Mr Malcolm Thornton
April 3, 1939 -Summary information for Mr Malcolm Thornton
Contributions
1981
Prime Minister (Engagements) Written Answers January 13, 1981
Prime Minister (Engagements) Written Answers January 20, 1981
Prime Minister (Engagements) Written Answers January 27, 1981
Prime Minister (Engagements) Written Answers January 29, 1981
Education Bill Commons February 2, 1981
2 speeches — 16 to 19-year-olds Commons February 10, 1981
Engagements Commons February 24, 1981
Enterprise Zone (Speke) Written Answers March 13, 1981
Capital and Current Expenditure (Government and Local Authorities) Written Answers March 27, 1981
Local Authorities (Expenditure) Written Answers April 1, 1981
2 speeches — Schools Curriculum Commons April 7, 1981
Engagements Written Answers April 7, 1981
Students (Loan Scheme) Written Answers April 15, 1981
Pupil-Teacher Ratio Commons May 12, 1981
British Leyland (Speke Factory) Commons May 13, 1981
Postgraduate Students (Grants) Written Answers May 21, 1981
Architectural Association School of Architecture Written Answers June 25, 1981
Vaccine Damage Payments Act 1979 Written Answers June 30, 1981
Remuneration of Teachers Act 1965 Written Answers June 30, 1981
3 speeches — Motor Vehicle Industry Commons July 1, 1981
Royal Wedding Written Answers July 2, 1981
Adult Unemployed Persons Written Answers July 8, 1981
Student-Staff Ratio (Further Education) Written Answers July 13, 1981
2 speeches — Independent Preparatory Schools Commons July 14, 1981
British Shipbuilders Written Answers July 30, 1981
Public Expenditure Written Answers October 19, 1981
Income Tax Written Answers October 19, 1981
Value Added Tax Written Answers October 19, 1981
Direct Labour Organisations Written Answers October 19, 1981
Direct Labour Organisations Written Answers October 20, 1981
Local Authorities (Staff) Written Answers October 20, 1981
Local Government Expenditure Written Answers October 20, 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.