Mr John Cronin

March 1, 1916 - 1986
Summary information for Mr John Cronin

Contributions

1976

Expenditure Commons January 13, 1976

5 speeches — SMOKING AND HEALTH Commons January 16, 1976

Exchange Rate Commons April 1, 1976

Armed Forces (Deployment) Commons April 6, 1976

3 speeches — ROYAL NAVY Commons May 12, 1976

Northern Ireland Commons June 15, 1976

£ Sterling Written Answers June 17, 1976

Harrier Aircraft Commons July 13, 1976

2 speeches — RESTRICTION OF RELIEF FOR PAYMENTS OF INTEREST Commons July 13, 1976

ACCEPTANCE OF PROPERTY IN SATISFACTION OF TAX Commons July 13, 1976

M42 Written Answers July 14, 1976

Industrial Investment Written Answers July 15, 1976

Retail Price Index Commons October 11, 1976

NORMANSFIELD HOSPITAL Commons October 11, 1976

4 speeches — ECONOMIC SITUATION Commons October 11, 1976

NATO Commons October 12, 1976

Economic Policy Commons October 14, 1976

3 speeches — ENERGY CONSERVATION Commons October 21, 1976

2 speeches — Clinical Expenditure Commons October 26, 1976

BAOR (Ministerial Visit) Commons November 9, 1976

Exchange Rate Written Answers November 11, 1976

Food Prices Written Answers November 15, 1976

Middle East Commons November 17, 1976

2 speeches — Rhodesia (Geneva Conference) Commons November 17, 1976

2 speeches — Coal Miners (Retirement) Commons November 29, 1976

Regional Health Authorities Written Answers November 30, 1976

2 speeches — Rates Commons December 8, 1976

Nationalised Industries Written Answers December 13, 1976

BAOR and Royal Air Force Commons December 14, 1976

BAOR Written Answers December 14, 1976

Economic Prospects Commons December 15, 1976

Inflation Commons December 16, 1976

Government Borrowings Written Answers December 16, 1976

8 speeches — ECONOMIC SITUATION Commons December 21, 1976

Rhodesia (Geneva Conference) Written Answers December 22, 1976

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.