Meeting of the Parliament 11 June 2026 [Last updated 19:16]
Yes. David Barratt also draws out the important point that the inconsistency in the Reform position is quite apparent. Reform members say in their amendment that we should not be talking about this stuff, and then they go on to talk about it from very different and contradictory positions. I draw Malcolm Offord’s attention to the fact that the biggest part of the net zero spend is financial support for bus fares and train subsidies—the removal of peak fares and so on. I do not know whether it is Reform policy to get rid of that support. Certainly, I expect Malcolm Offord, like me, to benefit from a bus pass. I would hate to lose that, frequent user of bus services that I am.
I will talk about some of the contributions that, frankly—although, as I said, not surprisingly—I was disappointed in. Murdo Fraser banged the same old drum and asked how we are going to fill the black hole; yet, every time that I answered that question, he did not listen and went back to the same point again. Likewise, Meghan Gallacher symptomises the descent into irrelevance of the Tory benches, whose members are simply going round in circles on these old canards without any innovation in their approach to how we tackle this very significant issue.