• Contact us
  • Advertise with us
  • Cumbria Crack app
  • About us
Thursday, June 4, 2026
cumbriacrack.com
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Food & drink
  • Jobs
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Food & drink
  • Jobs
No Result
View All Result
cumbriacrack.com
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Cumbrian MP makes maiden speech in Parliament

by Cumbria Crack
29/07/2024
in News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Josh McAlister

A Cumbrian MP has made his maiden speech in the Houses of Parliament.

Josh MacAlister, who was elected to represent Whitehaven & Workington in the General Election on July 4, stood in the House 18 days later.

The Labour MP paid tribute to his Copeland predecessor Trudy Harrison, and said while he and the Conservative disagreed on matters of policy, she had been unfailingly gracious and generous with her time.

He paid tribute to the RNLI and mountain rescue team volunteers – the MP is a volunteer for Wasdale Mountain Rescue Team – and said the constituency featured friendly and welcoming ‘marras’.

He added: “It is a great honour and privilege to stand here as the first Member of Parliament for the new Whitehaven and Workington constituency. Whether it is the people of Whitehaven or the good people of Workington who are the jam eaters continues to be a source of fierce debate. Of course, I will remain neutral on that question, as I will on all rugby league-related matters.”

Mr MacAlister ended his maiden speech by saying he was determined to play his part to ensure that West Cumbria feels the maximum possible benefit of the change we want to bring about for our country.

Josh MacAlister’s maiden speech in full

The first and only time I entered this chamber before being sworn in as a Member of Parliament was as a secondary school citizenship teacher, bringing dozens of teenagers here to see their Parliament.

On that occasion, I was required to use my teacher voice a number of times, but that is not something I plan to make a habit of in this house.

I begin by putting on record my thanks to my predecessor for the now abolished Copeland constituency, Trudy Harrison. We may disagree on matters of policy, but she has been unfailingly gracious to me and generous with her time, demonstrating the “country before party” approach that we can all learn so much from.

I may be new to this house, but I am not new to pushing governments to get things done, as opposition members will know only too well, and I have worked with a number of Education Secretaries over the years.

I founded and led a national charity to get more people into fulfilling careers on the frontline of children’s social work to ensure that every vulnerable child has a champion fighting their corner. From that, I was asked by the last Government to chair a landmark independent review of the children’s social care system.

That review found that the disadvantage faced by the care-experienced community in our country should be the civil rights issue of our time.

Evidence of that disadvantage is found in worse education outcomes, worse health outcomes and shorter lives, but that disadvantage is fuelled by something that politicians often find too hard to discuss, and that MPs certainly find too hard to mention in this chamber: the absence of love.

I believe every child has the right to be loved, and we have the ability to build a care system that can provide that for them. I hope this Parliament will take up the challenge of addressing this moral outrage. The problem is huge, but the solutions are known, and with enough will, tens of thousands of lives can be transformed.

It is a great honour and privilege to stand here as the first Member of Parliament for the new Whitehaven and Workington constituency.

Whether it is the people of Whitehaven or the good people of Workington who are the jam eaters continues to be a source of fierce debate.

Of course, I will remain neutral on that question, as I will on all rugby league-related matters.

Nowhere is more blessed than my constituency, home to the highest peak and the deepest lake in England, with miles of beautiful coastline and the stunning western part of the Lake District, which has inspired millions. Let me here pay special tribute to our amazing mountain rescue volunteers, our Royal National Lifeboat Institution volunteers – and all those who give up their time to volunteer in search and rescue services. I have an interest to declare as a serving mountain rescue volunteer, and I will champion volunteer search and rescue services at every opportunity.

Behind the doors of the towns and villages across my constituency, you will find the warmest and friendliest marras in the country, people forged by the drama and confidence of the surrounding landscape and people with humility, respect and determination at their core.

These are people such as Gary McKee, who ran a marathon every day for a year to raise over £1 million for cancer support; those in the growing network of Andy’s Man Clubs in our community, tackling the crisis of male suicide that my area faces; and community leaders, such as Rachel Holliday of Calderwood House, giving people a route out of homelessness.

Our area has also forged those who were not born West Cumbrian, but who made our corner of the world their home, including pioneers and entrepreneurs such as Frank Schon, later Baron Schon of Whitehaven.

Frank was an Austrian refugee who fled the Nazis, was bombed out of London and was taken in by a kind Cumbrian farmer. He went on to set up and lead a global chemicals company based in Whitehaven, before later chairing Harold Wilson’s development corporation and going on to serve in the other place.

Today, my community is home to dozens of Ukrainian families that could well have the next Frank Schon in them. I hope we can offer those who wish to stay a permanent home here in this country.

Lord Schon is one famous example, but there are thousands of men and women like him—from Whitehaven to Workington, Gosforth to Egremont, Cleator Moor to Seascale and Flimby to Seaton in the north of the constituency—pioneers, entrepreneurs and grafters who have helped West Cumbria to lead the world.

It is because of this graft that my constituency is home to the UK New Balance trainer factory—I am not wearing them right now—and the Iggesund paper mill, which has been experimenting with leading carbon capture technology.

It is home to Forth Engineering and React Engineering, and hundreds of other businesses represented by Britain’s Energy Coast Business Cluster, from the coal and iron mines to the steelworks.

Of course, there is the world’s first civil nuclear power station at the site now famously known as Sellafield, home to a world-leading decommissioning mission, which is stimulating innovation in robotics and AI.

We led the world, and we can again. We have the people, the will, the determination and now, thankfully, the Government to do it.

Our nuclear heritage and our skilled workforce mean we have what it takes to be the ideal location for the next generation of nuclear power.

The Government are determined to make the most of new jobs in the energy transition, to reform our broken planning system and to decarbonise the grid, and these three things offer the opportunity for the people of Whitehaven and Workington to fly.

A Labour Government with a proper industrial strategy and the right targeted investment could completely transform the economic geography of my community. These are decisions that need to be made to create the growth we have promised and to tackle the climate crisis our planet faces.

I am determined to play my part to deliver this Labour Government’s mission and to ensure that West Cumbria feels the maximum possible benefit of the change we want to bring about for our country.

Previous Post

South Cumbrian chef joins forces with village pub

Next Post

Gallery owners say bridge closure has been worse for Cockermouth than 2009 floods

Have you read?

Rediscovered literary history in Cartmel
News

Rediscovered literary history in Cartmel

04/06/2026
High-value power tools stolen from vehicle
News

Six arrests after tip-offs about dangerous off-road bike riding in Barrow

04/06/2026
Mobile speed camera van locations today in Cumbria
News

Speed camera vans in Cumbria today

04/06/2026
Tribute to grandmother killed in West Cumbrian crash
Latest

Tribute to grandmother killed in West Cumbrian crash

04/06/2026
Kendal teen brings 19th century style back to life
Latest

Kendal teen brings 19th century style back to life

03/06/2026
Autism memoir tells of 60-year struggle for understanding
News

Autism memoir tells of 60-year struggle for understanding

03/06/2026

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list to receive daily updates direct to your inbox!

*We hate spam as much as you do. Privacy Statement

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

33 Middlegate
Penrith
Cumbria
CA11 7SY

Phone: 01768 862313
Email: [email protected]

Registered in England as Barrnon Media Limited. No: 12475190
VAT registration number: 343486488

Explore

  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Carlisle United
  • What’s on
  • Jobs

Useful links

  • Contact us
  • Send a sport report
  • Get our app
  • Advertise with us
  • About us

Follow us on

Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list to receive daily updates direct to your inbox!

*We hate spam as much as you do. Privacy Statement

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

© Barrnon Media Limited 2023

Terms & Conditions / Privacy Policy / Cookie Policy
This website and its associated newspaper are members of the Independent Press Standards Organisation
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Food & drink
  • Jobs

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.