Mr Denis Healey
August 30, 1917 -Summary information for Mr Denis Healey
Contributions
1985
17 speeches — Hong Kong Bill Commons January 21, 1985
Arms Control Commons January 23, 1985
Latin America (Debts) Commons January 23, 1985
Lebanon Commons January 23, 1985
Engagements Commons January 24, 1985
3 speeches — Gibraltar Commons February 6, 1985
Cyprus Commons February 20, 1985
Middle East (Arms Supplies) Commons February 20, 1985
3 speeches — Expenditure Commons February 20, 1985
Fontainebleau Agreement Commons February 20, 1985
3 speeches — Prime Minister (Washington Visit) Commons February 26, 1985
Geneva Arms Talks Commons March 20, 1985
Geneva Arms Talks Commons March 20, 1985
2 speeches — Voting Procedures Commons March 20, 1985
4 speeches — Soviet Diplomats (Expulsion) Commons April 23, 1985
Central America Commons April 24, 1985
Central America Commons April 24, 1985
European Community Questions Commons April 24, 1985
15 speeches — Foreign Affairs Commons April 25, 1985
Strategic Defence Initiative Commons May 22, 1985
2 speeches — Middle East Commons May 22, 1985
Geneva Disarmament Talks Commons May 22, 1985
Central America Commons June 26, 1985
Soviet Foreign Minister Commons July 24, 1985
2 speeches — South Africa Commons July 24, 1985
2 speeches — Foreign Affairs Council Commons July 24, 1985
6 speeches — South Africa Commons July 24, 1985
European Communities (Finance) Bill Commons October 22, 1985
5 speeches — Southern Africa Commons October 23, 1985
5 speeches — Foreign Affairs and Overseas Development Commons November 8, 1985
South Africa Commons November 20, 1985
Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty Commons November 20, 1985
Stockholm Conference Commons December 18, 1985
South Africa Commons December 18, 1985
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Commons December 18, 1985
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.