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Infected Blood Inquiry Additional Report 2025-07-21

21 July 2025

Lead MP

Nick Thomas-Symonds

Debate Type

General Debate

Tags

ImmigrationEmployment
Other Contributors: 17

At a Glance

Nick Thomas-Symonds raised concerns about infected blood inquiry additional report 2025-07-21 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 Paymaster General and Minister for the Cabinet Office provided an initial response to the Infected Blood Inquiry’s additional report published on July 9th. He highlighted progress in compensation payments, noting that as of July 15th, 2,215 people have been contacted by IBCA, with 808 offers made and £411 million paid out. The Minister announced further interim payments to the estates of infected individuals who have passed away and acknowledged the need for faster payment speed-ups. He also discussed the Government's commitment to fair compensation and outlined specific recommendations from the inquiry that are being accepted or under consideration.

Government Response

ImmigrationEmployment
Government Response
Acknowledged criticism regarding transparency in the expert group established under his predecessor. Announced that the Government will reconstitute an expert group with transparency at its heart, including publication of work and minutes. Stated that the Government will pay what it takes to fund the compensation scheme, currently estimated at around £1 billion in further compensation payments. Acknowledges importance of introducing duty of candour legislation. Pledges to work with affected communities to change culture of cover-up. Announces measures including removal of the 1982 start date, interim payments for unregistered victims' estates, and extended financial support beyond current fiscal year. Acknowledged criticisms and announced actions based on Sir Brian Langstaff's report, extending compensation period by two years to 2031 for affected estates. Reassured that the Government will pay what it takes to fund the scheme and update forecast costs at the autumn Budget.
Assessment & feedback
Summary accuracy

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