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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.

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1999–2026
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Showing 60 of 2,355,091 contributions. Latest 30 days: 148. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 14 May 2026.
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
16 Mar 2016
Scotland Bill
I congratulate Annabel Goldie and Duncan McNeil on their service to the Parliament—their contribution has been substantial indeed. However, I say to Duncan McNeil that I would beware of taking too many lessons from the Palace of Westminster. When I was in the House of Commons ...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
23 Feb 2016
Fiscal Framework
Every Chief Secretary to the Treasury since 1999 has sought to erode the funding of this Parliament, and every single First Minister has faced that situation on occasion. This time, the Treasury has been sent homewards to think again, thanks to the experience of the finance mi...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
23 Feb 2016
Fiscal Framework
I join the Scottish Labour Party in giving full support to the First Minister’s position. There are no sides in this; there is only Scotland’s side. Recently, the Prime Minister secured a pre-referendum commitment from 27 other heads of state around Europe about what would ha...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
11 Feb 2016
Scottish Rate of Income Tax: Resolution
Did I hear that correctly? Is Mark McDonald saying that Willie Rennie was complaining about the education budget while his colleagues in Aberdeenshire Council were proposing to spend less on education? Even by Rennie’s standards, that is incredible.
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
08 Dec 2015
Criminal Justice (Scotland) Bill
I welcome the opportunity to contribute, not least to defend Kenny MacAskill, who was a fine justice secretary. I say not just to Alison McInnes but to the whole chamber that the impact of the Salduz and Cadder rulings has brought into serious examination the issue of corrobor...
Alex Salmond SNP Chamber
08 Dec 2015
Criminal Justice (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I accept that point, which is why I praised John Carnochan. However, one of the key aspects of reducing knife crime is preventing youngsters from carrying knives for protection because they believe that other youngsters will have them. Stop and search was extremely influential...
Alex Salmond SNP Chamber
08 Dec 2015
Criminal Justice (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
In that case, I will sit down.
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
08 Dec 2015
Criminal Justice (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
It is admirable that the cabinet secretary is looking for consensus but I would like to hear a bit more about whether he feels that the powers and amendments will be sufficient to keep the public safe from harm. I am particularly concerned about knife crime. During my early y...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
11 Nov 2015
Energy Storage Network
Tom Johnston also tried to exterminate the Scots midge, but that was less successful. The point that I was going to make was that he took emergency legislation through all its procedures in 10 days—I think—in the House of Commons to enable the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric ...
Alex Salmond SNP Chamber
07 Oct 2015
Fiscal Framework
Thank goodness the member is not a minister.
Alex Salmond SNP Chamber
07 Oct 2015
Fiscal Framework
Let us say for a second that Jackie Baillie’s promotion of Gavin Brown had come into effect and that he was a Treasury minister, but let us say that he was a Scottish minister. I presume that he would not agree to a fiscal framework that did not provide for independent arbitra...
Alex Salmond SNP Chamber
07 Oct 2015
Fiscal Framework
In line with the evidence and the unanimous recommendation of the committee, will the Scottish Government regard the establishment of an independent arbitration procedure as a prerequisite for agreeing the fiscal framework?
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
07 Oct 2015
Fiscal Framework
I think that what was said about no detriment is important. Paragraph 174 contains the unanimous recommendation that there should be an independent arbiter between the Treasury and the Scottish Government. Given that no department of state and no devolved Administration has ev...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
01 Oct 2015
Protection of Asylum Seekers and Refugees
I congratulate James Dornan on his members’ business debate. In the House of Commons, I tabled a motion that was similar at its heart to his motion: it said that, as a country, we had to accept a joint responsibility for refugees arriving in Europe and help those in the camps ...
Alex Salmond SNP Chamber
30 Sep 2015
Portfolio Question Time · Aberdeen Western Peripheral Route
Can the minister give an indication of the benefits of that major infrastructure improvement and its relationship to the AWPR?
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
30 Sep 2015
Portfolio Question Time · Aberdeen Western Peripheral Route
I could answer the questions if you wish, Presiding Officer. On the relationship between the AWPR and the Inveramsay bridge on the A96, could the minister say a word about the benefits that that will achieve and the timescale? We in the north-east of Scotland have been waitin...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
03 Sep 2015
Longannet Power Station (Closure)
Is it not the case that, if we could move Longannet to central London, instead of paying a £40 million penalty in transmission charges, it would receive a subsidy of £11 million? After 10 years of campaigning against charges that Brian Wilson as the energy minister for a Labou...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
17 Jun 2015
Community Empowerment (Scotland) Bill
The community right-to-buy process has evolved over the past few years and the bill takes it much further than it has been before. However, there is nothing to stop it evolving further. For example, in the future a community of anglers might have the right to buy out the netti...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
03 Mar 2015
Welfare Funds (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I would have thought that a parliamentarian of Ken Macintosh’s long experience would know that the Advocate General is a post of the Westminster Government.
Alex Salmond SNP Chamber
19 Feb 2015
Community Charge Debt (Scotland) Bill
Since I am here, I will reciprocate. Jackie Baillie rightly touched on the fact—perhaps she should reflect on the point—that this is about the practical effect and the messages that were being sent out. I called the phone-in programme because of the messages that had been sent...
Alex Salmond SNP Chamber
19 Feb 2015
Community Charge Debt (Scotland) Bill
Because of the three reasons that I outlined. First, the poll tax cost more to collect in many circumstances than could be collected. Secondly, the debt is mythical because many of the people never existed or no longer exist. Thirdly, there is the important point that I made t...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
19 Feb 2015
Community Charge Debt (Scotland) Bill
I speak not so much as the member of the Scottish Parliament for Aberdeenshire East but as Alex from Strichen, who was moved to call the “Call Kaye” phone-in programme on the very subject that we are debating. What moved me to do that was the enthusiasm that was being displaye...
Alex Salmond SNP Chamber
15 Jan 2015
Living Wage
I do not know whether the minister is aware of just how serious the situation is with regard to the minimum wage not keeping pace with inflation. I have some figures from the Scottish Parliament information centre that show us that, in two out of the four years from 2007, the ...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
15 Jan 2015
Living Wage
As the member knows, the support that the Scottish Government provided in 2011 to put public sector workers on the living wage was crucial. The Labour Administration that preceded us did not manage to provide that. It is also crucial that large companies in Scotland such as SS...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
08 Jan 2015
Oil and Gas
I thank the minister for detailing the six streams of action that the Scottish Government has taken and I ask him for assurance that those actions will be intensified as the need arises, given the threat of job losses in the industry. Of the tax changes that he proposes, I co...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP Chamber
03 Dec 2014
NHS Grampian (Healthcare Improvement Scotland Reports)
As we think about the serious problems of NHS Grampian and compare them with the tragedy in the Vale of Leven hospital, was not the essential lesson of the Vale of Leven tragedy that the health service must develop systems that enable problems to be identified before they impa...
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
18 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Statement (Response)
I promise that I will be brief, Presiding Officer. I have small corrections for Jackie Baillie. Saving the world was what Gordon Brown did, not me. It was not in Perth that I was expelled from the party; it was at the Dam Park pavilion in Ayr. She is wrong about YouTube. She ...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
18 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Statement
It is a wise newspaper that listens to the verdict of its readers. The more important realisation is this: we are on a political journey, and each step along the way has been dictated by the impact of the constitution on the issues that mean most to ordinary Scots. This Parl...
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
18 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Statement
First, I must—not for the first time—disappoint Willie Rennie. I took it from his question at First Minister’s question time last Thursday that he was making a very subtle, last-ditch attempt to persuade me to stay in post. I have given his suggestion great thought, but have d...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Underground Coal Gasification (Licences)
The Conservative Party in the United Kingdom coalition described Liberal Democrat energy policy as nonsense, and the Liberal Democrats in the coalition at Westminster described the Conservative Party’s energy policy as nonsense. The energy policy that we have been able to purs...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Underground Coal Gasification (Licences)
The Scottish Government recognises Alison Johnstone’s concerns, but it also recognises that we have to see the potential for new energy technologies, and the potential synergies between technologies such as underground coal gasification and carbon capture and storage, whereby ...
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Underground Coal Gasification (Licences)
The Coal Authority, which is, of course, a United Kingdom non-departmental public body that is sponsored by the Department of Energy and Climate Change, has issued six licences for underground coal gasification in Scotland. All those licences are offshore or in estuaries. Howe...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Legal Assistance
As Graeme Pearson knows, expenditure on legal assistance in Scotland has been held at £150 million since 2007. Of course, that is not what has happened south of the border, where there have been substantial cuts. Interruption. Labour members should understand that, under the B...
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Legal Assistance
The Scottish Legal Aid Board makes hundreds of thousands of grants of legal assistance each year, whether to help people to deal with welfare benefit problems or to help those who are accused of criminal offences to defend themselves. Expenditure on legal assistance last year ...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Health and Safety Legislation (Devolution)
It cannot be a coincidence that the cuts to the Health and Safety Executive budget have coincided with a dramatic fall in the number of prosecutions. That was one of the key arguments that the STUC put forward when arguing that the devolution of responsibility for health and s...
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Health and Safety Legislation (Devolution)
The Parliament would be wise to pay close attention to the words of Grahame Smith, the general secretary of the Scottish Trades Union Congress, who said: “We believe that this is due to lack of proactive inspections, a policy forced on the HSE by a Government who refuse to ac...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · European Council (Fisheries Negotiations)
Yes, I do. That is exactly the point that was raised at the joint ministerial committee on Europe back in 2010. As the Europe minister, Fiona Hyslop attended that meeting, so she can verify everything that I have to say. When the position was explained with regard to how few t...
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · European Council (Fisheries Negotiations)
I have had a totally unsatisfactory response from the Prime Minister. At Monday’s agriculture and fisheries council meeting, the main issue of fisheries policy under discussion was the deep-sea stock regulation. Scotland has a dominant interest in that activity; landings of th...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Prime Minister (Meetings)
The reassurance is this: Serco will be held absolutely to the terms of the contract. I am sure that my successor and, indeed, the transport minister will be able to reassure the local member that that will absolutely be the case. Serco is of course under new leadership, but no...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Prime Minister (Meetings)
Ruth Davidson is overrelaxed about that matter. We are not talking about some mid-ranking official; we are talking about the First Sea Lord, and what he said had cast doubt on where the order would be placed and the country it would be placed in. That is exactly what the First...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Prime Minister (Meetings)
I was quoting the wrong American general. I mean to quote General MacArthur when he said “I shall return”. I got my generals mixed up. Interruption. Nicola Sturgeon wants to know what the answer to Mr Rennie’s question is. That is the first time that I have been heckled by the...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Prime Minister (Meetings)
I point out that the Scotland performs website shows that there have been substantial rises in the vast majority of the indices since 2007. I want to pick up on one point of detail. I was surprised by the comparator between UK and Scottish growth, because Scotland had a shall...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Prime Minister (Meetings)
There have been substantial achievements in education and health, which are key public services. People’s respect for the health service is increasing. It is a fantastic testament to our health service, our doctors, our nurses and other staff throughout the service that, in th...
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Prime Minister (Meetings)
I have no current plans, and I would have to be reasonably quick if I was going to do so.
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Engagements
How can I break the mood? I say to Jackie Baillie that whoever stands for the Scottish National Party in the Westminster Parliament would seem, according to the present polls, to have a reasonable chance of success. There have been substantial achievements, and I will name bu...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Engagements
I do not think that talking about changing leaders is the Labour Party’s strongest suit. Jackie Baillie is actually the 10th leader or caretaker leader I have faced over the dispatch box, and all of them have had the grace and charity with which she addresses the chamber. Nico...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Engagements
If there is a mood to miss, Jackie Baillie has an unerring ability to miss it. I have been doing some research on these matters. Over the years, the Labour Party has called for the resignation of each and every one of my cabinet secretaries. The only person it has not called ...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Engagements
No. Laughter. One word seems hardly adequate for that task, although I say to Fergus Ewing that his words might have been better addressed to the coming First Minister rather than the departing one.
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
13 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Engagements
I am told that this is my 215th session of First Minister’s question time. Later today, I will be proud to meet a group of young carers who have designed the young carers tartan, which I am proudly wearing. They have experience in care and have designed the tartan with Black C...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Crude Oil Prices
That was spoken with the confidence and authority that comes from being at 8 per cent in the most recent Scottish opinion poll. At some stage, the Conservative Party will consider whether a revival to 8 per cent indicates a glowing future. Why is the Conservative Party at such...
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Crude Oil Prices
The impact will depend on a number of factors. The final impact on the economy will depend on how the fall passes through to investors and consumers. Of course, it would be unwise to assume that the recent fall will last. Much of the recent decline has been driven not by marke...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Living Wage
What a pity that James Kelly did not attend the Scottish Trades Union Congress conference when I gave a speech that laid out exactly such a strategy and how the Government intends to roll out the living wage. Of course, it is this Government that introduced the living wage in ...
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Living Wage
Tackling low pay is a key priority of the Government, and we fully support the living wage campaign. We have, of course, led by example. For the fifth consecutive year, we have required employers that are subject to our pay policy to pay their staff the Scottish living wage. W...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Welfare Reforms
Yes, I do. I also think increasingly that the number of people in the Parliament who would say that Scotland should not—not “could not”—control welfare will diminish as people recognise, across the range of issues, that decisions that are made closer to people in Scotland will...
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Welfare Reforms
We should start calling them “welfare changes”, not “welfare reforms”. It is estimated that funds of £6 billion will be removed from the Scottish economy. That money is from families in Scotland in the six years from 2011-12 to 2015-16. Independent projections suggest that up...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Cabinet (Meetings)
I chaired a long Cabinet session on exactly that subject on Tuesday. A range of initiatives were discussed, excepting, of course, the announcements that have already been made; for example, the new unit in the new Scottish police service for investigating crime and criminality...
The First Minister SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Cabinet (Meetings)
There were full discussions of those matters in the previous two Cabinet meetings, and I understand that there will be a ministerial statement this coming Tuesday, so Alison McInnes will have a full opportunity to press her questions.
The First Minister (Alex Salmond) SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Cabinet (Meetings)
Issues of importance to carry forward the Government’s programme for Scotland.
The First Minister SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Secretary of State for Scotland (Meetings)
No, but I undertake to examine the issue and to write in detail to the local member to see whether I can help him with his legitimate inquiry.
The First Minister SNP Chamber
06 Nov 2014
First Minister’s Question Time · Secretary of State for Scotland (Meetings)
I do not think that the local member’s depiction of the situation is entirely the full story. As I know of his interest in the airport, perhaps the best way forward would be for me to arrange the meeting that he asks for. We should recognise that this is an operational matter...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 16 March 2016

16 Mar 2016 · S4 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Scotland Bill
Salmond, Alex SNP Aberdeenshire East Watch on SPTV

I congratulate Annabel Goldie and Duncan McNeil on their service to the Parliament—their contribution has been substantial indeed. However, I say to Duncan McNeil that I would beware of taking too many lessons from the Palace of Westminster. When I was in the House of Commons yesterday, I glanced up at the House of Lords annunciator and saw the words “Adjournment for the leisure period”. I will have to ask Annabel what they do with their time when that adjournment is on. [Laughter.] Once we have found out exactly what takes place, maybe it would be popular to introduce that into this Parliament—who knows?

I also join with Duncan McNeil in thanking my constituency staff, the parliamentary staff and the governmental staff, without whom no contribution in this place would have been possible in any of our careers.

In making a valedictory address, I am aware, Presiding Officer, that there is a major rival attraction down south today. However, on balance, I feel that the champion chase at Cheltenham race course will not be overshadowed by my remarks. [Laughter.]

I am grateful for the opportunity provided by the debate to reflect on the position that this Parliament and this country are now in. Clearly, the legislative consent motion before us does not pave the way for near federalism, devo to the max or home rule—all things that were raised in the last days of the referendum campaign. It does, however, represent a further transfer of power from London to Scotland. That much should be welcomed. It is also to be very much welcomed that, thanks to their iron resolve, the First Minister and the Deputy First Minister ensured that that was done according to the Smith principles of no financial loss. It is not immediately apparent that that would have been the outcome under other leadership of this Parliament.

We should remember that it is 10 years since a Labour First Minister suggested that there should be no further transfer of power from London to Scotland and five years since a Conservative leader said that a line should be drawn in the sand. This Parliament and this country are on a journey, and under these circumstances, it is sometimes easier to see the full extent of the distance travelled when one is not at the very heart of the battle.

In my first speech to this chamber, I refuted the idea that we were a divided Parliament representing a divided country. I suggested that we were not divided but diverse. We have all experienced an extraordinary referendum campaign—one that was hard fought, certainly, but one that produced a level of democratic participation and engagement that most societies can only dream of. Yes, we are a country of different views, but we are not divided. In fact, there is a broad consensus on the need for this Parliament to assume greater responsibility for the governance of Scotland. We are definitely stronger—so much stronger—as a result of that.

We should reflect on some of those whom we have lost. Bashir Ahmad, John Farquhar Munro, Tom McCabe, David McLetchie and Margo MacDonald—five different individuals from five different parties with five different viewpoints, but still diverse rather than divided.

Seventeen years ago, when this Parliament was reconvened, Donald Dewar delivered the best speech of his life. In an elegant historical sweep, he described Scotland as being on

“a journey begun long ago ... which has no end”.

In truth, we would do well to debate more the history and culture of this country. It is a subject worthy of discussion and it is, after all, the real reason that this place exists. However, when Donald spoke, his Administration was an Executive, not a Government; the Parliament anguished every time it trespassed into reserved areas; and there were real doubts as to whether the fledgling Parliament would stand the test of time.

Those questions are now over. There is no doubt as to the permanence of this institution, and the only question is about the pace at which the Parliament, the Scottish people, and their Government will assume further responsibility.

Will that make us totally independent? Well, not in an absolute sense. All nations are interdependent, one upon the other. That fact of life does not change, regardless of Scotland’s status. However, the greater our independence, the greater our ability to impact on the political environment around us and the greater our power to determine the circumstances of our fellow citizens.

It will be this Parliament that decides to intervene to protect the dispossessed, as we have done over the bedroom tax; this Parliament that determines the life chances of the future, as we have done on nursery education; and this Parliament that places no financial barrier on human potential, as we have done with the abolition of tuition fees. I hope and believe that one day soon, it will be this place that removes weapons of mass destruction from Scotland; this place that decides to fully commit to a renewable future; and this place that acts not just to secure but to develop Scotland’s proper position in the mainstream of Europe.

I wish all members well in their choices. For those who are retiring, you have done the nation some service. For those moving on to new careers, think well of this Parliament. For those standing for election, I wish you all luck—albeit with varying degrees of enthusiasm. [Laughter.]

Let me leave members with these final thoughts. There is no greater honour in public life than to be a member of this Parliament. There is no greater task than to mould the public purpose of Scotland. There is no greater cause to serve than that of the people of this country. With that, it is goodbye from me—for now. [Applause.]

In the same item of business

The Presiding Officer NPA
The next item of business is a debate on motion S4M-15941, in the name of John Swinney, on the Scotland Bill, which is United Kingdom legislation. 09:00
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Finance, Constitution and Economy (John Swinney) SNP
I can well remember returning from school on 2 March 1979 to be greeted by my mother with some disappointing news: the yes campaign had not secured enough vo...
Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab) Lab
I support the motion in Mr Swinney’s name and express my delight that we have arrived at this debate and this question. After all, like him, I spent 10 weeks...
Kevin Stewart (Aberdeen Central) (SNP) SNP
Does Mr Gray think that we have such a UK Government at this moment, which is trying to break the trade unions and public services? Does he think that it wou...
Iain Gray Lab
I do indeed think that we have such a UK Government at the moment, and I will come to what I think about that immediately. Out of the 1980s and 1990s came t...
Annabel Goldie (West Scotland) (Con) Con
This is not my final speech—I understand that that will take place next week—but, in a sense, the bill encapsulates a journey for me that has involved a mark...
The Presiding Officer NPA
I call Bruce Crawford to speak on behalf of the Devolution (Further Powers) Committee. 09:28
Bruce Crawford (Stirling) (SNP) SNP
I am delighted to speak as the convener of the Devolution (Further Powers) Committee. I thank all the members of the committee, past and present, for the man...
The Presiding Officer NPA
We move to the open debate. 09:34
Linda Fabiani (East Kilbride) (SNP) SNP
I am pleased that we have reached this point, which, as was outlined by the Deputy First Minister, has come from Calman, the Scotland Act 2012 and the promis...
Alex Johnstone (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
I hear the comments that Linda Fabiani makes, but how do they relate to Lord Smith’s remark that he believes that the vow and the promises of the commission ...
Linda Fabiani SNP
Lord Smith can answer for himself. What I can talk about is what was agreed by the committee, with the exception of Alex Johnstone. The fact is that what was...
Iain Gray Lab
Will the member take an intervention?
Linda Fabiani SNP
No, thank you. During the Smith commission sittings, there were overriding themes: the potential use of additional powers, the principle of no detriment, an...
The Presiding Officer NPA
I call Duncan McNeil. This is Mr McNeil’s final speech in the Parliament. 09:40
Duncan McNeil (Greenock and Inverclyde) (Lab) Lab
Thank you, Presiding Officer. I want to take a moment to thank all the members of the Parliament’s staff who have served me my breakfast, put up with my rant...
The Presiding Officer NPA
On behalf of the Parliament, I thank Duncan McNeil for his contribution as a member, as a member of the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body, as a committee...
Tavish Scott (Shetland Islands) (LD) LD
I found a Duncan McNeil speech last night when I was looking forward to this debate. I had some inkling that he would give some thoughts on his very distingu...
The Presiding Officer NPA
I call Alex Salmond. This is Mr Salmond’s final speech in the Parliament. 09:57
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP
I congratulate Annabel Goldie and Duncan McNeil on their service to the Parliament—their contribution has been substantial indeed. However, I say to Duncan M...
The Presiding Officer NPA
On behalf of the Parliament, I thank you for your contribution as an MSP and as the First Minister of Scotland. You have served the Parliament and Scotland w...
Stewart Maxwell (West Scotland) (SNP) SNP
I believe that today represents another significant step on the journey of this Parliament, and I feel privileged to have played a part in that process as a ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (John Scott) Con
You should be drawing to a close.
Stewart Maxwell SNP
I hope that, as we approach the end of this session of Parliament, we do so with a sense of determination to ensure that in the next session Parliament will ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
Many thanks. We are now very tight for time. I call Malcolm Chisholm, to be followed by Mark McDonald. Up to six minutes, please. 10:11
Malcolm Chisholm (Edinburgh Northern and Leith) (Lab) Lab
This is not my final speech, for which I am very grateful, given the number of distinguished final speeches that we have heard this morning. First of all, I ...
Mark McDonald (Aberdeen Donside) (SNP) SNP
Having served as a member of both the Devolution (Further Powers) Committee and the Finance Committee, I cannot help but feel that a gaping hole is about to ...
Lesley Brennan (North East Scotland) (Lab) Lab
It is a great honour to speak in this debate and to follow many great parliamentarians who have shaped this place over the past 17 years, and also to speak i...
Stuart McMillan (West Scotland) (SNP) SNP
Does Lesley Brennan agree with me that the powers that come to this Parliament from the Scotland Bill are very much limited? Does she agree that, no matter w...
Lesley Brennan Lab
I agree that the powers are narrow in their scope, but I think that they could do a great deal of good. I suggest that the Parliament considers devolving the...