Ramsay is proud that he & his staff are Dementia Friends.  Recently, the local branches of the Alzheimer's Society gave training to Adrian Ramsay MP and his team. After the training, Adrian said:

 

“I am proud to share that my constituency team and I are now all fully qualified Dementia Friends, thanks to the support of the Alzheimer’s Society. I cannot thank the Society enough for working with my team.

With one in three people born in the UK today expected to develop dementia in their lifetime, we all must understand more about the condition and how to support those affected. Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia, but there are many types, and all have a profound impact on individuals and families.

As part of the Dementia Friends training, we learned five essential facts that everyone should know:

  1. Dementia is not a natural part of ageing

  2. Dementia is caused by diseases of the brain

  3. Dementia is not just about losing your memory

  4. There is more to the person than the dementia

  5. A little understanding makes a big difference

I encourage everyone to consider becoming a Dementia Friend. Small steps in understanding and kindness can help make our communities more supportive and inclusive for people living with dementia and their loved ones.”

 

Hana Richardson, Alzheimer’s Society Local Services Manager, said: “This has been a fantastic opportunity to raise awareness, reach those that might need our support and create a society of Dementia Friends within the local community in Norfolk and Waveney. 

 

“Around one million people are living with dementia in the UK. The impact of dementia is devastating. It can often leave people feeling excluded and cut off from everyday life. Alzheimer’s Society’s Dementia Friends is all about increasing people’s understanding of dementia and inspiring everyone to make a difference for people affected in their communities. It could be checking in on a friend who is caring for someone with dementia, being more patient in the shop queue or taking part in a fundraising event. Whatever you choose to do, a little understanding makes a big difference. 

 

“At Alzheimer’s Society, we know the steps it will take to create a future where dementia no longer devastates lives. No one can beat dementia alone. It will take a society to beat it. Join us and become a Dementia Friend today, visit dementiafriends.org.uk

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Urgent Investment Needed to Power Industrial Decarbonisation and Secure UK Jobs

  • Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by ADE the Association for Decentralised Energy.

    Dear Chancellor,

    Urgent Investment Needed to Power Industrial Decarbonisation and Secure UK Jobs

    The UK’s 2050 target depends on decarbonising our industrial heartlands, but current policy is failing to address half the problem.

    While significant focus is rightly placed on large industrial clusters, nearly 50% of our industrial emissions – and at least 1.4 million jobs in the manufacturing and utilities industrial sectors alone could be at risk – are based in dispersed sites outside these clusters. These are the distilleries in Scotland, the ceramics kilns in the Midlands, the food processors in East Anglia. They are the backbone of our regional economies and our national supply chains, yet they face a perfect storm of barriers.

    Our electricity prices are the highest among IEA nations, with policy costs up to fourteen times more expensive and this contributes to making power more expensive than gas. This makes electrification – the primary route to decarbonisation for most of these sites – an economic non-starter. Compounded by crippling grid connection delays and a lack of tailored support, these businesses are being locked into high-carbon operations.

    This is an active threat to our economic competitiveness and energy security. We are stalling investment and risking carbon leakage at a time when we should be spurring green growth in every part of the country.

    The recent ADE: Demand report, "Decarbonising Dispersed Industries," provides a framework of this challenge, outlining five distinct archetypes of rural industry, each with unique needs but all united by this common policy blind spot.Therefore, I urge you to use the upcoming budget to allocate significant funding to address this imbalance. We need a mechanism that bridges the damaging price gap between electricity and gas, conditional on fuel switching, to make electrification the economically rational choice for British industry. This will unleash the investment we desperately need.

    By providing this price signal, you can unlock billions in private investment, secure hundreds of thousands of jobs, and finally put dispersed industrial decarbonisation on the fast track

    Let’s not leave half of our industrial economy behind. Let’s give them the tools to help us all reach net zero.

    Yours sincerely,

    Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by ADE the Association for Decentralised Energy.

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Letter Adrian Ramsay Letter Adrian Ramsay

Supporting Parents of Seriously Sick Children

  • Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by Chris Hinchliff MP.

    Dear Secretary of State,

    Re: The Government’s Consultation On Support for Parents of Seriously Sick Children

    We are writing in support of the It’s Never You campaign for Hugh’s Law, following the government’s announcement of a stand-alone consultation on supporting parents of seriously ill children.

    The campaign for Hugh’s Law goes to the heart of what our welfare state must provide: a safety net people can rely on in moments of crisis. Too many parents, already facing the anguish of caring for a seriously ill child, also face the devastating reality that they cannot afford to be at their child’s bedside. Hugh’s Law would introduce an immediate, non-means tested benefit for parents of seriously ill children, offering immediate support that current benefits simply do not provide. Families must not fall through the cracks of the welfare system at what is, for many, the hardest period of their lives. There is support for families at certain stages of life, such as maternity and paternity leave. There is nothing bespoke for parents of seriously ill children, aside from the limited Neonatal Care Act, applying only in a child’s earliest days. Hugh’s Law is a natural extension of that Act. Our welfare state should

    respond not to the timing of illness, but to the reality of need.

    We welcome the consultation as a significant step forward that reflects the government’s commitment to addressing the campaign for Hugh’s Law. We would be grateful for clarification on the following points ahead of the consultation:

    • Will the consultation’s terms be co-produced with It’s Never You to ensure they reflect families’ real needs?

    • Will you confirm the timeframe for the consultation?

    • Will you announce an intention to legislate on Hugh’s Law in next year’s King’s Speech?

    • Can you outline a potential timeframe for implementation of any resulting legislation?

    The government’s announcement marks significant progress. The upcoming King’s Speech provides

    the ideal opportunity to build on this to deliver Hugh’s Law, ensuring the needs of families are fully

    addressed.

    Yours sincerely,

    Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by Chris Hinchliff MP.

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Letter Adrian Ramsay Letter Adrian Ramsay

Ensure Audit Reform Is Not Delayed Further

  • Adrian Ramsay MP co-signed this cross-party letter initiated by the Chartered Institute of Internal Auditors.

    Sunday 7 September 2025

    The Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer KCB KC MP

    Prime Minister

    10 Downing Street

    London

    SW1A 2AA

    Dear Prime Minister,

    We welcomed the Government’s commitment in last July’s King’s Speech to publish the draft Audit Reform and

    Corporate Governance Bill, an important milestone following years of delay. However, we are very disappointed

    that, despite this early promise, it has been announced that it has once again stalled and will not be published for

    pre-legislative scrutiny during this session.

    The case for reform is now more pressing than ever. Strengthening audit and corporate governance is essential

    to laying the foundations for sustainable growth and long-term economic stability. Investors, the public, and other

    stakeholders must be able to rely on accurate, transparent reporting from our largest companies, covering both

    financial performance and other business-critical matters. This is fundamental to restoring trust and confidence in

    UK markets.

    We also need an audit regulator with real authority, one that can hold company directors and audit firms to

    account when failures occur. Without this, the system remains exposed and vulnerable, as the regulator lacks the

    legal powers it needs to do its job effectively.

    It is deeply concerning that over seven years have passed since the collapse of Carillion, yet no legislation has

    been brought forward, despite multiple independent reviews, a Government White Paper, and extensive public

    consultation. In the meantime, we have witnessed further high-profile corporate failures linked to weaknesses in

    audit and governance, including Patisserie Valerie, Bulb, Thomas Cook, Wilko, and ISG - making it clear that

    market oversight remains far from adequate. When companies collapse due to audit and governance failings, the

    consequences are devastating - impacting jobs, pensions, and smaller businesses across supply chains. This is

    the polar opposite of economic growth.

    In today’s increasingly volatile geopolitical and macroeconomic environment, a robust and effective audit and

    corporate governance framework is not a nice-to-have but a business necessity. The Audit Reform and Corporate

    Governance Bill enjoys strong cross-party support and represents a vital opportunity to legislate and regulate for

    growth, resilience, and accountability.

    As we have seen with other important Bills, where there is political will, there is a way. We urge the Government

    to act now, bring forward this long-overdue legislation, and prioritise its passage through Parliament.

    Yours faithfully,

    • Rt Hon Diane Abbott MP, Hackney North

    and Stoke Newington (The Mother of the

    House) (Independent)

    • Luke Akehurst MP, North Durham (Labour)

    • Josh Babarinde MP, Eastbourne (Liberal

    Democrat Spokesperson for Justice &

    Justice Committee)

    • Paula Barker MP, Liverpool Wavertree

    (Committee on Standards) (Labour)

    • Lee Barron MP, Corby and East

    Northamptonshire (Labour)

    • Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle (former

    Leader of the Green Party)

    • Siân Berry MP, Brighton Pavilion (Green)

    • Clive Betts MP, Sheffield South East

    (Public Accounts Committee) (Labour)

    • Bob Blackman MP, Harrow East (Chair,

    Backbench Business Committee)

    (Conservative)

    • Wendy Chamberlain MP, North East Fife

    (Liberal Democrat Chief Whip)

    • Ellie Chowns MP, North Herefordshire

    (Environmental Audit Committee) (Green)

    • Lord Clement-Jones CBE (Liberal

    Democrat Lords Spokesperson for

    Science, Innovation and Technology)

    • Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown MP, North

    Cotswolds (Conservative)

    • Daisy Cooper MP, St Albans (Liberal

    Democrat Spokesperson for the Treasury

    & Deputy Leader of the Liberal Democrats)

    • Adam Dance MP, Yeovil (Liberal

    Democrat)

    • Steve Darling MP, Torbay (Liberal

    Democrat Spokesperson for Work and

    Pensions & Work and Pensions

    Committee)

    • Ann Davies MP, Caerfyrddin (Welsh

    Affairs Committee) (Plaid Cymru)

    • Bobby Dean MP, Carshalton & Wallington

    (Treasury Committee) (Liberal Democrat)

    • Carla Denyer MP, Bristol Central

    • The Rt Hon. the Lord Dholakia OBE DL

    (Human Rights Joint Select Committee)

    (Liberal Democrat)

    • Neil Duncan-Jordan MP, Poole

    (Independent)

    • Sarah Dyke MP, Glastonbury and

    Somerton (Environment, Food and Rural

    Affairs Committee) (Liberal Democrat)

    • Sarah Edwards MP, Tamworth (Business

    and Trade Committee) (Labour)

    • Will Forster MP, Woking (Housing,

    Communities and Local Government

    Committee) (Liberal Democrat)

    • Andrew George MP, West Cornwall & Isles

    of Scilly (St Ives) (Health and Social Care

    Committee) (Liberal Democrat)

    • Mary Glindon MP, Newcastle upon Tyne

    East and Wallsend (Administration

    Committee) (Labour)

    • Claire Hanna MP, Belfast South and Mid

    Dow (Leader of the Social Democratic and

    Labour Party)

    • Baroness Harris of Richmond (Secondary

    Legislation Scrutiny Committee) (Liberal

    Democrat)

    • Pippa Heylings MP, South Cambridgeshire

    (Liberal Democrat Spokesperson for

    Energy Security and Net Zero &

    Environmental Audit Committee)

    • Wera Hobhouse MP, Bath (Energy

    Security and Net Zero Committee) (Liberal

    Democrat)

    • The Rt Hon. the Baroness Hodge of

    Barking DBE (Labour)

    • Christine Jardine MP, Edinburgh West

    (Women and Equalities Committee)

    (Liberal Democrat)

    • Liz Jarvis MP, Eastleigh (Culture, Media

    and Sport Committee) (Liberal Democrat)

    • Kim Johnson MP, Liverpool Riverside

    (Labour)

    • Clive Jones MP, Wokingham (Liberal

    Democrat Spokesperson for Trade)

    • Ben Lake MP, Ceredigion Preseli (Welsh

    Affairs Committee) (Plaid Cymru)

    • Graham Leadbitter MP, Moray West, Nairn

    & Strathspey (SNP)

    • Lord Leigh of Hurley (Conservative)

    • Seamus Logan MP, Aberdeenshire North

    and Moray East (SNP)

    • Ben Maguire MP, North Cornwall (Home

    Affairs Committee & Liberal Democrat

    Shadow Attorney General)

    • Helen Maguire MP, Epsom and Ewell

    (Liberal Democrat)

    • Rachael Maskell MP, York Central

    (Independent)

    • Brian Mathew MP, Melksham and Devizes

    (International Development Committee)

    (Liberal Democrat)

    • Andy McDonald MP, Middlesbrough and

    Thornaby East (Labour)

    • John McDonnell MP, Hayes and

    Harlington (Independent)

    • Iqbal Mohamed MP, Dewsbury and Batley

    (Independent)

    • Layla Moran MP, Oxford West and

    Abingdon (Chair, Health and Social Care

    Committee) (Liberal Democrat)

    • Tessa Munt MP, Wells and Mendip Hills

    (Administration Committee) (Liberal

    Democrat)

    • Susan Murray MP, Mid Dunbartonshire

    (Scottish Affairs Committee) (Liberal

    Democrat)

    • James Naish MP, Rushcliffe (International

    Development Committee) (Labour)

    • Sarah Olney MP, Richmond Park (Liberal

    Democrat Spokesperson for the Cabinet

    Office & Public Accounts Committee)

    • Manuela Perteghella MP, Stratford-on-

    Avon (Education Committee) (Liberal

    Democrat)

    • Adrian Ramsay MP, Waveney Valley

    (Green)

    • Martin Rhodes MP, Glasgow North

    (Environment Audit Committee) (Labour)

    • Marie Rimmer MP, St Helens South and

    Whiston (Labour)

    • Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick

    (Secondary Legislation Scrutiny

    Committee and former Leader of the

    Social Democratic and Labour Party)

    (Labour)

    • Dr Roz Savage MP, South Cotswolds

    (Petitions Committee) (Liberal Democrat)

    • Jim Shannon MP, Strangford (DUP)

    • Lord Sikka (Professor of Accounting at the

    University of Sheffield, and Emeritus

    Professor of Accounting at the University

    of Essex) (Labour)

    • Alex Sobel MP, Leeds Central and

    Headingley (UK Trade Envoy to Ukraine

    and Chair of the Net Zero APPG) (Labour)

    • Ian Sollom MP, St Neots and Mid

    Cambridgeshire (Liberal Democrat

    Spokesperson for Universities and Skills)

    • Baroness Uddin

    • Martin Vickers MP, Brigg & Immingham

    (Backbench Business Committee)

    (Conservative)

    • The Rt Hon. the Lord Wallace of Saltaire

    (Liberal Democrat)

    • Nadia Whittome MP, Nottingham East

    (Environmental Audit Committee) (Labour)

    • Steve Witherden MP, Montgomeryshire

    and Glyndŵr (Welsh Affairs Committee)

    (Labour)

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Adrian Ramsay Adrian Ramsay

Adrian Ramsay MP Welcomes Minister’s Commitment to Direct NHS Dentistry Funding Where It Is Most Needed

19th of August 2025

Adrian Ramsay MP, Member of Parliament for Waveney Valley, has questioned the Minister of State for Care on whether the extra funding allocated to the Department will be reflected in increased funding for NHS dentistry. The question - asked last month before Parliament went into recess - secured a commitment to focusing more NHS dentistry funding in under-served areas like Waveney Valley.

Adrian Ramsay asked:

“Data published last week shows that despite the Government’s initial action, the proportion of dentists working in the NHS in Norfolk and Waveney continues to drop. I am pleased to hear about the Government’s work on the dental contract, but the Public Accounts Committee is clear that this will work only if it is backed by sustainable funding. I will give the Minister another chance to answer the question: will the Government ensure that the extra funding that has been put into the Department is actually reflected in extra funding for NHS dentistry?”

 

In response Stephen Kinnock MP the Minister of State for Care said

 “One thing that I made clear to officials when I came into this post was that every penny that is allocated to NHS dentistry must be spent on NHS dentistry. We are in a crazy situation where demand for NHS dentistry is going through the roof, yet we have had underspends. That needs to stop. We will focus the spending on where it is most needed, including areas that are under-served, such as the hon. Gentleman’s constituency.”

Reacting to the reply Adrian Ramsay MP said 

"I am glad that the Government has acknowledged the ridiculous situation where the demand for NHS dentistry is increasing while funding remains unspent and so many people just can’t get access to a dentist. I welcome the Minister’s commitment to ensuring that resources are directed to where they are most needed. In the upcoming parliamentary term, I will hold the Minister accountable to this commitment and will continue to advocate for improved access to NHS dentistry for people in East Anglia and across the country.” 

ENDS

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Adrian Ramsay Adrian Ramsay

Adrian Ramsay MP statement on the Park Hotel, Diss 

15th of August 2025

Adrian Ramsay MP, Member of Parliament for Waveney Valley, statement on the recent issues relating to the Park Hotel in Diss:  

“In recent weeks I have been contacted by many constituents about the situation at the Park Hotel in Diss and I am keeping in close and frequent contact with residents, local groups, and the authorities. This is a sensitive situation and one where the right thing to do has been to focus on working behind the scenes with the Home Office, South Norfolk Council, local police, community groups and residents to seek clear, accurate information and to help ease tensions in our community. I continue to be concerned for the welfare of the asylum seeker families who have been in Diss for some time and have been welcomed into our community and I will continue to press for them to be treated fairly.“

 

“I have spoken directly with many constituents to hear their questions and to ensure they have the latest verified facts. Responses from the Home Office have at times been slow or unclear and we currently have a situation where it is unclear what the future plans for the hotel are. I will continue to press for timely communication so that we can avoid speculation and so South Norfolk Council and the many community groups who have been supporting the asylum seekers living in our community can continue to do so.“

 

“Although some local media coverage has not reflected the full picture, my focus remains on supporting our community and ensuring the wellbeing of all residents of Diss, both long term residents and people seeking sanctuary in our town. I have written to the Minister to call for a dedicated MP hotline to improve coordination between local authorities, elected representatives and the Home Office. Clear, open communication and co-ordination between all the authorities is essential to ensure the best outcomes for our community.” 

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Waveney Valley, NHS, Dentistry Adrian Ramsay Waveney Valley, NHS, Dentistry Adrian Ramsay

The Government has finally acknowledged the NHS dentistry crisis. Now it must take action.

 8th of August 2025

When I stood for election a little over a year ago, the one issue that came up time and time again was the near-complete collapse in access to NHS dental care locally. It was raised by parents who couldn’t get appointments for their children, and by people sometimes travelling hours just to be seen. I’ve even spoken to people in so much pain that they resorted to pulling out their teeth. This cannot be right.

 

I’ve long believed that dentistry is the forgotten sibling of the NHS. A vital service that has been chronically underfunded for decades.

 

From day one in Parliament, I made it a priority to press the Government on this issue. I’ve repeatedly raised it on the floor of the House, submitted questions, and met with the British Dental Association (BDA) and the campaign group Toothless in England multiple times to hear directly from those on the front lines. Their message has been consistent: the current system is broken.

 

Dentists are willing and able to help, but many are leaving NHS work because the contract model is unworkable, and the funding is not there. That is why I have sought to work with the BDA to secure a new workable contract - one that serves dentists, patients, and the NHS.

The Government’s response until now has been lacklustre to say the least. They have promised reforms that never materialised and continued to allocate funding that, infuriatingly, went unspent. In fact, despite the Government’s initial action and announcements and schemes that were supposed to fix things, the proportion of dentists working in the NHS in Norfolk and Waveney continues to drop.

 

I took the opportunity in Parliament last month to ask the Minister of State for Care whether the recently announced additional funding for the Department of Health and Social Care would lead to substantial investment in NHS dentistry. I asked a simple, direct question. Will the Government ensure that the extra funding that has been put into the Department is actually reflected in extra funding for NHS dentistry? 

 

This time, the Minister gave a clear and welcome commitment. He said, and I quote, “Every penny that is allocated to NHS dentistry must be spent on NHS dentistry.” He also acknowledged how outrageous it is that we have seen underspending in dentistry budgets at a time of rising demand. Crucially, he recognised that areas like East Anglia, which have been underserved for years, must be prioritised.

 

As someone who has worked consistently on this issue, both inside and outside Parliament, I am pleased that the Government is finally starting to recognise the scale of the problem. But let’s be clear. Words are not enough. Promises mean little unless they are followed by action. What we need is for this Government to live up to its commitment to spend every penny allocated to NHS dentistry, and to follow through as soon as possible with the contract reforms so we can stop – and then reverse – the exodus of dentists from the NHS.

 

For people in Waveney Valley and across East Anglia, this needs to result in more NHS dentists on the ground. It needs to mean appointments that are available when needed. Patients must not be forced into private treatment or left waiting for months or longer for basic care.

 

There is also a broader question here about how we view dentistry as part of our health system. For too long, dental care has been treated as a separate or second-tier service. That must change. Oral health is not an optional extra, it’s a vital part of our overall health. Until the Government sees this, we are going to get nowhere in improving our overall wellbeing.

 

Untreated dental problems can lead to severe pain, serious infections, and, in some cases, leave people unable to eat. Tooth decay is the number one reason for hospital admission for children – a total scandal. The idea that this essential part of healthcare is now out of reach for so many people is not just unfair. It is a public health failure.

 

The Government may have come to its senses on NHS dentistry, but this must now be a turning point, not just a passing gesture. In the months ahead, I will continue to work with the BDA and Toothless in England to push for tangible action, not just words.

 

No one should be in pain because they cannot afford to see a dentist. No child should be denied basic healthcare because of where they live. It’s time the Government made good on its promise and delivered NHS dentistry that works for the people who need it most.

 

I will not let this issue drop. I will continue to fight for a system that works, for patients, for dentists, and communities like ours.

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Adrian Ramsay Adrian Ramsay

Adrian Ramsay MP Welcomes Swift Brick Pledge and Calls for Greener, Nature-Friendly Housing Standards

7th August 2025

Adrian Ramsay MP, Co-Leader of the Green Party of England and Wales and Member of Parliament for Waveney Valley, has welcomed Saffron Housing Trust’s new commitment to install swift bricks in all suitable new build homes on their future developments – calling the move “A great example of what should become the norm, not the exception.”

 

Saffron Housing announced that they have made this decision following representations from Adrian Ramsay on behalf of his constituents.

Speaking on the commitment Adrian Ramsay MP said 

“With swifts now on the UK’s Red List, we urgently need to protect and restore their nesting sites. That is why I welcome Saffron Housing Trust's commitment to install swift bricks in all suitable new build homes on their future developments.  Swift bricks are a simple, low-cost solution that offer real benefits to these birds and many other species.

“We need to make nature-friendly design and high environmental standards the norm in all new developments. We must build homes that are fit for the future – that means measures that are good for wildlife, and also measures that are good for people and reducing bills such as including renewable energy and high insulation standards as a matter of course. I commend Saffron Housing Trust for taking this step and I want to see all housing providers ensuring the highest environmental standards.”

Marie Baynham-Davies - A member of Halesworth Swifts and Suffolk Save Our Swifts who highlighted the issue with Adrian in a constituency surgery, said

 

“This is a real boost for swift populations which have declined by 66% since 1995. Insulation in modern developments means buildings provide no natural nest sites for birds. Swift bricks provide a safe cavity for swifts to nest in and cost less than a nest box but last the lifetime of the building. It is fantastic that Adrian Ramsay is supporting the use of Swift bricks, and we hope that Saffron Housing's decision to install them shows that putting bricks in new developments is an achievable target for all planners and developers.” 

ENDS
For more information, visit https://www.actionforswifts.com and https://hannahbournetaylor.com/the-feather-speech-campaign-for-swifts/

Saffron Housing announcement https://www.linkedin.com/posts/saffron-housing-trust-limited_socialhousing-developments-environmental-activity-7358888552119615489-G4h2?utm_source=social_share_send&utm_medium=member_desktop_web&rcm=ACoAACXkKVkBzhFvdiHzxiiRBBCGJvHQaqgifLM

 




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Letter Adrian Ramsay Letter Adrian Ramsay

ICJ advisory opinion on unlawful occupation of Palestinian territory

  • Dear Prime Minister, Foreign Secretary, and Attorney General

    On 19 July 2024, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) gave a groundbreaking

    judgement on the legal consequences arising from the Policies and Practices of

    Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT).

    This advisory opinion made crystal clear determinations that:

     The Israeli presence in the OPT, including Gaza, is unlawful and its policies

    and practices are incompatible with international law.

     All Israeli settlements are illegal and must be withdrawn immediately

     Israel owes full reparation for all damage of its illegal acts since 1967,

     Other states are obliged to not provide any sort of aid or assistance that

    maintains Israel’s unlawful presence in the OPT, referring to Gaza, the West

    Bank, and East Jerusalem.

    Following this advisory opinion, the Foreign Office response was that it would

    consider “carefully before responding. The UK respects the independence of the

    ICJ... the UK is strongly opposed to the expansion of illegal settlements and rising

    settler violence”.

    The government promised to publish its formal response. One year on since the

    advisory opinion was issued, it has yet to do so. Given that the ICJ referred to the

    “unlawfulness” as an established fact, the UK has a legal duty to ensure that the

    government and British entities take all necessary steps to ensure that we are not

    complicit with this unlawful situation. This is particularly pertinent given the

    seriousness of the situation, the continued and increasing Israeli violations of

    international law, as well as the increase in illegal settlements. Between November

    2023 – October 2024, Israel established 57 new settlements and outposts. However,

    the UK needs to not just denounce the rise in settlements but the mere existence of

    them, as regards the ICJ advisory opinion.

    The failure of the government to publish its legal advice on the advisory opinion and

    address the unlawful situation occurring in the OPT, as well its own obligations under

    international law to avoid complicity, needs to be rectified.

    Over the last year, since the opinion was issued, Israel has accelerated its violations

    of international law including the Fourth Geneva Convention in the OPT.

    We, the undersigned, urge the government immediately to publish its response to

    the ICJ Advisory Opinion on the legal consequences of the Israeli occupation and

    take all the necessary measures to adhere to the obligation of 3 rd party states “not to

    render aid or assistance in maintaining the situation created by Israel’s illegal

    presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory” as the Court stipulated.

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Adrian Ramsay MP joined the local community in celebrating Pride in Bungay over the weekend.

22nd of July 2025

Adrian Ramsay MP, Co-Leader of the Green Party of England and Wales and Member of Parliament for Waveney Valley, proudly joined community members at this year’s Pride celebration in Bungay to show support for LGBTQ+ rights and visibility.

Adrian Ramsay MP said at the end of the event "Pride is a time to celebrate the progress we have made in the fight for LGBTQ+ rights and to uphold the idea that everyone deserves to live in safety, dignity, and with equal respect. I was pleased to support the residents of Bungay who are dedicated to ensuring we have an inclusive and welcoming community."



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