Oeddech chi'n golygu garage?
Stella Creasy: .... With every new wave of people, the UK has always been unwelcoming and always regretted it. Indeed, it was the same with the Huguenots, the wave of refugees that brought both my family and Nigel Farage’s family here. When the Windrush generation came, they were met with “no blacks, no Irish, no dogs”. Now we rightly honour their contribution to our communities. We have demonised...
Carwyn Jones: Brif Weinidog, mae Animal Farm wedi ei grybwyll, ac rwy'n siŵr bod Mark Reckless yn gwneud dynwarediad da yn y fan yna o fod y Boxer i Napoleon Nigel Farage. Rwyf yn gobeithio, wrth gwrs, na fydd yn y pen draw yn cael ei gymryd i ffwrdd, ac ni fyddwn eisiau i hynny ddigwydd chwaith. Daniel Kawczynski yw'r cymeriad Snowball, efallai, onid e—yr AS Ceidwadol dros Amwythig sydd, mewn ymateb...
Gareth Bacon: ...the constituency is home to contemporary figures who have made an impact on public consciousness. By a quirk of fate, that same village has been home to one of my new constituents—a certain Nigel Farage, who, although never a Member of this place, has had an undeniable impact on British and European politics. We are fortunate to have some of the best schools in the country, and I am...
Mark Reckless: Mae Joyce Watson yn y fan honno'n ceryddu Nigel Farage am fethu mynychu mwy nag un o bwyllgorau pysgodfeydd yr Undeb Ewropeaidd. Mae wedi gwneud rhywbeth ychydig yn fwy gwerthfawr i bysgotwyr drwy ein cael allan o'r UE a'u cael allan o'r polisi pysgodfeydd cyffredin. Diolch i Andrew R.T. Davies a Llyr Gruffydd am eu sylwadau hael am ein cynnig. Rwyf am fynegi fy siom na fyddant yn ei gefnogi...
Lord Willoughby de Broke: ...going to implement the referendum result that 17.5 million people voted for. I remind noble Lords and the Government that we are here tonight largely because of the bravery and courage of Nigel Farage and his leadership of UKIP. Without that, David Cameron would never have had any intention of granting a referendum—that was the effect of UKIP. When we won the leave vote, we were all...
Pete Wishart: ...tribute to some of the other people who have won today, in the great victory of this Brexit. I know that the Conservatives will, uncharitably, not do this, but somebody has to congratulate Nigel Farage. It is his vision that has been realised today. Without Nigel Farage, there would be no Brexit. Without the pressure that was put on the Conservative party from whatever incarnation of his...
Daniel Zeichner: ...) explained so well, he buckled and did what he and the previous Prime Minister said they would never do: create a border down the Irish sea. Less commented on is how he buckled under pressure from Farage when he threatened to put up candidates in every seat. That was when no deal was brought back: by that promise to not allow an extra extension of the transition period. We know it is all...
Jenny Rathbone: ...bwyd. Rwy'n credu yr hoffwn ganolbwyntio am eiliad ar eich rhybudd iasoer chi, os byddwn ni'n gadael yr UE ar ddiwedd mis Ionawr gyda chytundeb neu heb gytundeb fis Rhagfyr nesaf, sef cynllun Farage/Johnson wrth gwrs, yna ychydig iawn o amser fydd gennym i baratoi ein heconomi ar gyfer y storm ofnadwy sy'n debygol o ddeillio o hyn, sy'n waeth o lawer nag unrhyw beth a gyflawnodd Mrs...
Ken Skates: ...ac na ddylem ni briodoli bai, ond yna defnyddiodd y cyfraniad fel manteisiaeth wleidyddol pur. Y gwir amdani yw—[Torri ar draws.] Y gwir amdani—[Torri ar draws.] Y gwir amdani yw bod Nigel Farage wedi siarad am yr angen i dorri'n lân oddi wrth yr UE trwy Brexit, a fyddai yn ei dro yn ein dychwelyd i dariffau a rheolau Sefydliad Masnach y Byd, a fyddai yn ei dro yn dinistrio'r sector...
...me be absolutely candid: I support independence for Scotland. I want Scotland to escape a position where our future is imposed on us by Boris Johnson, who is now having his strings pulled by Nigel Farage. The Tory party is now a wholly owned subsidiary of Nigel Farage and the Brexit Party. I do not want that to be Scotland’s future; I want the people of Scotland to have the opportunity...
Sadiq Khan: ...raised by prominent Brexiteers, from Boris Johnson [Prime Minister] to Michael Gove [Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster] to Liam Fox [Member of Parliament for North Somerset] to Nigel Farage [Leader, Brexit Party]. None of them talked about leaving the EU without a deal. Most of them talked about us being members of the Customs Union and the single market and being able to do a trade...
Harriett Baldwin: ...opening remarks. We have not had a UK ambassador in Washington for four months. Can he update the House on when he expects that appointment to be made, and can he also rule out appointing Mr Nigel Farage to such a position?
Bob Seely: ...to DAC, the OECD committee. To colleagues who think that I am hostile to DFID, let me say that I am genuinely not, and I am genuinely not hostile to 0.7%. Some people in this House, like Nigel Farage outside it, say, “We should pretty much scrap it. It is a disgrace that we spend more on overseas aid than on policing.” Actually, that is an embarrassing figure for us. I am not against...
Michael Russell: ...uncertainty. It would merely unleash on the population fresh and ever more complex, ever more acrimonious, disputes. There would be more of Boris Johnson, more of Jacob Rees Mogg, and more of Nigel Farage. What an appalling prospect. There would be a veritable continuous Halloween of sneering antidemocratic horrors on our screens, for another year, or two, or three. The withdrawal...
Tommy Sheppard: .... That is why it is right and proper that the Prime Minister should put his case before the electorate. I look forward to him being challenged—not just by Opposition parties, but by Nigel Farage so that we can see whether the deal he has come up with satisfies the real hard-right Brexiteers, for whom nothing will sate their appetite. As many people have remarked, the situation in...
Caroline Lucas: ...a people’s vote because they know that that is the best way—indeed, the only way—to get to the bottom of this crisis and resolve it. All that a general election will do, frankly, is put Nigel Farage and the Prime Minister back in their comfort zones, giving them a stage—political insiders dressed up as rebels, whose agenda, frankly, is chaos—so that division will thrive. I want...
Steve Brine: ...heal this country we have to move on from this in some way. In such a fractious situation, with such a close referendum result, we have to be generous in defeat and magnanimous in victory. As Nigel Farage said—and I do not quote him often— “For a civilised democracy to work you need the losers’ consent”. Fortunately, we can now have that because we are the dealers—the...
Baroness Armstrong of Hill Top: ...Lord. I profoundly disagree with a range of things he said. He started by asking what the position would be if the referendum had gone the other way. That was made extremely clear to us. Nigel Farage said, “If this goes the wrong way, the campaign for the next stage will begin immediately and we will continue with that”. The reality is that we are in this position because the Tory...
Baroness Quin: ...Jacob Rees-Mogg should talk about “remainiacs”, as he did this week. I am also shocked by some of the language that is being used. I was shocked, perhaps not surprisingly, by a tweet from Nigel Farage, which showed a photograph of a large number of union jacks flying outside Parliament. It said: “Share this photo to wind a Remainer up”. As a remainer, I am not wound up by the sight...
Lord Heseltine: ...what it has been since day one of his premiership: to combine an agenda of right-wing hard-line politics with Brexit to try to get it through a general election campaign by attracting back Nigel Farage’s supporters. It is as blindingly obvious as that. You had only to listen to the speech today, in which the ultimate target was Jeremy Corbyn. But Boris has got it wrong. Jeremy Corbyn is...