Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Grant Shapps

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British politician Grant Shapps.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Grant Shapps

Grant Shapps is a British politician serving as Secretary of State for Transport since 2019. A member of the Conservative Party, he has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Welwyn Hatfield since the 2005 general election.

To reduce repossessions caused by unemployment, Gordon Brown needs to look at cutting the rate of corporation tax for small companies to 20 per cent and the main rate to 25 per cent, while reducing the rate of employers' national insurance by 1% for the smallest companies.
I went to Manchester poly for two years.
I've always thought that the level of homelessness in society is likely to be a truer measure of how civilised we are then almost any other factor. — © Grant Shapps
I've always thought that the level of homelessness in society is likely to be a truer measure of how civilised we are then almost any other factor.
We are the workers' party. We are the party of the hard working individual.
Incentives and infrastructure should encourage development and that development needs to contain the right types of housing in the right places.
The arts and crafts architecture of Letchworth and Welwyn Garden City is now hugely admired. Remember much of it was stimulated through open competition.
Before I went into parliament I used to write business publications, and like many authors wrote under a business name.
Taxi drivers up and down the country are at the vanguard of the electric vehicle revolution.
Representing the people of Welwyn Garden City makes me intensely proud.
While we recognise the challenges councils are facing, we do expect to see them match our commitment to the most vulnerable.
IVF became the only way for us to have children after I was treated for Hodgkin's lymphoma 10 years ago with fertility-destroying chemotherapy. And while the cancer treatment was predictably punishing for me, I was struck by the anguish of the IVF process and in particularly the failed cycle.
All too often affordable housing can be a block on mobility and aspiration, so instead Conservatives will ensure that living in social accommodation means that you'll get a 'freedom pass' to get on and do more with your life.
Extra homes require additional services and councils have to pick up the tab.
Conservatives don't love business for some abstract reason. We love it because of what it offers our children. Hope.
When Welwyn Garden City was planned, the workers homes were placed in the east, downwind from the factories in the middle, whilst the bosses got the larger westside homes in Handside. This sort of social engineering, including the absence of a pub, would not be acceptable today.
We believe that a civilised society can be measured by the way in which it treats its most vulnerable members and that being impatient about poverty is therefore simply the default position for modern progressive Conservatives.
It's vital that communities actually get something back in return for seeing their area developed. — © Grant Shapps
It's vital that communities actually get something back in return for seeing their area developed.
As the people at the sharp end of delivering the government's commitment to tackle climate change we know attaining zero carbon status has always involved a flexible approach.
I believe that investing in welfare is crucial - but I also believe that it only works if you're getting help to those who need it. If you're doing it with no results, it's disastrous.
Of course homelessness has many causes and the solutions are often frustratingly complex.
My wife and I set up the business, we were always very open about it and had a business author's name as many authors do.
I absolutely believe that we're the workers' party. We are the party that has always been at the forefront of the big social changes that have promoted women and working people.
When I was setting up my own business in my early 20s I'd get up early and work every hour I could stay awake.
I like being Jewish and I married a Jewish girl. It's like a way of life and it's good to be able to instil some of that sense of being in your kids. All of that makes me seem as though I am quite observant but actually the flipside of this is I don't know if there is a God or not.
I have always been an aviation nerd. I read the magazines.
I've always been tenacious. I don't let go of things until I think it's fixed. On the other hand I'm a fairly jovial, smiley person.
Gordon Brown doesn't often spring surprises. He's usually far too cautious to deliver the unexpected.
Fighting poverty is nothing new for the Conservative Party, but during the 1980s the emphasis placed on individualism and prosperity was sometimes seen to crowd out social issues like helping the most vulnerable in society.
There should be a way of saying to people 'thank you very much, it has not worked out but here is a good decent package for you to move on from this role and we will support you to move on into other jobs, so it is not a hire and fire thing'; and those are the sorts of changes that Conservatives would like to see.
I've always been quite driven so it wasn't like the cancer was my wake-up call.
We know that solving homelessness has to be about more than simply introducing a new raft of government initiatives, task forces and top-down solutions.
Chemo is properly punishing, and it's hard to do things at the usual level.
My personal interest in IVF led me to author two reports into the availability of treatment on the NHS.
I think it is absolutely inevitable that Palestinians will, and have to, have their own state.
I suspect I have a relationship with my religion which will seem slightly weird to people who don't understand me.
Labour voted to increase welfare spending again and again, without considering the effect that the spending was having, either on the people it was designed to help or those working to support the system.
The reality is that it would be wiser and even kinder for politicians to be responsible about what they claim the NHS will do, because the pain of having raised expectations for parents who are desperate to start a family, only to see those hopes crushed, is more cruel than having said nothing at all.
For anyone who has found it easy to conceive, it is perhaps hard to imagine how IVF can become all-encompassing in someone's life. The endless check-ups, scans, tests, periods of waiting and finally the day when you learn the result. It's a physically punishing process for the women and an emotionally exhausting process for both partners.
Our reasons for criminalising squatting are crystal clear - we want to protect the rights of regular hard-working homeowners against the damage squatters can inflict on their homes, and the distress this causes in their lives.
There is a dangerous chasm between what those seeking election claim they could do in office and the stark reality that once in power the real decision-making has long since been sub-contracted elsewhere.
Labour have long since forgotten that people work hard to pay their taxes and support our welfare system. — © Grant Shapps
Labour have long since forgotten that people work hard to pay their taxes and support our welfare system.
I think politicians just need to get out in the real world.
We need to make sure that people are progressively better off in work than they would be on welfare.
I was so glad when geek went from being a bad word to a good word.
Every part of society should honour the debt we owe those who've served our country.
Business can be hard. But we need more of it.
Most people don't get the chance to do whatever their dream in life was. I have ended up doing exactly what I wanted to do and it has been more enjoyable, challenging, stretching and fulfilling than I would have dared to imagine.
By scrapping the government's centrally dictated density targets we'll ensure that the right type of new homes are built where they're needed, ending the glut of one- and two-bedroom flats.
None of us want to live in a society where people are forced to sleep in shop doorways, on park benches or in dangerous, run-down buildings.
I believe that overall if you want a growing economy what you have got to have is sufficient flexibility to allow that to happen.
The idea that squatting in some way offers a reasonable solution to the issue of homelessness is both false and cruel.
Incredibly, a typical town hall official spends 85% of their time satisfying ministers in Whitehall and a puny 15% of the day for local residents. We believe that this relationship is upside down.
I think he would care if you were a good person, if indeed there is a god. — © Grant Shapps
I think he would care if you were a good person, if indeed there is a god.
I have probably become a lot more Zionist than I used to be. Jews have a history of being persecuted over a long, long period of time so I think it is absolutely right to have a country that is a Jewish state.
When I was starting a small printing shop in Wembley, I vividly remember coming out of the cinema, realising I had spent the two hours worrying about that month's payroll, rather than focusing on the film.
I always think there's some value in saying no with a smile.
If there is a moment when it is possible to intervene in the chaotic life of a homeless person, it is when they turn up as an NHS patient.
Businesses create every penny of the wealth we need to pay for our nation's schools, our NHS and our pensions. They are our only path to prosperity.
When eco-towns were first announced we said that we would support environmentally-friendly development where local communities supported the home-building; where infrastructure was in place and where the growth was genuinely green.
An astonishing disengagement from reality is necessary to actually believe there is something sinister about protecting people's homes from invasion through squatting.
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