Meeting of the Parliament 16 March 2016
Thank you very much for your kind remarks, Presiding Officer.
I believe that the Land Reform (Scotland) Bill is the single most important bill with which I have been involved in my nine years as an MSP. I am extremely proud, with most of my colleagues—in fact, with all my colleagues, although there were some disagreements—on the Rural Affairs, Climate Change and Environment Committee, to have helped it along.
Many others have contributed to the important debate on land reform, but Community Land Scotland, Global Witness and the Scottish Tenant Farmers Association deserve special mention for their work on this vital issue. I commend the minister and the cabinet secretary for their leadership and their willingness to listen, and I thank all the parliamentary staff for their help during the bill process.
However, we should be under no illusion that the bill, which is soon to become an act, would ever have seen the light of day if we did not have the Scottish Parliament. The Westminster establishment in the House of Lords would have killed the bill stone dead long ago. Fortunately, their proxies—the Tories sitting opposite me—do not have the same influence in this Parliament, but let that be a lesson to those who do not want any more powers for this place. Every power that they leave in London, they leave at the mercy of the Westminster elite, so on their own heads be it.