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Hansard

Every contribution to the Official Report — chamber and committee — searchable in one place. Pulled from data.parliament.scot, indexed for full-text search, linked through to every MSP.

129
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415
MSPs ever elected
14
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2,096,833
Hansard contributions
1999–2026
Coverage span
Official Report

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Showing 60 of 2,096,833 contributions. Latest 30 days: 2,655. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 09 Jun 2026.
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
24 Mar 2026
Railways Bill
I am grateful for the opportunity to contribute, albeit briefly, to today’s debate on the legislative consent motion on the Railways Bill.As colleagues know, the bill represents a significant reshaping of how rail services and rail infrastructure will be overseen across Great ...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
24 Mar 2026
Climate Change Plan
On the subject of public money, the entire premise of the climate plan is that the renewable investment that is outlined happens only because of subsidies from bill payers across the UK.I want to speak about transport. The SNP Government has committed to reducing car kilometre...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Standing Order Rule Changes (Strengthening Committees’ Effectiveness)
As Martin Whitfield knows, we support the majority of the proposed changes, but I raise a specific concern about proposed new rule 6.3.4A, which states that the Parliamentary Bureau must ensure that a committee’s members are not all of the same sex. Does he accept that that ru...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Data Centres (Regulatory Framework)
The cabinet secretary has outlined some of the safeguards in the current regulatory framework. A massive data centre proposed in Edinburgh would be similar in size to—and occupy as much land as—the entire ground at Murrayfield stadium. Will the Scottish Government make represe...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Parliamentary Bureau Motions
Criminals forfeit their right to vote when they break the law. The SNP Government needs to focus on punishing criminals, not trying to win their support at the ballot box. I urge the Parliament not to approve the instrument.21:04
Sue Webber Con Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Parliamentary Bureau Motions
I cannot possibly comment on why the minister is so keen to give mentally ill criminals the right to vote before the elections in May, but I will say—I am trying not to smile—that everyone outside the Holyrood bubble will think that it is ridiculous.The SNP and Labour both sup...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Parliamentary Bureau Motions
No, Mr Mason, the Scottish Conservatives could not condone or endorse that—as I think you knew before you put it to me—because it is totally mad, to be frank. Interruption.
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Parliamentary Bureau Motions
When the Scottish National Party Government first allowed some prisoners to vote in Scottish Parliament and local elections in 2020, we warned that that would set a dangerous precedent, with an increasing number of offenders being allowed to vote over time. Sure enough, in the...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Roads in Lothian (Local Government Funding)
Road condition figures that were published this week confirm what every driver in the Lothians already knows: our roads are getting worse, not better. The reason is straightforward: this Government has squeezed council budgets so hard that roads spending has been cannibalised ...
3. Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Roads in Lothian (Local Government Funding)
To ask the Scottish Government what assessment it has made of any impact of its local government funding settlement on the condition of roads across the Lothian region, in light of the City of Edinburgh Council, for example, facing an £86 million repair backlog. (S6O-05658)
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
17 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill
This evening’s debate has been deeply emotional. Many members have spoken about the deaths of loved ones and how those experiences have shaped their views on assisted dying. I begin by acknowledging that sincerity. None of us comes to the issue lightly, and I do not question t...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The term related to many people’s perception of what an assisted death would look like. We have heard from other members that that is not the reality. We must stop pretending that that is the reality, because it is not. Serious side effects happen. For some people, the drugs d...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The term did not relate to what your mother experienced. Interruption.
Sue Webber Con Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Before I speak to my amendments, I draw members’ attention to the fact that, in the past few minutes, we have received an email from the Royal Pharmaceutical Society in Scotland, which has stated its opposition to the bill following the removal of vital protections to protect ...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Amendment 119 would strengthen the statutory review by requiring Scottish ministers to examine, document and report on potential risks, failures and unintended consequences arising from the operation of the legislation. It would ensure that the review considers clinical safety...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
On a point of order, Deputy Presiding Officer. I am trying my best to listen to the remarks and the debate between Mr Doris and Mr Kerr, but all I can get in the background is another member who is chuntering away because they do not accept the order from the chair—Interruption.
Sue Webber Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I do not feel that I know the answer but, with the amendments in this group, I am trying to ensure that patients and healthcare professionals who face this profound legal and ethical uncertainty, at what would be an extraordinarily difficult moment for everyone, have a clear l...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Indeed, Mr Kerr. I believe that the original text fails to define the scope of immunity with the precision that legislation of this gravity demands. Without that clarity, doctors and carers could find themselves unsure of their legal position if a patient survives the initial ...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am sorry, but I do not accept that. We have asked Mr McArthur today, yesterday, last night and at stage 2 what would happen and what a healthcare professional should do if an individual takes a substance and it does not lead to their death. Do they then perform their traditi...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Yes, I will.
Sue Webber Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
As we have heard, the issue in this group of amendments goes to heart of both the legal framework surrounding the bill and, frankly, the fundamental principles that underpin our criminal law.In any other circumstance, taking a person’s life is a crime. Enabling or assisting a ...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Perhaps Mr McArthur can help me to understand. When he is talking about that informed discussion between the healthcare professional and the patient seeking the assisted death, is he suggesting that there would be a conversation between those people, in which the patient said,...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
There is a profound and dangerous omission in the bill: it is silent on what should happen if the lethal substance fails to end a person’s life. Section 19(3) offers immunity to those who assist a person in an attempt to end their own life in accordance with the legislation, b...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Edinburgh Medical School 300
As a University of Edinburgh alumna, I am pleased to speak in this debate to recognise 300 years of medicine being formally taught at the university and celebrate the profound legacy of its renowned medical school. I thank Martin Whitfield for bringing the topic to the chamber...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Parliamentary Bureau Motions
Frankly, yes, I agree, and law-abiding Scots across the country would also agree, and they would agree that free bus passes must be stripped from those who have used them as any excuse to act violently, whether they do so on a bus or whether they use their pass to travel to a ...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Parliamentary Bureau Motions
As members know, buses are central to Scotland’s transport network. Although most passengers just want to get on with their journey, it is clear to bus operators and other passengers that antisocial behaviour on our buses has been a growing problem for the past number of years...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I thank Ruth Maguire for that intervention, because these are not theoretical concerns, as we have heard time and again. There are fundamental questions about responsibility, legality and patient safety.The fact that so many questions remain unsolved at this late stage should ...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I apologise, Presiding Officer.It is our responsibility to legislate for the most vulnerable—those who are not empowered and who cannot seek out information on substances or the steps that might be best for them in their dire state of health. We are here to make responsible la...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am quite glad that we are not all clinicians, because I would be upset if we were not out there actually seeing patients, perhaps in a GP surgery or an out-patient clinic, which might make more of an impact on waiting lists. I know that that is perhaps a slight on your remar...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The deadline to lodge amendments was quite some time before that agreement. However, I am simply outlining the complexity of the legislation and its ramifications. I am not doubting what the cabinet secretary has been doing or what other members have said. I am here to sum up—...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Yes, I will.
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Group 8 has brought into sharp focus some of the serious competence issues that remain in the bill. I will not dwell on that for too long, as Ross Greer gave a succinct outline of what could be done to resolve that a moment ago. Quite frankly, it has been unsatisfactory for th...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am sorry. I would have taken an intervention if the member had jumped in a wee bit earlier.I move amendment 90.
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The bill is full of ambiguity, and there is not a lot of clarity in much of it. We need to ensure that patients who are perhaps considering an assisted death—which is not something that I would consider—are given the stark reality of what the process entails. I am sure that we...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will. I assume that the member will go back a bit.
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will speak to amendments 90, 96, 134, 135, 213, 215 to 217, 99, 100, 106, 122 and 124. As members can see, I have quite a few amendments in the group. Together, they are an attempt to clarify several areas of the bill where significant uncertainty remains.Amendments 90, 96, ...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will not, thank you, Ms Slater.A six-month prognosis provision has been introduced, but there is no mechanism for solving the issue if that prognosis changes at the second declaration. Even that small, simple amendment throws up a huge number of issues about coercion, benefi...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
First, I thank my colleague Stephen Kerr, who spoke to my amendments in group 2 yesterday.My amendments 91 and 92 seek to reinforce the safeguards that exist earlier in the bill. They are not there to serve as any form of obstacle. I note that the Parliament has agreed to rede...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am looking back at some evidence that I have seen from elsewhere. A report called “Assisted Dying/Assisted Suicide” by the Health and Social Care Committee at Westminster notes:“The Cicely Saunders Institute of Palliative Care, Policy and Rehabilitation at King’s College poi...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
05 Mar 2026
Draft Climate Change Plan
I will not.Scotland’s emissions are already down by 50 per cent compared with the 1990 baseline. Progress has been made. The Scottish Conservatives would scrap the arbitrary 2045 target and replace it with a credible and affordable pathway that would protect oil and gas jobs, ...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
05 Mar 2026
Draft Climate Change Plan
We will see whether I will come to that in the two minutes that I have left. I will leave Bob Doris eagerly anticipating from his sedentary position whether I will do so, but I thank him for asking.Communities in the north-east are being hollowed out while ministers talk about...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
05 Mar 2026
Draft Climate Change Plan
Consumers at home do not care much about 8 per cent of GDP when they face bills that will cripple their household incomes.The cabinet secretary has still not answered the question that I asked: who will pay? Officials have admitted that they cannot predict whether the burden w...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
05 Mar 2026
Draft Climate Change Plan
The debate has exposed a fundamental divide in the Parliament: on one side sits the left-wing Holyrood consensus that is determined to push ahead with arbitrary 2045 net zero targets regardless of the cost to families, businesses and Scotland’s vital oil and gas sector; and, o...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
05 Mar 2026
Draft Climate Change Plan
It will be me this time.
Sue Webber Con Committee
05 Mar 2026
Ethical Standards Commissioner
Perhaps more people need to take a look at how you work, commissioner.
Sue Webber Con Committee
05 Mar 2026
Ethical Standards Commissioner
If the move to a 35-hour week is, as you said, the equivalent of losing one full-time post, are you seeking to bring in another head?
Sue Webber Con Committee
05 Mar 2026
Ethical Standards Commissioner
That helps with turnover and speeds everything up.
Sue Webber Con Committee
05 Mar 2026
Ethical Standards Commissioner
Can you share any specific examples of that?
Sue Webber Con Committee
05 Mar 2026
Ethical Standards Commissioner
That is very fiscally prudent of you, commissioner. I am not going to disagree with your approach.In your introductory remarks, you mentioned the increase in activity. It all sounds as if things are ramping up and that there is quite a lot of pressure on your office. What oper...
Sue Webber Con Committee
05 Mar 2026
Ethical Standards Commissioner
Commissioner, I want to ask about the funding that you operate with currently. You are fully funded by the SPCB, but I see that there was a decision to surrender £80,000 to the corporate body. How has not just the £97,000 underspend but the surrendering of that £80,000 to the ...
Sue Webber Con Committee
05 Mar 2026
Subordinate Legislation
I do, convener.I will not be supporting this SSI today, because of my party’s long-standing opposition to allowing prisoners to vote, regardless of the circumstances of their incarceration. Individuals who are imprisoned as a result of breaking the law should not be able to vo...
Sue Webber Con Committee
05 Mar 2026
Subordinate Legislation
I have a statement that I want to make later. Is that okay, convener?
Sue Webber Con Committee
05 Mar 2026
Subordinate Legislation
Yes. This instrument is also about prisoner voting—these people are still detained.
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
05 Mar 2026
Subordinate Legislation
I have a question, minister. In England and Wales, they have found a compromise: they do not let prisoners vote unless they are released on a temporary licence. Why did the Scottish Government not seek some sort of compromise, such as that presented?
Sue Webber Con Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Ferries
In conclusion, it is time to stop Scotland’s ferry fiasco. It is time to restore trust.I move amendment S6M-20957.2, to insert at end:“; notes that the combined costs of the MV Glen Sannox and MV Glen Rosa has reached almost £500 million; acknowledges the Scottish Government’s...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Ferries
I will not, Mr Gibson, as I have very limited time and quite a significant amount to carry on with.That figure will rise further now that the charter has been extended. That is not strategic fleet management; it is short-term crisis management.Island and coastal communities ha...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Ferries
I am pleased to speak in support of the motion that was lodged by Jamie Greene on fixing Scotland’s ferry fiasco.For too long, Scotland’s islands and coastal communities have been treated as an afterthought by the SNP Government. Lifeline ferries are not a luxury or a seasonal...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
03 Mar 2026
Ferguson Marine
I thank the Deputy First Minister for advance sight of her statement. I welcome the announcement that the Scottish Government intends to return Ferguson Marine to the private sector“when the time is right”.Securing international contracts is the best way to ensure that shipbui...
Sue Webber (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
03 Mar 2026
Ferries and Ports
I thank the cabinet secretary for the advance copy of her statement. I welcome her remarks regarding community involvement with decision making and on the investment in Port Ellen, which is vital for whisky distilleries on Islay, which were grateful for that.I recognise the co...
Sue Webber Con Chamber
26 Feb 2026
Substance Misuse in Prisons
If Ms Constance does not mind, I will not. I am a last-minute addition to the speakers list. Perhaps I will give way as I get through my speech; I am only four lines into it.Let us be clear: prison should be a place of punishment, but it must also be a place of recovery. Right...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 24 March 2026 [Draft]

24 Mar 2026 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Railways Bill

I am grateful for the opportunity to contribute, albeit briefly, to today’s debate on the legislative consent motion on the Railways Bill.

As colleagues know, the bill represents a significant reshaping of how rail services and rail infrastructure will be overseen across Great Britain. The Scottish Conservatives recognise that many of the revisions before us are technical in nature and that they follow extensive engagement between the two Governments. However, we also recognise that the bill will not alter the Scottish ministers’ existing powers over ScotRail and the Caledonian Sleeper or the funding and specification of rail infrastructure in Scotland. It is clear that, in several respects, the bill will strengthen formal consultation duties and will provide a clearer framework for interaction between the Governments. Those are sensible steps.

However, our party has a long-standing commitment to a rail system that grows instead of restricts choice, competition and freight capacity, which brings me to the principal issue that prevents me from supporting the LCM today. My concern is focused squarely on the future of open-access operators and freight services. Those operators, such as those running commercially on key inter-city corridors, have been a vital source of innovation, lower fares and improved customer experience. Likewise, freight operators depend on fair and transparent access to the network to support economic growth, decarbonisation and supply chain resilience.

Evidence that was considered by the Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee made it clear that open-access operators remain unconvinced that the new arrangements will protect their ability to compete on a level playing field. The committee also heard that, although assurances have been offered at United Kingdom level, operators still fear being disadvantaged in a system in which Great British Railways becomes the dominant operator and the main decision maker on access.

We should not underestimate the value of open access to Scotland. Those services bring genuine choice to passengers and reduce pressure on taxpayer-funded operations, and they help to strengthen cross-border links that matter to our economy and our communities. Any framework that risks weakening that model, whether unintentionally or through lack of safeguards, must be approached with caution.

Similarly, on freight, Scotland has ambitious growth aspirations, but growth depends on confidence that freight paths will be protected, that investment will be worthwhile and that decisions affecting Scottish freight will be taken transparently and in the interests of the wider network. The bill includes duties relating to freight, but I remain unconvinced that those duties alone will offset the increased centralisation of access decisions.

For those reasons, although I acknowledge the Scottish Government’s satisfaction with the amendments that have been made thus far, I do not believe that the bill in its current form provides sufficient certainty for operators, passengers or freight customers who rely on open and competitive access to our railways.

The Scottish Conservatives cannot support the motion, but, equally, we recognise the technical nature of many of the provisions and the importance of continued co-operation around rail reform.

17:58

In the same item of business