Holyrood, made browsable

Hansard

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

129
Current MSPs
415
MSPs ever elected
14
Parties on record
2,096,445
Hansard contributions
1999–2026
Coverage span
Official Report

Search Hansard contributions

Clear
Showing 0 of 2,096,445 contributions in session S6, 14 May 2026 – 13 Jun 2026. Latest 30 days: 3,975. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 11 Jun 2026.

No contributions match those filters.

← Back to list
Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 06 February 2014

06 Feb 2014 · S4 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Local Government Finance (Scotland) Order 2014 [Draft]

Yesterday’s debate on the budget resulted in Labour and the Scottish National Party agreeing that we would bin the bedroom tax. I warmly welcome that. In the debate last year, I asked the SNP to work with us when we debated local government finance. The bedroom tax is a policy based on Tory ideology, with no understanding of the reality of the lives of the thousands of tenants who live in council and housing association properties. There are simply not enough affordable houses for people who need them. The policy ignores the realities of families—for example, children having needs because they are studying for exams, carers looking after a relative and people with disabilities. Last year, I knew from talking to Labour councils across the country that they were worried that the bedroom tax was pushing into debt tenants who had never been in debt and destabilising council and housing association budgets.

We can take pride from yesterday, when we worked as the Parliament that we were set up to be and used our powers to protect people. Today’s debate is about our councils’ capacity to do the same—to use the increasingly scarce resources that they are allocated, to work with the increasingly centralist policy framework that they have been given and to try to plan ahead to address challenges such as the care of older people and climate change. Those are no longer challenges for the future; they are with us now. We look to local government to deliver better-quality environments, well-planned housing for communities, local economic action to support local jobs and training, and the high-quality education and social care services that give us all not just the best start in life but the best support and care throughout our lives when we need it.

We do not see today as a complete cause for celebration because, although extra resource is being put in to tackle the bedroom tax, the overall financial settlement for local government is not good news. It is a story of cuts, of centralisation and of impacts on front-line services resulting from the SNP’s financial straitjacket. Every MSP will know of the tough decisions that our council colleagues are making. The SNP has broken local government finance, with nearly 35,000 jobs being cut from local government since 2008. As Audit Scotland rightly documents, the challenge of delivering health and social care under the budget settlement will add to the pressures on care workers and the families who rely on their services. We need committed care staff who are paid a decent wage and are well trained and motivated. The loss of local authority jobs is bad for local economies, too, especially in economically fragile areas, as it has a negative impact on local economic activity and businesses.

We believe that the Scottish National Party Government is on pause and is more concerned about independence than about the reality of people’s lives. More could be done. For example, we could create flexibility for councils to benefit financially from tourism and to build local renewables and heat and power infrastructure to keep people warm and keep energy affordable. At present, only a few councils are able to do that given their scale. My colleague Richard Baker will talk about the need to give businesses more support and to give local authorities the support that they need to do that.

Local government costs have risen by 10 per cent since 2007 but, with this budget, £637 million has been cut since 2008-09. The SNP’s white paper talks grandly about life post-2016, but it does not address the realities of the cost-of-living crisis for people now. The SNP is proud of its underfunded council tax freeze—we heard that again today—but it hits hardest those people on low and modest incomes, or the people whom the SNP says it is meant to help.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (John Scott) Con
Good afternoon, everyone. The first item of business is a debate on motion S4M-08916, in the name of John Swinney, on the draft Local Government Finance (Sco...
The Cabinet Secretary for Finance, Employment and Sustainable Growth (John Swinney) SNP
The draft finance order that we are considering today seeks agreement on the allocation of revenue funding to local government for 2014-15 to enable local au...
Sarah Boyack (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
Yesterday’s debate on the budget resulted in Labour and the Scottish National Party agreeing that we would bin the bedroom tax. I warmly welcome that. In the...
Mark McDonald (Aberdeen Donside) (SNP) SNP
The Labour Party issued leaflets in Dunfermline and Cowdenbeath saying that it backed the freeze and would continue to do so. Did it run them past the member...
Sarah Boyack Lab
Absolutely. When we look at the budgets that are being set across the country, we see that the choice between keeping the council tax freeze or losing even m...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
You should be drawing to a close, please.
Sarah Boyack Lab
Last year, we warned about the removal of local control of policing and this year we have seen cuts without consultation in police counters and control rooms...
Cameron Buchanan (Lothian) (Con) Con
With the Parliament’s approval of the Scottish Government’s budget yesterday evening, I can confirm that the Scottish Conservatives will support the order, a...
Kevin Stewart (Aberdeen Central) (SNP) SNP
The leader of the Opposition has been using the term “real world” quite a lot of late, but I think that, sometimes, the Opposition sees the real world as som...
Sarah Boyack Lab
We would be equally keen to hear what the SNP is going to do to make local government finance fairer. It promised to do that in its past two manifestos, but ...
Kevin Stewart SNP
I will tell Sarah Boyack how we could make almost everything fairer—by voting for an independent Scotland on September 18. That is the reality of the situati...
Alex Johnstone (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
I want to give the lie to this concept of a fixed budget. I believe that in 1997 the Scottish people voted for tax powers. The power to vary income tax by up...
Kevin Stewart SNP
The last thing that one would want to do to the people of this country at this moment would be to raise the basic rate of income tax. If we had control over ...
Willie Rennie (Mid Scotland and Fife) (LD) LD
That was a rather excited contribution from Kevin Stewart. It takes a Fifer to point out that not once did Kevin Stewart mention the fact that his finance se...
Kevin Stewart SNP
The finance secretary most certainly did that. There have been changes in the three-year settlement, as Mr Rennie knows. However, let me ask Mr Rennie—
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
Is this a speech or an intervention?
Kevin Stewart SNP
Will Mr Rennie support me in calling on Aberdeen City Council’s leaders to ask COSLA for a change to the funding formula to take account of population change...
Willie Rennie LD
I will intervene on Kevin Stewart’s intervention so that I can devote some of my four minutes to what I hoped I would be able to say. That was a long-way-ro...
Richard Baker (North East Scotland) (Lab) Lab
Although, in many ways, Parliament’s consideration of the local government finance order is something of a formality, it is important to mark the extent of t...
Mark McDonald SNP
Will Richard Baker give way?
Richard Baker Lab
If I have time later, I will give way to Mr McDonald, although I might not have time. From a dwindling pot, Aberdeen City Council and Aberdeenshire Council ...
Dennis Robertson (Aberdeenshire West) (SNP) SNP
Will Richard Baker give way?
Richard Baker Lab
I will give way if I have time later. That second point—on investing in the local economy—is pertinent to the debate because the cabinet secretary promised ...
Kevin Stewart SNP
Will Richard Baker give way?
Richard Baker Lab
I will take a brief intervention from Mr Stewart.
Kevin Stewart SNP
If memory serves me well, the Labour Party in Aberdeen rejected the business rates incentivisation scheme when the Government first proposed it, just as it r...
Richard Baker Lab
Mr Stewart tries to blame the councils, as Mr Swinney did yesterday. I will come on to exactly why that is wrong. The fact is that ministers have moved the ...
John Swinney SNP
I am glad that Cameron Buchanan is on the Conservative front bench today, because we heard an eminently more sensible contribution and stance than usual. I h...
Willie Rennie LD
The funding floor is 85 per cent.
John Swinney SNP
Yes, Mr Rennie, it is 85 per cent, because we have gone through the basis of the calculation that is undertaken in all of these approaches. Mr Baker has a b...