Example sentences of "which [art] hon. [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I am glad to confirm that the disabled persons transport advisory committee , which was set up under the Transport Act 1985 , exists to provide exactly the voice for which the Hon. Member called .
2 I am not sure where the hon. Gentleman gets his figures from — perhaps from the same Labour party briefing on which the hon. Member for Blackburn ( Mr. Straw ) relies .
3 The financial details of the transaction to which the hon. Member referred , and which bear no resemblance to those that he described , took place two years after my noble Friend left the Government .
4 In the same interview from which I quoted , Mr. Bickerstaffe went on to repeat the high priority that NUPE attaches to increasing the minimum wage — a proposal which the hon. Member for Livingston ( Mr. Cook ) has already said would cost the NHS between £400 million and £500 million .
5 The hon. Gentleman makes a valid point about the regime which the hon. Member for Edinburgh , Leith ( Mr. Brown ) appears to admire .
6 We played and fought hard , and it is sad to reflect that the plethora of political parties to which the hon. Member referred seems unable to produce the good will , fellowship and spirit that prevailed in those days .
7 That entity must be based on consensus and it must be one to which the British people will willingly belong because they appreciate the advantages to which the hon. Member for Chichester has already referred .
8 Those of us who work with refugees recognise how stretched are the resources of the United Nations , particularly those for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees , and those who have responsibility for coping with the enormous problems about which the hon. Member for Islington , North ( Mr. Corbyn ) has just spoken .
9 Of course , everyone is aware of the difficulty of introducing an EC peacekeeping force before there is a genuine peace to keep , but the Government should urgently consider other options such as the naval action which the hon. Member for Wellingborough suggested .
10 On 1 November , my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for the Environment and I announced our decision — to which the hon. Member for Caerphilly referred — to exclude the area of the inland bay as defined in the Bill from further consideration as part of the area proposed as a special protection area .
11 The Labour party , to which the hon. Member for Denton and Reddish ( Mr. Bennett ) belongs , objected to that Bill and voted against it .
12 I am not sure how accurately that can be measured , but it represents a substantial cost to the NHS , which the hon. Member for Eccles compared , in my view rightly , with the large sums of money that the European Community still commits to subsidising tobacco production , against which we have argued vehemently in Brussels .
13 The most recent was the Children and Young Persons ( Protection from Tobacco ) Act 1991 , which the hon. Member for Bradford , South ( Mr. Cryer ) mentioned .
14 That is why I objected to the assurance with which the hon. Member for Ryedale was arguing that this would happen .
15 Acceptance of a social charter might lead more easily to the achievement of the goals to which the hon. Member referred .
16 I rather suspect that the present regional disparities to which the hon. Member for Gateshead , East referred , not least the voting disparities , will change as one moves further south .
17 Last week , I was at a Salford school , having visited one of those motor projects to which the hon. Member for Huddersfield referred .
18 The first is top-up payments , which the hon. Member for Birkenhead recommends should be made by local offices ; the second is the reintroduction of housing benefit .
19 One does not have to look at the report which the hon. Member for Gordon has thrown away with such disdain .
20 There is an important distinction between the shelter to which the hon. Member for Tooting referred and the rather higher quality provision in hostels and in permanent accommodation .
21 After considerable deliberations , a great deal of attention , many discussions with the various parties concerned — no doubt the kind of conference which the hon. Member for Kingston upon Hull , West ( Mr. Randall ) so naively believes will produce a solution — the committee came forward with the only viable solution , total deregulation of Sunday trading .
22 The hon. Member for Derby , South ( Mrs. Beckett ) would be shocked if she knew the extent to which the hon. Member for Dagenham attempts to lead the public into believing that Labour would operate a more generous rebate system .
23 The programme for the next 10 years should be based on a clear recognition of the need for an early enlargement to include the aspiring EFTA countries , to which the hon. Member for Inverness , Nairn and Lochaber ( Sir R. Johnston ) referred , and the three central European countries — Poland , Hungary and Czechoslovakia — to the east of the Community .
24 I shall mention some of the issues to which the hon. Member for Stamford and Spalding ( Mr. Davies ) referred , although there seemed to be a lack of logic in his remarks because he cheered the Government on while encouraging them to be careful .
25 That measure was aimed at tackling the menace of the casual carrying of knives on the streets to which the hon. Member for Leyton drew attention .
26 I am appalled at the flippant way in which the hon. Member addresses the serious matter of the continuing equipment of the Royal Navy .
27 In the letter from the Secretary of State which the hon. Member for Devon , North ( Mr. Speller ) read out , as well as saying that differences are likely to arise because of different clinical views , he said that they may arise because of different local circumstances .
28 Why does the system in Northern Ireland remain isolated with no connection to any other system , with all the technical and economic disadvantages which that entails and which the hon. Member for Antrim , East has referred to on several occasions ?
29 There is an issue , which the hon. Lady must recognise , involving the careers service figures .
30 He shows clearly that he did not find evidence of the so-called two-tier phenomenon to which the hon. Lady refers , but that the total of care provided was increased .
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