Meeting of the Parliament 02 May 2018
No. I want to make some progress.
Increasingly, the budget pressures that IJBs face are directly influencing their decision making in relation to proposals such as cutting mental health beds and services.
Audit Scotland has called on the Scottish Government to make fundamental decisions about how services are provided. I welcome the Government’s acceptance that we need greater financial accountability in relation to IJBs, but I believe that we need to take time now to make sure that they are truly fit for purpose. This is a major reform that the Parliament passed in the previous session, and we need to ensure that it is fit for purpose for our communities in this session. Scottish Conservatives, therefore, have also asked in our motion for the cabinet secretary to commit to a review of the integration joint boards in order that we can not only fully understand their current financial position but look to how effective they have been and what future reforms are needed. We cannot and will not just stand on the sidelines and watch a crisis in social care in Scotland build ever greater.
I did not want to make this debate personal. I believe that the future of our NHS and its financial sustainability are too important for that. [Interruption.] As I have said, in recent weeks—perhaps SNP members should start to listen—when Labour and the Liberal Democrats have called for the cabinet secretary to be sacked, I have not gone down that road. The truth is that I do not think that there is anyone on the SNP benches who could step up to the challenge. We have had a look around the cabinet secretary. Fergus Ewing—is he in today?—has presided over the farm payments fiasco. Our once world-class education system has declined under Angela Constance and John Swinney. Further, where do we start with regard to Michael Matheson and the problems and issues that are facing Police Scotland and the SNP’s centralising agenda?
The question is, who on the SNP benches thinks that they can do any better? I ask them to put up their hand if they think that they can. Anybody?
Christina McKelvie (Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse) (SNP) rose—