Mr John Hatch

November 1, 1917 - October 11, 1992
Summary information for Mr John Hatch

Contributions

1981

Namibia: Independence Arrangements Lords March 24, 1981

North-South Economic Relations: Mexico Summit Lords March 25, 1981

2 speeches — East/Southern Africa: Economic Co-operation Lords March 25, 1981

2 speeches — Nigeria: State Visit by the President Lords March 31, 1981

School Closures Lords April 2, 1981

Zimbabwe: Aid Donors' Conference Lords April 6, 1981

4 speeches — Overseas Aid Lords April 7, 1981

3 speeches — Development Education in Schools Lords April 9, 1981

3 speeches — Guinea: Trade with the United Kingdom Lords April 14, 1981

UNESCO Projects: Third World Lords July 3, 1981

4 speeches — British Nationality Bill Lords July 7, 1981

Technology College Proposal Lords July 8, 1981

APT and Burnham Representation Lords July 10, 1981

6 speeches — Overseas Aid Cuts Lords July 10, 1981

2 speeches — British Nationality Bill Lords July 13, 1981

British Nationality Bill Lords July 13, 1981

5 speeches — Employment and Training Bill Lords July 15, 1981

3 speeches — The Mexico Summit Conference Lords July 16, 1981

3 speeches — Overseas Aid Programme Lords July 17, 1981

3 speeches — HM Inspectors of Schools Lords July 22, 1981

The Ottawa Summit Lords July 23, 1981

2 speeches — Cyprus: Settlement Negotiations Lords July 24, 1981

Finance Bill Lords July 24, 1981

2 speeches — Business Failures: April-June Quarter Lords July 27, 1981

Namibian Independence: Policy Lords July 27, 1981

TOTAL COMPANY LIQUIDATIONS Written Answers October 6, 1981

3 speeches — British Experts Overseas: Salary Supplements Lords December 1, 1981

5 speeches — Zambia: Aid for Transport Costs Lords December 1, 1981

Education, Training and Industrial Efficiency Lords December 2, 1981

Namibia: Independence Discussions Lords December 3, 1981

Procedure Lords December 22, 1981

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.