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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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2,095,827
Hansard contributions
1999–2026
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Showing 60 of 2,095,827 contributions. Latest 30 days: 3,357. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 10 Jun 2026.
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Remote, Rural and Island Communities (Sustainability)
I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests as a partner in a farming business.I thank all those who have signed today’s motion, allowing me to bring the debate to the chamber. With an election on the horizon, there will inevitably be a more partisan ton...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
24 Mar 2026
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 3
I agree with that. I served with Richard Leonard on the Economy, Jobs and Fair Work Committee in session 5, and, although I accept that his politics and mine will probably never align, he has served those whom he represents extremely well in this place, even if his views are n...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
24 Mar 2026
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 3
Not if the member is going to demonstrate a crush.
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
24 Mar 2026
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 3
Now for something different. I draw members’ attention to my entry in the register of interests, as a partner in a farming business, a member of Scottish Land & Estates and NFU Scotland, and a crofting landlord.I turn to part 1 of the bill. It bears repeating that, although th...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Does the minister accept that, if patients from Orkney, Shetland or somewhere else go down to a council area in the central belt—perhaps with family or somebody else joining them—and they have no option other than to stay overnight because of the limited transport, there is no...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Energy Prices (Impact on Businesses of Middle East Conflict)
While £10 million is going to support 71 businesses in Glasgow that have been impacted by the fire there, thousands of businesses across the Highlands and Islands will be seeing fuel costs double, with apparently no support coming to them. Will there be specific support for th...
5. Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Energy Prices (Impact on Businesses of Middle East Conflict)
To ask the Scottish Government what support it is providing to businesses facing higher energy prices and other increased costs resulting from the conflict in the middle east. (S6O-05652)
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
General Question Time · National Health Service (Decision Making and Accountability)
The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care will be aware of Scottish Labour’s proposals to axe local health boards such as NHS Orkney, NHS Shetland, NHS Western Isles and NHS Grampian in favour of three health boards for the whole of Scotland. In my Highlands and Islands...
7. Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
12 Mar 2026
General Question Time · National Health Service (Decision Making and Accountability)
To ask the Scottish Government what its position is on the importance of local decision making and local accountability in the national health service. (S6O-05633)
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
05 Mar 2026
General Question Time · HIAL Airports (Accessibility)
The cabinet secretary will be aware of the unique challenges of the Highlands and Islands, the challenges that customers face in accessing hub airports when there are limited public transport or other options available and the long journeys that those customers often have to m...
4. Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
05 Mar 2026
General Question Time · HIAL Airports (Accessibility)
To ask the Scottish Government what steps it is taking to ensure that Highlands and Islands Airports Ltd airports are as accessible as possible to all residents and users. (S6O-05598)
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Ferries
It would not be a debate without Kevin Stewart shouting something from a sedentary position, would it?We welcome the good news, but it does not make up for 19 years of complete failure on our ferries. We have heard about the many procurement issues. The truth is that the futur...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Ferries
I feel like Dr Allan is looking for an endorsement ahead of the election. I recognise that there is some good news—
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Ferries
If it is brief, yes.
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Ferries
I add my thanks to Fiona Hyslop for all her work, although there are a few things that I need her to sort out before she rides off into retirement.One of the most important things that we have heard voiced in today’s debate is how communities have been affected year after year...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Ferries
I always enjoy listening to Richard Leonard speak. However, I tell him as an islander—I think that I speak on behalf of many islanders in the northern isles—that we would be worried about having CalMac Ferries run the ferry service in the northern isles. We do not want a publi...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Ferries
Will the member take an intervention?
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Future Farming Investment Scheme
I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests, which states that I am a partner in a farming business.The Scottish Government found itself forced into providing a drip feed of information about the chaotic introduction of round 1 of the scheme, whether thr...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
03 Mar 2026
Ferries and Ports
The impact of the crisis that the Scottish National Party has overseen in our ferries fleet has, thankfully, been lessened by the role that has been played by the Pentland Ferries vessel MV Alfred, although that has meant that that new and larger vessel has been taken away fro...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
26 Feb 2026
Scottish Broadcasting
:I feel we might get into the issue of jigsaw identification.
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
26 Feb 2026
Scottish Broadcasting
:I recognise that control over advertising on independent local radio is an issue that is reserved to the UK Government.There is no political campaigning or advertising on radio, although the listening public might be delighted by that. However, members of the Scottish Parliam...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
26 Feb 2026
Scottish Broadcasting
:We have talked a lot about radio and the growth of radio stations. Radio provides an easy way of listening, and it allows for the targeting of markets. Local radio is vitally important in communities such as mine and across the Highlands and Islands. The BBC plays a massive r...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
26 Feb 2026
Scottish Broadcasting
:I will ask a question, which is not intended as a gotcha at all, but to which I genuinely do not know the answer.When the BBC Scotland channel was set up, there was quite a large budget—I think that it was about £38 million. I do not know what the current budget is or what th...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
26 Feb 2026
Scottish Broadcasting
:We have known each other for a very long time. I think you know that I am certainly more likely to be into sport than the opera.
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
26 Feb 2026
Scottish Broadcasting
:I am sure that Channel 5 might have its opinion on that.
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
26 Feb 2026
Scottish Broadcasting
:Do you think that, in essence, the BBC reacted to political pressure and brought in a product that was probably already on its way out?
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Committee
26 Feb 2026
Scottish Broadcasting
I am glad that we have got away from the spiral that we got into in previous contributions to talk about some issues that I think really matter.I want to ask about BBC Scotland’s dedicated online channel. What is the potential for that? A huge amount of money has been invested...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
18 Feb 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Island Communities (Policing)
Island communities have often been seen as being protected from the worst rises in crime and antisocial behaviour experienced in mainland communities. However, among some islanders there is a feeling that the prevalence of low-level crime and antisocial behaviour is increasing...
3. Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
18 Feb 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Island Communities (Policing)
To ask the Scottish Government what steps it is taking to ensure that policing of island communities is adequately resourced. (S6O-05525)
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
05 Feb 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Skye Reinforcement Project
Some of these roads are narrow and in poor condition, and they are all heavily used by tourists, with tour buses and camper vans being a very common sight. They cut through the heart of communities, where schoolchildren, older folk and pedestrians often have to walk across the...
3. Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
05 Feb 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Skye Reinforcement Project
To ask the Scottish Government what discussions it has had with communities, developers and other stakeholders regarding wide loads and any increased traffic movements on the A86, A889, A82 and A87 linked to the Skye reinforcement project and the Glen Mor workers camp at Fort ...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
When would you expect to see that detailed feedback?
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
This is my last question. How will you oversee and benchmark the process, and how will you publish information on those benchmarks and that oversight?
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
Given the evidence that we received from one of your SNP colleagues who was representing COSLA about the impact of the settlement, I am not sure that they necessarily agree with that positivity.My final question is on Creative Scotland. We spoke to its representatives earlier ...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
What concerns did they raise with you?
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
I do not know whether you saw Iain Munro’s evidence earlier, but he highlighted the youth music initiative, which is one of the areas that you highlighted, and we talked about the impact of the squeeze on local government. He talked about a fragility in the local government si...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
Do you recognise that the confidence that such an increase will be delivered—you have highlighted that it will be over a longer period—is somewhat impacted by the fact that promises that were made in the past were occasionally followed by sectoral budget cuts and later reinsta...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
I will be quick and I would be grateful for brief answers. I will follow up on some of the areas that Patrick Harvie covered. In giving evidence to the committee last week, Steven Roth talked about “managing decline”. He warned that the current funding settlement means that Sc...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
So, £10 million was a considerable part of that balance?
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
This will be my final question, if that is okay—I am conscious of time. I am dotting around a little bit again. The report says that it was also planned to draw down £10 million from the reserves built up from lottery income. What are the total reserves at the moment?
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
The cabinet secretary has suggested previously that he has met the board to discuss funding issues. Are you aware of other meetings with the board?
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
I will widen the question out to wider oversight. One of the issues that have been raised repeatedly is the opportunities for the cabinet secretary to meet the board. Has the cabinet secretary met the Creative Scotland board or attended board meetings? Have there been invitati...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
I turn to the leadership aspect. To be clear, I am not trying to make comparisons, but you will appreciate that we have been dealing with the issues and concerns that have been raised around Historic Environment Scotland. The report says:“Creative Scotland’s governance is diff...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
There will be an action plan but not a transformation plan. Will it cover the same things?
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
Sorry—I am going to dot around a little bit, but there are some areas that I want to cover. One part of the review said that Creative Scotland needs to improve its long-term planning; by implication, the organisation is too short term in its approach. The report noted that you...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
Another area that is highlighted in our papers is the planned increase in the youth music initiative’s budget to £10 million, which is an increase of £0.2 million. We have all heard stories of local government and schools not being able to provide things such as musical instru...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
You have talked about partnerships and, in particular, working with local government. An area that we heard concerns about at last week’s meeting was that the pressures on local government funding causes pressures in relationships with museums and the like. Are you concerned t...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Committee
05 Feb 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
I want to go back to the multiyear funding question. In our committee papers, there is a map and I can see that the Highlands and Islands, which I represent, is doing quite well out of the multiyear funding—this is an unusual experience for me. You have highlighted that the ci...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
04 Feb 2026
Hospitality
I am afraid that I do not have the time.That experience will be the consequence of large hikes in business rates. It will hit regions such as mine hard, because rural businesses routinely operate on tighter margins with lower footfall and greater seasonal fluctuations, with ow...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
04 Feb 2026
Hospitality
I am not quite sure what that previous contribution related to, but I am sure that it looked good on the computer.As MSPs who visit businesses large and small, we hear from employees and employers alike, we talk to the people who deliver public services in our areas, and we me...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
29 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
::No, you have just raised a point.
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
29 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
::Will the member take an intervention?
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
29 Jan 2026
Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
::I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests. I am a partner in a farming business and a member of NFU Scotland, SLE and the Royal Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland.I start on a positive note. Despite differences over the content of the bill...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Chamber
29 Jan 2026
Greyhound Racing (Offences) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
::I am sorry, but I do not have time. My colleague Fin Carson, speaking on behalf of the committee, highlighted that the committee did not agree on the need for the bill. Tim Eagle highlighted the recognition of some stakeholders’ belief that regulation would be more effective...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
29 Jan 2026
Greyhound Racing (Offences) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
::I congratulate Mark Ruskell on bringing his member’s bill to stage 1. Wherever we may fall on the content of the bill, it has clearly been the product of a lengthy process and considerable effort on his part that has been motivated by a legitimate concern for animal welfare....
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
29 Jan 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
Okay—thank you.
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
29 Jan 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
Is it likely that in, say, five years’ time, you will not be able to offer the same amount as you do now?
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
29 Jan 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
Given the constraints, some people may feel that ballet and other cultural offerings are not as accessible as they could be. My experience of ballet was being dragged along to watch my sister as a small girl try to do things that resembled ballet around a stage. It is a differ...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
29 Jan 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
Steven Roth, I will come to you because, as I say, you pressed the button by mentioning Orkney. I am always very interested to hear about the regional and local aspects and about bodies that sit within the central belt coming out to areas such as mine. How confident are you th...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con Committee
29 Jan 2026
Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
You only have to go into a small Highland community to see a museum about something—the local clan or a bit of its industrial heritage. Is there enough co-ordination across the sector, whether on the private or the public side? Is there an increasing reliance on volunteers who...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 25 March 2026 [Draft]

25 Mar 2026 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Remote, Rural and Island Communities (Sustainability)

I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests as a partner in a farming business.

I thank all those who have signed today’s motion, allowing me to bring the debate to the chamber. With an election on the horizon, there will inevitably be a more partisan tone in the air after today’s proceedings, but I just want to recognise how often members representing remote, rural and island communities have been able to work together to get things done.

I especially appreciate the work of all those who joined me on the cross-party group on islands that I established this session. There is scope for the CPG to do more and reach out even further, but I hope that MSPs and the many other organisations and individuals involved have seen the value of having a forum for island issues at the heart of the Parliament.

In yesterday’s stage 3 debate on the Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill, I talked about the loss of experience and expertise from this Parliament, and this debate will feature the last contributions that a number of members from the rural communities will make.

My party colleague Oliver Mundell is stepping down after 10 years representing the Dumfriesshire constituency. Oli is a scion of the great Mundell political dynasty; I first worked with his father, David, when I was a relative newbie to politics and this Parliament was further up the road. Like David, Oli has dutifully served those he represents and has always stood up for their interests, regardless of how popular it made him with our Conservative whips. I know that colleagues from across the chamber will miss his consideration of and commitment to the issues that he was most passionate about.

Beatrice Wishart, too, will be giving her last speech, and I particularly thank her for all her efforts on the CPG on islands, for making it the success that it has been and for the strong voice that she has been for Shetland. Our island communities face many challenges, and it is vital that their voices are heard in the chamber and in the corridors of power. Beatrice Wishart has very much played her part in that respect, and I wish her all the very best for the future.

John Mason, too, will be bowing out after today’s debate. I would be hard pressed to describe him as a strong voice for our island communities, given his previous confusion about what actually constitutes an island. [Laughter.] However, I have served with John on committees, most recently the Finance and Public Administration Committee, and I know how diligent he has been in conducting the vital scrutiny required of MSPs.

Last but not least, the cabinet secretary will be giving her last speech, too. I know that, because she reminded me of the fact last week. We have not always agreed—and the rest of my speech will probably highlight some of those areas of disagreement—but Mairi Gougeon has always been one of the more approachable members of a Government that is not always known for truly welcoming differing opinions. I and my colleagues would recognise that, if it were needed, the cabinet secretary would sit down with those with concerns and hear them out, and that was appreciated. We certainly wish her all the very best in whatever she chooses to do after this place.

With all of the niceties out of the way, I turn to my motion. Although it directly mentions the Highlands and Islands, I know that most of the issues that we will talk about touch constituencies and regions around Scotland that are facing the challenges of remoteness and rurality. Some listeners might see them as little more than a list of grievances, the complaints of people who have chosen to live furth of the central belt. Some might see them simply as a variation of problems felt elsewhere, and therefore no better or no worse in the end.

However, that is not the feeling on the ground in rural Scotland. Last year, the Scottish Government’s research into the effect of increases in the cost of living concluded that

“Rural and remote places in Scotland are more exposed to high inflation”,

noting the high costs of fuel, food and transport.

That is not, in itself, unusual: such businesses often operate on reduced margins; salaries are lower; and costs are often higher. What is different now is a palpable feeling that many communities are on the edge of a precipice. Instead of creating sustainable communities, it feels more as though the core resilience of many of our villages and towns has slowly been crushed.

That has practical consequences—whether it is the young family facing another year of being unable to afford a permanent home for their children; the small business owner who seems to be sacrificing more than she gains, but who keeps going; the working person who is trying to make ends meet; or the older person on a fixed income who is afraid to turn on the heating. Specifically rural issues are pushing more people into those sorts of categories. The result can be anything from depopulation to despair.

When the motion was written, I referred to the many unprecedented challenges that remote, rural and island communities have faced. We can now add a crippling energy crisis on top of those. That crisis hits not only households, but businesses and public services. It comes at a time when household finances are already stretched, when many businesses have already had their confidence battered and when we were already worried about additional costs through rate revaluations and tax changes from April. For the public sector, it comes against a backdrop of overstretched and underresourced services.

The traditional rural economy is struggling by almost every measure. Farm incomes have fallen, harvests have been decimated by the climate, and increases in regulation have driven up costs and complexity. Many rural communities are also dependent on visitors—whether they are in the Highlands and Islands, the south of Scotland or places such as Stirlingshire and Perthshire. There, too, costs for operators in the visitor economy are escalating, while the Government sees this as a good time to impose more regulation and more tax.

In addition to economic woes, small rural communities are increasingly seeing services moved further away. The local police office has disappeared, the local general practitioner surgery has been combined with one elsewhere and the local hospital has had services downgraded or lost entirely. Perhaps even the local school is at risk. The goal of efficiency savings—often without any consideration of second-order effects—is motivated not by the efficient management of resources but by driving costs down. There is a visible retreat of public services from communities. That has a cost in towns and villages being hollowed out. It also impacts the quality of service that people are receiving: it is more difficult than ever for many people to see their GP; it is a struggle to find a national health service dentist in most of the country; and crimes are going unreported, because there is no expectation of their being investigated.

The problems of remoteness are made all the greater by failures in connectivity. Our roads are in the worst state in my memory. Major infrastructure projects, such as the dualling of the A9 and the A96 and tackling the repeated closure of the Rest and Be Thankful, have been delayed or overlooked. The costs are not solely economic—sometimes they are measured in lives lost. Meanwhile, the ferries crisis continues, with the Scottish National Party Government coming face to face with the consequences of two decades of neglect, while islands and ferry-dependent communities pay the price.

If the next Scottish Government is to serve the people of remote, rural and island Scotland, there desperately need to be a reassessment of the relative cost of delivering public services in remote and rural areas. It is clear that those services are not currently being delivered effectively. In many cases, such as the delivery of social care at home, there is no strategy at all. We also need there to be real effort to grow the economies of Scotland’s regions, and an economic strategy from the Scottish Government that analyses regional impact and recognises how island and remote communities operate.

We will not always agree on the way forward. However, there are many areas in which we can work together and where the need for change is both urgent and evident. As we go into this election, I hope that the needs of remote, rural and island Scotland will be at the top of the agenda.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
The next item of business is a members’ business debate on motion S6M-20849, in the name of Jamie Halcro Johnston, on the sustainability of remote, rural and...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests as a partner in a farming business.I thank all those who have signed today’s motion, allow...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
Before we move to the open debate, I advise members that the debate is heavily oversubscribed. I am conscious that afternoon business starts at 3 o’clock and...
Kenneth Gibson (Cunninghame North) (SNP) SNP
Thank you, Presiding Officer. Since this will be my last speech of session 6, I thank you and the Presiding Officer team for your patience and for the fair a...
Oliver Mundell (Dumfriesshire) (Con) Con
Before I start with some final thoughts, I want to make it clear, up front, that my comments are not personally aimed at the cabinet secretary, who I respect...
Carol Mochan (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
As a South Scotland MSP, I am no stranger to the harsh realities faced by those accessing services in rural areas. I speak to constituents from across the re...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
Before I start, I want to thank Oliver Mundell. He has been a great colleague, and I thought that he gave a really good speech on rural Scotland and what it ...
Ariane Burgess (Highlands and Islands) (Green) Green
I thank Jamie Halcro Johnston for bringing this debate on rural issues to the chamber. Before I contribute to it, however, I would like to pay tribute to sev...
Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD) LD
I thank Jamie Halcro Johnston for bringing this important debate to the chamber on this, the last day of the sixth session of the Scottish Parliament. This w...
Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con) Con
It is a pleasure to follow Beatrice Wishart, who, as we all know, has been a real champion for her communities in the time that she has spent here. I also pa...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
Before I call the next speaker, in order to protect the time available for each member who wants to participate, I am minded to accept a motion without notic...
Emma Roddick (Highlands and Islands) (SNP) SNP
I thank Jamie Halcro Johnston for allowing us to debate, on the final day of the parliamentary session, the many issues that he and I have fought most hard o...
Finlay Carson (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con) Con
I pay tribute to my colleagues who will not return next session, particularly Oliver Mundell, who has spoken out so well for Dumfriesshire, John Mason and my...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
You have run out of time. Could you wind up, please.
Finlay Carson Con
Rural Scotland does not need more recognition of the problem; it needs action. We need policies that reflect rural realities, investment that matches rural n...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
John Mason is the final speaker in the open debate.14:31
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind
I thank Jamie Halcro Johnston for securing the debate and other members for their kind words.Many people in Scotland’s urban areas and central belt still car...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
Thank you, Mr Mason. As a resident of Burray, I can assure you that the linked south isles in Orkney are definitely islands.With that, I call Mairi Gougeon t...
The Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs, Land Reform and Islands (Mairi Gougeon) SNP
I am grateful to Jamie Halcro Johnston for securing the debate. Given the breadth of the areas that are covered in the motion, any one of my colleagues could...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
That concludes the debate. I will briefly suspend the meeting, and I look forward to regathering with you, cabinet secretary, and a few other colleagues at 3...