Mr David Ginsburg
March 18, 1921 - 1994Summary information for Mr David Ginsburg
Contributions
1960
Clause 1.—(PURPOSE FOR WHICH PART I POWERS EXCISABLE, AND DURATION OF POWERS.) Commons February 2, 1960
LOCAL EMPLOYMENT AREAS Commons February 23, 1960
2 speeches — Bank Rate Commons February 25, 1960
2 speeches — Local Employment Prospects Commons March 3, 1960
2 speeches — Simonds Committee (Report) Commons March 10, 1960
2 speeches — WOOL TEXTILES (EXPORT TO UNITED STATES) Commons March 17, 1960
2 speeches — Stocks Commons March 21, 1960
2 speeches — Riots Commons March 24, 1960
3 speeches — FIDUCIARY NOTE ISSUE Commons April 5, 1960
4 speeches — Stocks Commons April 11, 1960
2 speeches — WORLD REFUGEE YEAR Commons May 9, 1960
3 speeches — Washing Machines and Refrigerators Commons May 17, 1960
BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE Commons June 2, 1960
4 speeches — New Clause.—(DOUBLE INCOME TAX RELIEF FOR COMPENSATION PAYMENTS.) Commons June 22, 1960
2 speeches — Disciplinary Tribunals Commons July 21, 1960
2 speeches — Richard Thomas and Baldwins, Ltd. Commons July 26, 1960
2 speeches — Steel Companies (Equity Shareholdings) Commons July 26, 1960
CENTRAL AFRICAN FEDERATION (PRIME MINISTERS' COMMUNICATIONS) Written Answers October 27, 1960
2 speeches — DEBATE ON THE ADDRESS [SECOND DAY] Commons November 2, 1960
2 speeches — CIVIL SERVICE (SCIENTISTS) Commons November 10, 1960
2 speeches — CABINET MINISTERS (OFFICIAL SECRETS ACTS) Commons November 15, 1960
4 speeches — Cotton and Wool Textiles (Orders) Commons November 29, 1960
2 speeches — INDIA (LOW-PRICED TEXT BOOKS) Commons December 1, 1960
2 speeches — Civil Servants (Scientific Classes) Commons December 6, 1960
2 speeches — Ford Motor Company, Dagenham Commons December 6, 1960
2 speeches — Restrictive Trading Agreements Commons December 13, 1960
2 speeches — NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANISATION (DEFENCE EXPENDITURE) Commons December 19, 1960
Information presented on this page was prepared from the XML source files, together with information from the History of Parliament Trust, the work of Leigh Rayment and public sources. The means by which names are recognised means that errors may remain in the data presented.