UK Parliament / Open data

Daylight Saving Bill

The hon. Gentleman has neatly completed a picture of which we had probably been given only half. The other half is very interesting. I agree with the hon. Member for Castle Point about the need for an analysis. I have given facts relating to Paris, Berlin and London. However, I do not want any analysis that would involve changing our clocks and making us undergo three years of misery before the clocks were inevitably changed back again. It seems that once the memory of 40 years ago has dimmed, a new generation must learn painfully and slowly over three miserable winters that this is the wrong thing to do. I am trying to proceed with my speech reasonably quickly, Mr Deputy Speaker. According to a 2005 survey by Ipsos Mori, Scots are in favour of lighter evenings. That is true: we are in favour of lighter evenings. However, only 19% of Scots who were polled want the clocks to move back permanently. Of course, some people might be in favour of Christmas every week, but they realise that that cannot happen. Similarly, we might want lighter evenings, but we know that the earth tilts. We know that we will have cold and frost.
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
519 c1114-5 
Session
2010-12
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
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