When Parliament Got Lit: The Fight to Save Britain’s Neon Craft
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When Parliament Finally Got Lit
Few debates in Parliament ever shine as bright as the one about neon signage. But on a unexpected session after 10pm, Britain’s lawmakers did just that.
the formidable Ms Qureshi rose to defend neon’s honour. She cut through with clarity: real neon is culture, and the market is being flooded with false neon pretenders.
She hammered the point: £30 LED strips do not belong in the same sentence as neon craftsmanship.
Backing her up was Chris McDonald, MP for Stockton North, who spoke of commissioning neon art in Teesside. For once, the benches agreed: neon is more than signage, it’s art.
The stats hit hard. The craft has dwindled from hundreds to barely two dozen. There are zero new apprentices. Qureshi called for a Neon Signs Protection Act.
From the Strangford seat came a surprising ally, armed with market forecasts, noting global neon growth at 7.5% a year. The glow also means serious money.
The government’s man on the mic was Chris Bryant. Even ministers can’t help glowing wordplay, getting heckled for it in good humour. But underneath the banter was a serious nod.
He reminded MPs that neon is etched into Britain’s memory: from Piccadilly Circus and fish & chip shop fronts. He stressed neon lasts longer than LED when maintained.
Why all this talk? The glow is fading: consumers are being duped into thinking LEDs are the real thing. That hurts artisans.
If food has to be labelled honestly, why not signs?. If it’s not woven in the Hebrides, it’s not tweed.
What flickered in Westminster wasn’t bureaucracy but identity. Do we want every high street, every bedroom wall, every bar front to glow with the same plastic LED sameness?
We’re biased, but we’re right: glass and gas belong in your world, not just LED copycats.
The Commons had its glow-up. No Act has passed—yet, but the spotlight is on.
And event lighting London [telegra.ph official] if MPs can argue for real neon under the oak-panelled glare of the House, you can sure as hell hang one in your lounge, office, or bar.
Skip the LED wannabes. When you want true glow—glass, gas, and craft—come to the source.
Parliament’s been lit—now it’s your turn.

the formidable Ms Qureshi rose to defend neon’s honour. She cut through with clarity: real neon is culture, and the market is being flooded with false neon pretenders.
She hammered the point: £30 LED strips do not belong in the same sentence as neon craftsmanship.
Backing her up was Chris McDonald, MP for Stockton North, who spoke of commissioning neon art in Teesside. For once, the benches agreed: neon is more than signage, it’s art.
The stats hit hard. The craft has dwindled from hundreds to barely two dozen. There are zero new apprentices. Qureshi called for a Neon Signs Protection Act.
From the Strangford seat came a surprising ally, armed with market forecasts, noting global neon growth at 7.5% a year. The glow also means serious money.
The government’s man on the mic was Chris Bryant. Even ministers can’t help glowing wordplay, getting heckled for it in good humour. But underneath the banter was a serious nod.
He reminded MPs that neon is etched into Britain’s memory: from Piccadilly Circus and fish & chip shop fronts. He stressed neon lasts longer than LED when maintained.
Why all this talk? The glow is fading: consumers are being duped into thinking LEDs are the real thing. That hurts artisans.
If food has to be labelled honestly, why not signs?. If it’s not woven in the Hebrides, it’s not tweed.
What flickered in Westminster wasn’t bureaucracy but identity. Do we want every high street, every bedroom wall, every bar front to glow with the same plastic LED sameness?
We’re biased, but we’re right: glass and gas belong in your world, not just LED copycats.
The Commons had its glow-up. No Act has passed—yet, but the spotlight is on.
And event lighting London [telegra.ph official] if MPs can argue for real neon under the oak-panelled glare of the House, you can sure as hell hang one in your lounge, office, or bar.
Skip the LED wannabes. When you want true glow—glass, gas, and craft—come to the source.
Parliament’s been lit—now it’s your turn.
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