← Back to House of Commons Debates

Violence against Women and Girls Strategy 2025-12-18

18 December 2025

Lead MP

Jess Phillips

Debate Type

General Debate

Tags

ImmigrationCrime & Law EnforcementDefenceEconomyTaxation
Other Contributors: 32

At a Glance

Jess Phillips raised concerns about violence against women and girls strategy 2025-12-18 in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Lead Contributor

Opened the debate
The Government is declaring violence against women and girls as a national emergency. The strategy aims to halve these crimes within a decade through prevention, bearing down on perpetrators, and supporting victims. This includes investing £20 million for tackling harmful attitudes in young people, deploying the full power of the state across government departments, rolling out specialist rape and sexual offences teams, using forensic technology to reopen cold cases, and providing over £1 billion in funding for victims’ services.

Government Response

ImmigrationCrime & Law EnforcementDefenceEconomyTaxation
Government Response
The Government declares tackling violence against women and girls a national emergency. The strategy includes investments in education and prevention (£20 million), enhancing police capabilities, and allocating over £1 billion for victims’ services. Affirmed the importance of individual autonomy for women, expressed willingness to meet stakeholders to discuss practical implementation. Noted that a significant increase in deportation of foreign nationals had occurred since her government’s period in office. Emphasised commitment to tackling online content and working with tech companies. Announced specific measures such as age verification on Pornhub leading to reduced traffic. Highlighted ringfenced funding for domestic abuse and sexual violence targeting various groups. Acknowledges contributions made by fellow MPs. Emphasises the commitment to challenge institutional norms and reinforce cultural shifts necessary for addressing violence against women and girls effectively beyond schools into broader societal institutions. Highlights specific measures such as funding for specialist advocates and embedding support workers within GP practices. The Minister emphasised her commitment to tackling violence against women and girls, highlighting increased funding for migrant women, enforcing restraining orders more effectively, and improving school interventions through the new curriculum. She also discussed the importance of early intervention in addressing domestic abuse. Responded to concerns raised, addressing issues such as honour-based abuse, male survivors' support, domestic abuse protection orders, care leavers, engaging with young people, and commercial sexual exploitation in pornography. Emphasised the importance of cultural sensitivity, specific uplifts for Rape Crisis services, additional funding for refuge, housing and support, and collaboration on family first strategies. Commits to long-term funding for domestic abuse organisations within comprehensive spending review periods. Addresses complaints about localised commissioning to ensure organisations can grow and operate more effectively.

Shadow Response

Katie Lam
Shadow Response
The Opposition supports the aim but emphasises the need to address cultural differences in understanding consent and sexual autonomy. They praise previous Conservative Government initiatives such as setting up a grooming gangs taskforce, measures for pre-recording evidence, rolling out more ISVAs, specialist police teams, forensic technology use on cold cases, and domestic abuse protection orders.
Assessment & feedback
Summary accuracy

About House of Commons Debates

House of Commons debates take place in the main chamber of the House of Commons. These debates cover a wide range of topics including government policy, legislation, and current affairs. MPs from all parties can participate, question ministers, and hold the government accountable for its decisions.