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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 2,096,497 contributions. Latest 30 days: 3,898. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 16 Jun 2026.
Ross Greer Green Chamber
10 Jun 2026
Public Trust in Scottish Politics
Not quite yet, Mr Johnson.However, I am not a member of the SNP, and it is no more my job to tell the SNP how to run that party than it would be for any member in this place to tell me how to run the Scottish Green Party.We could have spent this afternoon talking about many di...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
10 Jun 2026
Public Trust in Scottish Politics
Of course, the current Prime Minister was almost immediately mired in scandal because of the clothes and gifts that he received from Lord Alli.Two things can be true here. The SNP was the victim of a crime, but its internal governance processes and culture also failed. The cri...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
10 Jun 2026
Public Trust in Scottish Politics
I am glad that the Labour Party has secured a debate on restoring public trust in Scottish politics, because, quite clearly, the public have very little trust in our political institutions. However, that did not begin and does not end with Peter Murrell’s crimes against the SN...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
10 Jun 2026
Public Trust in Scottish Politics
I ask this quite sincerely: does Mr Sarwar genuinely believe what he just said—that this is the greatest political scandal in the history of devolution—when one of his formerly close colleagues, Colin Smyth, is yet to be prosecuted for what he allegedly did in this place? Does...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
04 Jun 2026
First Minister’s Question Time · Conversion Therapy Ban
As a West Scotland MSP, I welcome the First Minister’s prioritisation of Strathclyde Partnership for Transport, but families across Scotland should be able to benefit from the cap as soon as possible.Making bus travel cheaper is only half the picture, though. Forty years after...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
04 Jun 2026
First Minister’s Question Time · Conversion Therapy Ban
I thank the First Minister for his solidarity. I and the Scottish Greens want to see a UK-wide ban on that form of torture, but the UK Government has made the same promise over and over and it has still not introduced such a bill. Should it fail to do so again, I will expect t...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
04 Jun 2026
First Minister’s Question Time · Conversion Therapy Ban
This week marks the start of pride month. Pride is not just a celebration of our LGBTQ community; it is a protest. It is clear why protest is still needed. A decade ago, the United Kingdom consistently came top of the list for LGBTQ rights in Europe, yet we have fallen to 22nd...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
04 Jun 2026
First Minister’s Question Time · Conversion Therapy Ban
As a West Scotland MSP, I welcome the First Minister’s prioritisation of Strathclyde Partnership for Transport, but families across Scotland should be able to benefit from the cap as soon as possible.Making bus travel cheaper is only half the picture, though. Forty years after...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
04 Jun 2026
First Minister’s Question Time · Conversion Therapy Ban
I thank the First Minister for his solidarity. I and the Scottish Greens want to see a UK-wide ban on that form of torture, but the UK Government has made the same promise over and over and it has still not introduced such a bill. Should it fail to do so again, I will expect t...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
04 Jun 2026
First Minister’s Question Time · Conversion Therapy Ban
This week marks the start of pride month. Pride is not just a celebration of our LGBTQ community; it is a protest. It is clear why protest is still needed. A decade ago, the United Kingdom consistently came top of the list for LGBTQ rights in Europe, yet we have fallen to 22nd...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
26 May 2026
Independence Referendum
I remember that, in the last session of this Parliament, we pointed out that the pro-independence parties had won not just a majority of seats but a majority of votes, and Mr Cole-Hamilton had to come up with a whole new reason against a mandate for a referendum at that point,...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
26 May 2026
Independence Referendum
No.The best way to grow support for Scottish self-government is to do self-government well—to maximise the use of the powers that we have. That is the focus of today’s Green amendment. The powers of this Parliament are limited, but we have not yet exhausted them.In 2014, we gr...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
26 May 2026
Independence Referendum
Mr Hoy may have missed the fact that the Scottish Greens gave every voter in Scotland the opportunity to vote for us, and far more of them chose to do so than chose to vote for the Scottish Conservative Party.As I said, I respect the arguments for the union and against indepen...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
26 May 2026
Independence Referendum
Not quite yet.I ask those who use that particular line to reflect on the fact that 800,000 people who were old enough to vote at the election just a few weeks ago were not old enough to vote in the referendum in 2014. Is it really credible to continue with the line that it has...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
26 May 2026
Independence Referendum
I see that Mr Sarwar’s constructive and collaborative tone lasted about a week in this place. Clearly, no lessons have been learned from the election.Every Green MSP who was elected to this Parliament was elected on a mandate to support the cause of independence. Our gains hav...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
26 May 2026
Independence Referendum
I remember that, in the last session of this Parliament, we pointed out that the pro-independence parties had won not just a majority of seats but a majority of votes, and Mr Cole-Hamilton had to come up with a whole new reason against a mandate for a referendum at that point,...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
26 May 2026
Independence Referendum
No.The best way to grow support for Scottish self-government is to do self-government well—to maximise the use of the powers that we have. That is the focus of today’s Green amendment. The powers of this Parliament are limited, but we have not yet exhausted them.In 2014, we gr...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
26 May 2026
Independence Referendum
Mr Hoy may have missed the fact that the Scottish Greens gave every voter in Scotland the opportunity to vote for us, and far more of them chose to do so than chose to vote for the Scottish Conservative Party.As I said, I respect the arguments for the union and against indepen...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
26 May 2026
Independence Referendum
Not quite yet.I ask those who use that particular line to reflect on the fact that 800,000 people who were old enough to vote at the election just a few weeks ago were not old enough to vote in the referendum in 2014. Is it really credible to continue with the line that it has...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
26 May 2026
Independence Referendum
I see that Mr Sarwar’s constructive and collaborative tone lasted about a week in this place. Clearly, no lessons have been learned from the election.Every Green MSP who was elected to this Parliament was elected on a mandate to support the cause of independence. Our gains hav...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
14 May 2026
Oaths and Affirmations
The ultimate loyalty of the Scottish Greens is not to king or crown but to the people of Scotland, who are sovereign.I, Ross John Greer, do swear that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to His Majesty King Charles, his heirs and successors, according to law. So help m...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
14 May 2026
Oaths and Affirmations
The ultimate loyalty of the Scottish Greens is not to king or crown but to the people of Scotland, who are sovereign.I, Ross John Greer, do swear that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to His Majesty King Charles, his heirs and successors, according to law. So help m...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
14 May 2026
Oaths and Affirmations
The ultimate loyalty of the Scottish Greens is not to king or crown but to the people of Scotland, who are sovereign.I, Ross John Greer, do swear that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to His Majesty King Charles, his heirs and successors, according to law. So help m...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
14 May 2026
Oaths and Affirmations
The ultimate loyalty of the Scottish Greens is not to king or crown but to the people of Scotland, who are sovereign.I, Ross John Greer, do swear that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to His Majesty King Charles, his heirs and successors, according to law. So help m...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
25 Mar 2026
First Minister’s Question Time · Free Bus Travel
I am glad that the First Minister has mentioned the £2 bus fare cap across the Highlands and Islands and the scrapping of peak rail fares. Those were also policies that were proposed by Green MSPs in budget negotiations. We are proud to have provided those ideas, which have sa...
3. Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
25 Mar 2026
First Minister’s Question Time · Free Bus Travel
Free bus travel for young people is the Scottish Greens’ proudest achievement of the past five years. It is a simple idea, but one that has transformed the lives of young people across the country and saved families a fortune. It has opened up opportunities for young people to...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Children (Care, Care Experience and Services Planning) (Scotland) Bill
I pay tribute to Scotland’s care-experienced community. We would not be here without the incredibly powerful political movement that they built, which was ultimately impossible for politicians, Parliaments and Governments at all levels to ignore. That is the only reason why we...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Children (Care, Care Experience and Services Planning) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
To follow up on Willie Rennie’s points about monitoring uptake, I emphasise to the minister—I hope that she agrees—that it is not just about overall uptake rates. We know that, when advocacy is offered to young people, 98 per cent of them take it up, but we should be focusing ...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Children (Care, Care Experience and Services Planning) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Amendment 200 would change section 122 of the Children’s Hearings (Scotland) Act 2011, which is the section that makes provision for advocacy services to assist a child in relation to their involvement in a children’s hearing. Amendment 200 would amend the definition of “child...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Children (Care, Care Experience and Services Planning) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
On the point that Willie Rennie has raised, and on behalf of organisations that provide a lot of excellent service in this area, I ask whether the minister could provide some reassurance on the issue of immediate disruption. Whether through how we commence the provisions of th...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Children (Care, Care Experience and Services Planning) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will make just a brief contribution on this group. At stage 2, I lodged a series of amendments to include estranged young people in various provisions of the bill, including, to some extent, in relation to aftercare. I raise the issue now because, at that point, the minister...
Ross Greer Green Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
It sounds as if you are doing a huge amount of work at your own direction. You know your communities, what they need and how to facilitate that. Alongside that, are you getting approaches from the council about particular parts of the city in which it wants you to work, and do...
Ross Greer Green Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
Did the council originally facilitate the relationship between you and the emergency services—particularly the police, I imagine, on a more on-going basis—or do you have a direct relationship with community officers?
Ross Greer Green Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
Thanks very much. I am conscious of the time, so I will come to you, Mark. I want to ask about the example that you gave at the start, about Torry and the impact that your work has had there. I am interested in how such work comes about. Did the trust take a unilateral decisio...
Ross Greer Green Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
Is that a two-way relationship now? When you have families coming to you who need additional support, you will try to engage with the council, whether it is with the social work department or another part of the council. Is the opposite also happening? Are you getting social w...
Ross Greer Green Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
I hope that that will contribute.In response to Willie Rennie’s interest, you mentioned that there has been a shift in attitude from the council. Is it fair to say that, in the past, it perhaps felt as though there was a really strong network of third sector and private sector...
Ross Greer Green Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
Parliament has just passed a bill on community wealth building.
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
Good morning. I will follow up on Debbi’s example. The level of need in our communities is vast and it would be great to be able to give cash to everybody in that situation. What level of demand is there for that kind of support in the communities that you work in? Are you tur...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
17 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill
At stage 1, I said that I supported the principles of the bill but not the specifics. I believe that the circumstances of our deaths should be as safe and compassionate as possible, but for too many people suffering prolonged and undignified deaths in Scotland, that is not bec...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
As I have said throughout our proceedings, I still have a degree of doubt about the bill full stop and I have not yet decided how I will vote on Tuesday.On Mr Kerr’s specific point, and although it is not a foolproof solution, I point again to what is already in subsection (2)...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Mr Kerr makes an important point that was touched on yesterday in an exchange between Pam Duncan-Glancy and me, and he does so by posing a question about my confidence in the measure. If I have the privilege of being elected to the next session of Parliament, I certainly would...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will speak directly to Stephen Kerr’s amendments 266 and then I will happily take his intervention.I hope that there is a majority for on-going Parliamentary oversight of the guidance. I suggest that we can do that through Liz Smith’s amendments, which would possibly work al...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am grateful to colleagues who have indicated support for amendments 259 and 270. In this group, there has been broad agreement about the need for on-going parliamentary oversight and accountability.
Ross Greer Green Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am inclined to agree with Mr Kerr on the importance of parliamentary accountability and scrutiny—I am just not clear on what the mechanism for those would be. Amendment 266 does not state what the mechanism for parliamentary approval would be. I apologise if I have missed th...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
That intervention straddles a couple of points and it takes me on to what I was about to get on to. I do not want to pre-empt Liz Smith’s amendments 268 and 269, because I am undecided on how to vote on them, but I am particularly interested in them because of the accountabili...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will begin with a brief announcement about information technology, because my laptop has just informed me that it is going to force a restart in two hours and 40 minutes, at which point we will be locked into what I am sure will be a long series of votes. If any other member...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I have an instinctive hesitation about providing the Government with more Henry VIII powers, so I wonder whether the member can help me out. I am wondering what it is that is lacking in section 31, which gives the Government ancillary provision powers, and, indeed, in the Nati...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am sympathetic to amendment 250 because it would ensure a level of equity of access throughout the country but the rationale that Fulton MacGregor outlined for it does not tally with its effect. His rationale seems to be that it would mean that assisted dying would not be pr...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
It seems that the two primary arguments against what is proposed in this group of amendments are, first, about trusting the professional judgment of clinicians and, secondly, the healthcare literacy argument that Stephanie Callaghan raised. I struggle far more with the first a...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
My position is certainly that it would be additional resource. Obviously, that would get us into wider debates about budget allocations. Members will appreciate that I have no shortage of revenue-raising proposals to put to Parliament every year at budget time, so I can always...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am trying to round off, but I do not want to curtail the debate, so I will take one final intervention.
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Amendment 204 is paired with amendment 259, which is in group 19, on guidance. That is where we move the detail of what the advocate is to provide from legislation into guidance, to make sure that we can keep it up to date.I have just two brief responses to finish with, Presid...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am envisaging that the advocate would be there for their transition to whatever form of care they decide to receive instead. If it was palliative care, I cannot say that the advocate would stay with them throughout that journey; we do not know how long that might be or what ...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will be brief in summing up. I want to make one general point and give two specific responses.The general point is to emphasise to colleagues that the intention of the amendments is to either clarify or fix drafting issues following stage 2 or, critically, to make sure that ...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The short answer to that is yes. Apart from the ones that I have spoken to in detail, the amendments are based on advice that we have had from the Scottish Law Society and the Government and so on, on making sure that the definitions are legally clear and operable.Amendment 20...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will take Mr Whittle again. I am conscious of time, Presiding Officer, so I will try to round off after that.
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
That is what I was referencing a moment ago: the amendments move some of that from the bill to the statutory guidance. I ask Dr Allan and any other member who is interested in that issue to cross-reference amendment 204 with amendment 259, which we will come to in group 19. Th...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am grateful to Audrey Nicoll for making that point. The definition of independent advocacy is one that we are debating across several bills in the Parliament right now, particularly in relation to care-experienced young people.The concept of advocacy being independent is to ...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
That is a worry that I have, and not just in relation to this bill. We are well aware in this Parliament that, over our 27-year history, we have legislated to create a whole range of rights for individuals that public services have been unable to deliver in practice.What was a...
Ross Greer Green Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
That is why I think amendment 200 is particularly important, because that is where it comes down to the patient requesting advocacy. The specific language in amendment 199 is based, in part, on suggestions from the Law Society of Scotland about making sure that the language in...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 10 June 2026 [Draft]

10 Jun 2026 · S7 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Public Trust in Scottish Politics
Greer, Ross Green West Scotland Watch on SPTV

Not quite yet, Mr Johnson.

However, I am not a member of the SNP, and it is no more my job to tell the SNP how to run that party than it would be for any member in this place to tell me how to run the Scottish Green Party.

We could have spent this afternoon talking about many different issues. The Labour Party’s proposal is the result of one thing: it is the response of sore losers who cannot deal with the fact that, for 20 years, they have failed to put a positive vision about this country to the people and have got the response that they deserved over and over again.

We could have spent this afternoon talking about the NHS, an issue that I know is close to the heart of Anas Sarwar. We could have spent it talking about the problems in our social care system or—bearing in mind the greenhouse gas emissions statement yesterday—about the Government’s failure to get a grip on the climate emergency, but we are not doing any of that.

We can reflect on the few weeks that we have been in this place since the election. I am not one who is going to spend the next five years giving the Reform Party any credit whatsoever, but it is notable that the two parties that have used First Minister’s question time to ask about and challenge the Government on matters of public policy are the Greens and Reform—the two parties that gained seats at the election. As for the parties that have played silly games at First Minister’s question time for the past few weeks—Labour and the Conservatives—well, we all know what result the public gave them last month.

Anas Sarwar and, indeed, a further number of our unionist colleagues like to regularly challenge the Scottish Government and all of us who believe in the cause of independence to focus on the day job and get on with that. Do they really think that the public believe that this topic is the day job of this Parliament? Of course they do not. On Mr Sarwar’s specific criticism that an element of the Green amendment plays constitutional politics, I believe that the regulation of political parties and the laws that govern them should be the day job of this Parliament. Political parties have to register separately to run in Scotland. It is only logical that this Parliament, which has responsibility for elections and the franchise, should also have responsibility for that area of electoral law.

However, there is an obvious conflict of interest in having an inquiry along the lines of what the Labour Party has put forward, and I suggest that it is very much a case of throwing stones from inside glass houses. I was asked about that in the media this morning, and I used examples from other areas of public life. If one old firm team was accused of wrongdoing, we would not appoint the other one—or any club in Scotland—to an inquiry into that. We would appoint the governing institutions. In the case of political parties, the governing institutions include the Electoral Commission. There are serious questions about whether the Electoral Commission has the powers that it needs in order to act. There are also serious questions about whether it has the culture that it needs to oversee political parties in this place.

The Green proposal focuses on restoring public trust in this institution. Most importantly, the Greens have proposed an independent review, along the lines of that proposed in recent weeks by Professor James Mitchell, Transparency International and others. The review that we have proposed would apply to all political parties, not just one, to remove the element of conflict of interest.

Mr Sarwar, rightly, puts the challenge to the SNP, but I put it to him and to all parties in this place that if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear. The Greens have nothing to hide or fear about an independent review of political party financial arrangements; neither has the Labour Party, I hope. We believe that an independent review that looks at all political parties and the governing arrangements, rules and regulations that apply to all of us is the appropriate way forward. We would like such a review to look into issues such as the influence that is wielded by wealthy donors and dark-money organisations—those who do not declare their own funding before giving to political parties and working with them. According to a poll that was published, I believe, only this morning or yesterday, 83 per cent of the public across the UK believe that wealthy individuals wield influence over political parties through the money that they direct towards them. We will restore trust in politics by addressing such issues, which the public believes are seriously undermining our democracy.

There are serious risks to our democracy, whether in Scotland or UK wide. Foreign interference is a serious risk, and donations to political parties are one way in which foreign interference has wormed its way into our system. The Rycroft review made that clear. The previous UK Conservative Government would not act on it—because, I suggest, of the Russian money that I referenced. To its credit, the current UK Labour Government is entertaining proposals to deal with the issue. [Interruption.] Mr Sarwar is missing the limited praise that I am giving the UK Government, because of his conversation with other members. The UK Labour Government seems to be willing to get a grip on some of the issues, and I give it credit for that.

Transparency in our politics is important. I have mentioned the role of the Electoral Commission. Members across the Parliament will appreciate why the Greens in particular are frustrated with the Electoral Commission over its failure to act on issues that are undermining the legitimacy of our politics.

In closing, I go back to what James Mitchell proposed. I am not claiming that he endorses the Green proposals but, clearly, what we have proposed is closer to his calls than anything else that has been offered today. He said:

“we need to make sure that what is done results in improved outcomes, enhances transparency and improves internal party governance … not an opportunity for grandstanding, obfuscation and hyper-partisanship.”

The Greens do not want a review for its own sake. The 2025 social attitudes survey showed that less than half the Scottish public trust the Scottish Government, and that far fewer trust the UK Government. That lack of trust is easy to exploit. We see that in the other major story in Scotland this week. That is more relevant to us all than the situation inside the SNP.

The Greens do not want to waste public money on a hyperpartisan parliamentary inquiry with no clear objective other than bashing the Scottish Government. I urge members to support instead the Green proposal. We can produce something positive from the mess. In and of itself, the proposal will not restore trust in politics, but it takes an important step towards doing so. This afternoon, we can do something for the public, not just advance our party interests. I urge members to support the Green proposal.

I move amendment S7M-00294.2, to leave out from “agrees” to end and insert:

“believes there is a need to restore public trust in politics following multiple recent financial scandals, including those uncovered by Operation Branchform; further believes that an independent review into party political finances would go some way towards restoring this trust; believes that, to avoid this becoming a nakedly partisan process, it should be independently led rather than conducted by parliamentary committee, and that its remit must apply to the funding of all political parties; recognises wider concerns about the role of money in politics, including the scale of donations by extremely wealthy individuals, and the influence of organisations that refuse to disclose their funding sources, and calls for the devolution of power over the regulation of political parties and their funding to allow for the implementation of any recommendations of the independent review that would require legislative change.”

15:54

References in this contribution

Motions, questions or amendments mentioned by their reference code.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Clare Adamson) SNP
Before we begin the next item of business, I would like to say that the proceedings against Peter Murrell remain active until he has been sentenced. The sub ...
Anas Sarwar (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
The choice before us in this debate is simple. Do we believe in honesty, openness, transparency and the rule of law? Is this a Parliament that believes that ...
Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green) Green
I ask this quite sincerely: does Mr Sarwar genuinely believe what he just said—that this is the greatest political scandal in the history of devolution—when ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Clare Adamson) SNP
I remind members that criminal cases remain active and that the sub judice rule is engaged.
Anas Sarwar Lab
I say gently to Mr Greer that that is a shocking case that relates to individual behaviour, but today we are talking about a systematic culture of cover-up a...
Patrick Harvie (Glasgow) (Green) Green
Made a request to intervene.
Anas Sarwar Lab
If I get the time back, I will happily take an intervention.
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Clare Adamson) SNP
You can, Mr Sarwar.
Patrick Harvie Green
I wonder whether Anas Sarwar applies the same principle—if people have nothing to hide, they have nothing to fear—to our argument that, if there is to be an ...
Anas Sarwar Lab
I have sympathy for the argument that Patrick Harvie has made, and I have sympathy with the Green amendment. There should be greater transparency on party fi...
The Minister for Parliamentary Business and Veterans (Jamie Hepburn) SNP
In the interests of transparency, I place on the record that my wife is presently employed by the Scottish National Party and has been since April 2023.I beg...
Stephen Kerr (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con) Con
I assert that what the minister has said is outrageous. He has called into question the very idea of why we have parliamentary committees and parliamentary i...
Jamie Hepburn SNP
I am not convinced that that intervention was particularly worth hearing. We presumably all accept the objective fact that the issue in question is the forme...
Stephen Kerr Con
You should be in favour of an inquiry.
Jamie Hepburn SNP
If the member is suggesting that it is not the Scottish National Party that is the victim in this case, I do not know who he thinks the victim is.This picks ...
Michael Marra (North East Scotland) (Lab) Lab
Will the minister give way?
Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh North Western) (LD) LD
Will he give way?
Jamie Hepburn SNP
Not at the moment.I believe that the Parliament has a proud and good record of constructive committee work. It is not always easy or straightforward. It is w...
Michael Marra Lab
Will the minister give way?
Jamie Hepburn SNP
Can I check, Presiding Officer: if I give way, will I get the time back?
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Clare Adamson) SNP
Yes. The Presiding Officer has agreed that that should be the case for all debates if you take an intervention.
Michael Marra Lab
I appreciate the minister giving way. Would he not recognise that there is a question of public money paid in Short money to the SNP? There are questions of ...
Jamie Hepburn SNP
Any of those questions will be dealt with by the Electoral Commission. That issue has already been raised in Parliament. The question was asked of the First ...
Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab) Lab
It was about HMRC.
Jamie Hepburn SNP
I think that the question was about Short money, Ms Baillie, and it would be a matter for the Electoral Commission.
Alex Cole-Hamilton LD
Will the minister give way?
Jamie Hepburn SNP
I will give way one more time, to Mr Cole-Hamilton.
Alex Cole-Hamilton LD
The minister suggests that it would be inappropriate for a committee of inquiry to investigate the issue, but we have the Standards, Procedures and Public Ap...
Jamie Hepburn SNP
Government ministers are, quite correctly, accountable for their Government ministerial responsibilities, and they will be held to account by the Parliament....
Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab) Lab
Will the minister give way?