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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 02 September 2025

02 Sep 2025 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Scottish Government Priorities
Swinney, John SNP Perthshire North Watch on SPTV

We gather today at the start of the fifth and final year of the sixth session of Scotland’s national Parliament—a Parliament that is more than a quarter of a century old, its place anchored at the heart of decision making in Scotland today, a Parliament elected to chart a way forward for Scotland and to wrestle with the challenges that face our people.

In this session of Parliament, our country has faced a number of those challenges, including the lasting effects of the Covid pandemic and the illegal invasion of Ukraine, with its consequences for energy costs and security. In the middle east, we have witnessed, and I have repeatedly condemned, Hamas’s barbaric attacks on 7 October 2023. I also share the concerns of other Governments and other international leaders that the brutal actions of the Israeli Government in Gaza constitute a genocide. That has unleashed widespread suffering and has caused such anguish.

In the United Kingdom, we are seeing the prolonged application of austerity at a time of desperate need to rebuild in our society.

These are difficult days. For many in our society, the implications of those events are that money is tight, prices are rising and hope is in short supply. The danger in such circumstances is that all those difficulties are marshalled together to be made the fault of others in our society, and that some get blamed for supposedly causing those problems. That has been ever present during the summer recess, when migrants have been put in the spotlight and the politics of intolerance has been stoked by some.

Let me be clear, at the outset of this final year of the parliamentary session, that I reject that demonising behaviour. Let me be clear that I intend to defeat the politics of fear and division by offering a clear, principled alternative based on the decent, welcoming values that have served Scotland so well throughout my lifetime. That is why I want to use every opportunity that is available to my Government to give that leadership to Scotland and to deliver improvements in the lives of people in Scotland.

Since becoming First Minister, I have heard loud and clear the desire of the people for effective delivery in Government alongside a meaningful message of hope. Today I will speak mostly about how we have delivered, how we are delivering and how we will continue to deliver for the people of Scotland in ways that will improve their lives. It is a story of much achieved but more still to do, of a corner that is being turned and of progress that is once again being made.

I will start with the national health service. I often hear my political rivals say that the national health service is broken. I reject that. I say that, thanks to our dedicated staff, Scotland’s national health service remains fundamentally strong and an asset for this country. Yes, it has problems, and why would it not, after a decade and more of Westminster austerity, after Brexit and after the foundation-shaking experience of Covid? That is not just my view; it is what the Labour Party says about the NHS in Labour-run Wales.

In Scotland, 97 per cent of people leave hospital with no delay, 95 per cent are registered with an NHS dentist, and 7 million treatments have been delivered since November 2023. Scotland’s core accident and emergency system has consistently outperformed that in England and Wales for the past decade, as has been repeated again in the most recent figures. Those are not just numbers: last year, more than 1 million patients were seen within four hours in our accident and emergency system, which is around one patient every 30 seconds in Scotland.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-18671, in the name of John Swinney, on priorities for Scotland. 15:10
The First Minister (John Swinney) SNP
We gather today at the start of the fifth and final year of the sixth session of Scotland’s national Parliament—a Parliament that is more than a quarter of a...
Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD) LD
I am sure that everyone across the chamber supports our hard-working NHS staff. However, does the First Minister recognise that his words will come as cold c...
The First Minister SNP
Let me address those particular issues. In our programme for government, we promised 150,000 extra appointments and procedures, but we now expect to exceed t...
Rachael Hamilton (Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshire) (Con) Con
I totally believe that John Swinney is just making up what he has been saying. There are 900,000 people on waiting lists, which is one in six people in Scotl...
The First Minister SNP
I am very happy to reinforce the point that I made a moment ago about the extra capacity that means that, right now, in-patient waiting lists are falling in ...
Pam Duncan-Glancy (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
Will the First Minister set out to members how many newly qualified teachers are unemployed this year as a result of the Government’s failure to match supply...
The First Minister SNP
What has helped in relation to the recruitment of teachers has been the pupil equity funding that we put into the budget and the increased levels of local go...
Fergus Ewing (Inverness and Nairn) (Ind) Ind
While Norway forges ahead, our oil and gas industry is dying before our very eyes. Will the First Minister at last support it, or will he, like a modern-day ...
The First Minister SNP
The voices that speak to me from the oil and gas sector tell me that the cost regime that is applied by the taxation levels of the United Kingdom Government—...
Craig Hoy (South Scotland) (Con) Con
Will the First Minister accept an intervention?
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
The First Minister is concluding.
The First Minister SNP
I need to bring my remarks to a close. We need a Parliament with the power to create an immigration policy that works for the people of Scotland. We move ...
Russell Findlay (West Scotland) (Con) Con
In just over eight months’ time, this parliamentary session will come to an end. Over the past four years, Parliament’s achievements have been too few and it...
The Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Local Government (Shona Robison) SNP
Does Russell Findlay think that this line of argument keeps both his MSPs and the population voting for him, given that he is at record low levels at the mom...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Always speak through the chair.
Russell Findlay Con
Let us talk about this Parliament and what it can do—or, rather, what it is not doing because of this Government. It does not look at the interests of those ...
The First Minister SNP
Let me give Mr Findlay a flavour of some of the practical things that the Government is doing to help people with the cost of living challenges that they fac...
Russell Findlay Con
That was a bit of a long intervention. I am very glad that the First Minister listened to the Scottish Conservatives last December when they called for the e...
The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care (Neil Gray) SNP
Mistakes such as backing Liz Truss.
Russell Findlay Con
We are really not the only ones, Neil Gray, who should be doing that.
Neil Gray SNP
I did not back Liz Truss.
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Cabinet secretary, please desist.
Russell Findlay Con
He is very noisy when he is sat down—he has a big mouth when he is sat down. The only way that any of us will win back public trust and earn the right to re...
Fergus Ewing Ind
Made a request to intervene.
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Mr Findlay is bringing his remarks to a close.
Russell Findlay Con
We will focus on efficient spending, champion self-reliance, demand freedom for people to aspire and to succeed, and bring forward common-sense solutions to ...
Anas Sarwar (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
I welcome all members back to the chamber for the new session. It may be a new session, but, for this knackered SNP Government, it is the same old script and...
The First Minister SNP
In my speech, I quoted the statistic that if Scotland had the same level of child poverty as the rest of the United Kingdom, 90,000 more children would be li...
Anas Sarwar Lab
I welcome the Scottish child payment, which we have continually supported. However, this Government is failing to challenge structural poverty, which I will ...