Meeting of the Parliament 17 April 2024
Thank you. In the sweepstake, I had a Keith Brown intervention after 30 seconds, not three seconds.
Three years ago, Humza Yousaf was standing here in Parliament, lapping up applause and basking in adulation, having delivered the act. He described it at the time as being “truly transformative”, and he was right. It was transformative, just not in the way that he thinks it was. From April fools’ day, it has transformed Scotland into a place of international mockery. It has transformed the birthplace of the enlightenment into a place where free speech has been debased and devalued, where sinister police billboards instruct people to snitch on those who hurt their feelings, where contentious discussions and disagreements in one’s own home can result in a knock at the door from the police, and where every single complaint—no matter how groundless or absurd—is subject to police investigation, while despairing officers are being told not to pursue real crimes. Welcome to Scotland, home of Humza Yousaf’s hate crime law, AKA the “clypes charter”.