Meeting of the Parliament 13 January 2016
If the member was as aware as some of us in the north-east of Scotland are of the activity that goes on there, she would know that many companies are doing that already. What we cannot afford to happen is for them to have the rug pulled from under them before transitions can take place. However, we should not forget that the oil and gas industry is still extremely important, and that there are many more decades of oil and gas to come.
I move on to social security. I grew up in a family that believed in the welfare state and that there should be a social security safety net. Fortunately, over the piece, my family has not had to rely on that social security safety net very often—but who knows what is round the corner?
One of the things that really frustrate me—Dr Milne came up with this in her speech—is the idea that we have “generational” problems to deal with. It is as if they can never be dealt with at all. I ask Dr Milne and the Tories whether it is right that we deal with such problems by sanctioning folk through swingeing benefit cuts, or by paying universal credit to the man of the house. Is that the way to tackle those problems? I do not think so.