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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 05 November 2025

05 Nov 2025 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Land Reform (Scotland) Bill

Presiding Officer, 2025 is a year of anniversaries. It is a quarter of a century since the death of Donald Dewar, who warned that Scotland’s land had

“too much control in too few hands”—

that radical action was needed.

It is 60 years this year since the death of Tom Johnston, who began his great work on land ownership with a general indictment of the

“various divinities, dignities and privileges”

of Scots landlords as a class. Our

“Old Nobility is not noble”,

he famously concluded.

It is exactly half a century since the publication of the first “Red Paper on Scotland”, in which John McEwen boldly set his objective to see

“the stranglehold of our mainly absentee landlordism destroyed”,

and in which Jim Sillars argued that, for democratic socialist land policies to be applied, it required the

“devolvement of legislative power from Westminster to a Scottish Parliament.”

But, oh, how we have let them down. How we have let the people down with the timidity of our action, including the rejection of radical amendments to this bill.

This may be my last chance to speak on land reform in this Parliament. My faithfulness to this cause stretches back almost four decades, when, under the tutelage of Alex Falconer, I wrote a short pamphlet entitled “Who Owns Mid-Scotland and Fife?” In it, we exposed that, in the old Central region, including part of the area that I am now privileged to represent in this Parliament, fewer than 100 landowners—92, in fact—owned 50 per cent of all the land. It became yet another compelling reason for me to join the campaign for a Scottish Parliament and why I stood for election to be a member of the Scottish Parliament.

It has been a privilege to be here. I have loved almost every minute of it, but I will leave it, as I entered it, with half of Scotland still owned by fewer than 500 people. I will leave it as campaigners like Andy Wightman have shown: over the last decade, land ownership in Scotland has not got more diverse, it has got narrower; the estates have grown larger and the owners fewer; and there is more capital accumulation, more land monopoly and more ownership concentration, not less.

I will leave it, as well, to the echo of speeches in this debate by Edward Mountain, to whom I bear no personal animus, but they are speeches that could have been delivered by any member of the official roll of the baronetage at any time over the last four centuries.

Although the cabinet secretary told us that this bill is a

“significant step on our land reform journey”

and that the Government was

“committed to delivering ambitious proposals”,—[Official Report, 26 March 2025; c 83, 80.]

I will leave Parliament knowing, as this Government must know, that this bill is neither ambitious nor significant, that it will not fundamentally tackle the power imbalance that exists, that this bill will make no structural difference to the distribution of land ownership and that class inequality will remain Scotland’s hereditary curse.

The final words of that pamphlet written all those years ago, when I was in my 20s, I still stand by. So let them be my final words today:

“Inevitably there should be a move toward the common ownership of land in order that the benefits of what is after all a natural gift can be once again shared by the whole community.”

It will be for those elected to the next Parliament to rekindle the vitality of those ideas, to think big and act radical; to take on those vested interests. Although, by then, I will be gone, I will be outside Parliament—this cause of land justice, this demand for equality and this claim of right for our democracy will forever, forever, have my undying support.

18:28  

In the same item of business

The Presiding Officer (Alison Johnstone) NPA
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-19421, in the name of Mairi Gougeon, on the Land Reform (Scotland) Bill at stage 3. I would be grateful i...
The Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs, Land Reform and Islands (Mairi Gougeon) SNP
I am pleased to open the debate on our Land Reform (Scotland) Bill. In the broad sweep of land reform history, today marks a watershed moment. It is a moment...
Douglas Lumsden (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
Over the past six months, I have also been speaking to farmers and landowners, and one of the things that I have often heard is that landowners are now conce...
Mairi Gougeon SNP
That speaks to some of the claims that we have heard throughout the debate that the bill poses a threat to the letting of land in Scotland. However, the gene...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests. I begin by recognising the work that has gone into the bill. I have appreciated the cons...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Tim Eagle Con
I am happy to.
Jim Fairlie SNP
Does the member not recognise that in the programme for government, it was set out that all public landholdings should look at what opportunities they can cr...
Tim Eagle Con
I do remember seeing that, but I do not think that it has progressed since. The minister can correct me if I am wrong, but the Scottish Government has create...
Rhoda Grant (Highlands and Islands) (Lab) Lab
I thank the legislation team, which helped to draft amendments, and all the parliamentary staff who have assisted with the bill and those who have worked lat...
Douglas Lumsden Con
Will the member take an intervention?
Rhoda Grant Lab
Very briefly.
Douglas Lumsden Con
If the threshold had been reduced, how many family farms would it have brought into the scope of the bill?
The Presiding Officer NPA
I will give you the time back, Ms Grant.
Rhoda Grant Lab
Thank you, Presiding Officer. It would have been very few—more than 97 per cent of family farms are below that acreage. Neither does the bill take into sco...
Rhoda Grant Lab
Thank you, Presiding Officer. It would have been very few—more than 97 per cent of family farms are below that acreage. Neither does the bill take into sco...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
Ms Grant, will you please conclude?
Rhoda Grant Lab
I ask the cabinet secretary to expedite applications so that those projects can begin work for their communities before the end of the session. 18:07
Ariane Burgess (Highlands and Islands) (Green) Green
Land is power, and those who have the land have the power. Nowhere is that more acutely felt than in the Highlands and Islands—the region that I represent—wh...
Ariane Burgess (Highlands and Islands) (Green) Green
Land is power, and those who have the land have the power. Nowhere is that more acutely felt than in the Highlands and Islands—the region that I represent—wh...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Ms Burgess, you will need to bring your remarks to a close. You are over your time.
Ariane Burgess Green
We accept that the bill moves things marginally in the right direction, but the pace of change is glacial. However, we will not dismiss the improvements that...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Please conclude, Ms Burgess.
Ariane Burgess Green
For those reasons, the Scottish Greens will abstain on the bill. 18:11
Liam McArthur (Orkney Islands) (LD) LD
This has been a marathon process, which makes it all the more important that we acknowledge the work that has been put in by all those who have contributed. ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
We move to the open debate, with speeches of up to four minutes from back benchers. 18:15
Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP) SNP
Since it was reconvened, this Parliament has delivered radical and ambitious land reform, providing a challenge to the highly concentrated pattern of land ow...
Edward Mountain (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
I remind members, as I constantly do, of my entry in the register of members’ interests. I am the owner of 202 hectares of land. I rent about 200 hectares of...
Richard Leonard (Central Scotland) (Lab) Lab
Presiding Officer, 2025 is a year of anniversaries. It is a quarter of a century since the death of Donald Dewar, who warned that Scotland’s land had “too m...
Ariane Burgess Green
The contributions that we have heard today reflect the depth of feeling about land reform across the chamber. I share the disappointment expressed by Rhoda G...