Meeting of the Parliament 23 February 2016
I have always been willing to compromise. The Deputy First Minister has compromised in getting us to the position that we are in now. If we get a deal, as I hope we do, and when Parliament begins to scrutinise the deal, the evidence of that compromise on a range of issues will be clear. However, I have also said consistently that I will not compromise on the principle of no detriment, because once we compromise on that principle, we compromise on the delivery of the promise that was made to the Scottish people and I will not compromise on that.
The willingness of the Scottish Government to compromise has already been made clear by the fact that I have signalled that we would accept a transitional arrangement. It will not be based on our preferred model, but because it delivers the same outcome as our preferred model, we will compromise on that. However, the outcome—and the principle underpinning the outcome—of no detriment to the Scottish budget is the key one, and that is the principle that I do not think the Scottish people should be prepared to allow me or the Deputy First Minister to compromise on.