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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 04 March 2026 [Draft]

04 Mar 2026 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Education

This is a significant moment, not only because it is the annual Liberal Democrat debate in this chamber, which I know that everyone has been desperate to hear—[Laughter.]—but because it marks 10 years since Nicola Sturgeon said, “Judge me on education.” It is a deadline that she herself set.

I suspect that this will be the last time in this session that Parliament will have an opportunity to debate education in a substantial way. Perhaps it will be the last opportunity for Nicola Sturgeon to come before us so that she can be judged on education. However, where is the former First Minister today? She is nowhere to be seen—certainly, she is not in the chamber. It seems that she was not prepared to be judged by this Parliament or by the voters of this country.

Let us remember how all this began. It was at Wester Hailes education centre in 2015, where Nicola Sturgeon gave what was described as an inspirational contribution. In that inspirational contribution, she said:

“If you are not, as First Minister, prepared to put your neck on the line on the education of our young people then what are you prepared to do? … I want to be judged on it.”

On the back of that contribution, the Scottish National Party went on to win the largest number of seats in the Parliament at the next election, and Nicola Sturgeon continued as First Minister. The subsequent programme for government read:

“We intend to make significant progress within the lifetime of this Parliament”—

that is, 2016 to 2021—

“and substantially eliminate the gap over the course of the next decade. That is a yardstick by which the people of Scotland can measure our success.”

I repeat those words:

“substantially eliminate the gap over … the next decade.”

I know that the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills will have lots of statistics and that she will reel out her own selected ones. She has a right to do that and she will be able to identify areas where the gap has narrowed. I am not going to do that. If we traded statistics, none of them would show “elimination”, substantial elimination or even substantial closing of the gap—certainly not over the 10-year deadline that was set. So I am not going to trade statistics today.

The promise was very clear. It changed over time, but the programme for government was clear that SNP would “substantially eliminate” the attainment gap. There is no doubt that, by whatever measure we pick, that commitment has not been met. Sometimes, the gap marginally goes down; sometimes it marginally goes up; and sometimes it stays static. However, one thing is clear: there has not been a substantial reduction.

The impact is clear. If we tot up the number of children who have gone through the education system and to whom that promise was made—disadvantaged children from disadvantaged backgrounds—it amounts to 170,000 children in Scotland whose life chances have been limited because of the failure to keep that promise.

The commitment has not been met in 10 years and, at the current rate of progress, it will not be met in 20, 30 or even 100 years. At the current rate of progress, it will be the grandchildren of the grandchildren of those who are children at the moment who will have the opportunity to have the poverty-related attainment gap reduced in the way that was promised by Nicola Sturgeon 10 years ago.

The cabinet secretary will say that we are running down staff, but that is far from the case. I am backing staff. I believe that they are talented people who lift up the chances of children in this country. If only they had a Government that was prepared to back them up.

The international reports are what stimulated the debate, as is alluded to in Paul O’Kane’s amendment, which we will support. Those reports highlighted the fact that Scottish education, which used to be the best in the world, had become just average. The ultimate goal should have been to drive up overall performance, as well as to close the attainment gap, which we all wanted to achieve, but even overall performance is static—no improvement has been made on that, either.

I know to my bitter cost that, if we do not stick to our word, the electorate will cast a judgment. We have learned from that bitter experience. We apologised for when we made mistakes in the past, but the Scottish Government dodges, slithers and deflects. It is always someone else’s fault—someone else is always to blame. We will hear exactly the same story again today. However, when Nicola Sturgeon made her promise 10 years ago, she knew that the world is a volatile place and that, in making a promise to the poorest children in the country, it is necessary to have the mechanisms in place to deliver that policy, but the Government failed to do that.

Let us look at the individual measures that have not been delivered. They include the promised 90-minute reduction in contact time for teachers, who are on the verge of industrial action. The digital devices that were promised have not been delivered. The 3,500 extra teachers that were promised have not been delivered. The issue of bad behaviour and violence in schools has not been addressed.

Let us look at two measures that were introduced by the Government. The regional collaboratives that were introduced by the previous education secretary were scrapped by the current education secretary because they were not working.

The Government also introduced national testing. At the time, everybody warned that it would not necessarily be the answer to the problem. As I have said repeatedly, we do not fatten a pig by measuring it. It is necessary to put in place the measures that will drive up performance. Constant measuring does not drive up performance. All that has been created is a myriad of bureaucratic procedures and reporting mechanisms that have been bolted on to the system, which has made things even more challenging for teachers and classroom assistants.

There will be a debate in the run-up to the election—which I hope will be a positive one—about behaviour, additional support needs, parity of esteem between vocational and academic qualifications, and the need to improve knowledge in the curriculum and tackle workload. I hope that we will have a positive debate on all those issues, as we have had at various hustings with various educational audiences.

However, today’s debate is about judging, because we were asked to judge Nicola Sturgeon on her record on education. Everyone in the Parliament, regardless of which party they are in, must recognise that Nicola Sturgeon and the Scottish Government have failed to deliver on the promise to substantially eliminate the poverty-related attainment gap. Every member should vote for our motion today, because that is exactly what has happened.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-20956, in the name of Willie Rennie, on judging the Scottish Government on its education record. I invite...
Willie Rennie (North East Fife) (LD) LD
This is a significant moment, not only because it is the annual Liberal Democrat debate in this chamber, which I know that everyone has been desperate to hea...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
They will be able to do so only if you move the motion, Mr Rennie.
Willie Rennie LD
I move,That the Parliament notes that since 2016, the Scottish Government’s key commitments and targets on education have either been missed or abandoned; fu...
The Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills (Jenny Gilruth) SNP
In what is all but guaranteed to be the last education debate in this session of Parliament, I begin by paying tribute to Scotland’s children and young peopl...
Willie Rennie LD
We will do everything that we possibly can to get this Government on the right track, which is why we voted for the budget.Does the education secretary not r...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
I can give you the time back, cabinet secretary.
Jenny Gilruth SNP
I will come to the points that Mr Rennie has addressed in his motion, but I have more praise for him first, which it is important for him to hear.I am also g...
Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD) LD
The cabinet secretary talks about increased teacher numbers, but does she realise that three quarters of newly qualified teachers are struggling to find perm...
Jenny Gilruth SNP
I very much recognise that point, and I know that Mr Cole-Hamilton recently raised it at First Minister’s question time. To give him some assurance, I note t...
Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con) Con
I thank the Liberal Democrats for using their party business time today to bring this debate to the chamber. I will not necessarily love bomb Willie Rennie a...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I thank Willie Rennie and the Liberal Democrats for bringing today’s debate—which is, I believe, the last education debate of the current session of Parliame...
Karen Adam (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP) SNP
This debate cannot be reduced to the idea that Scottish education is simply failing, because that is just not true. Yes, there are pressures; yes, there are ...
Willie Rennie LD
If Karen Adam does not think that it is blanket failure, will she identify some failure in what has happened in the past 10 years?
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
I can give you the time back.
Karen Adam SNP
I identified in my opening remarks that we are not saying that the situation is perfect. There are areas that need improvement. The cabinet secretary said th...
Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con) Con
Presiding Officer,“There is no doubt that Scottish education can rightly claim many distinguished achievements in its long history, for which we have been ad...
Martin Whitfield (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests.It is very powerful to follow what might be Liz Smith’s last contribution on education. I ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
I am almost tempted not to say, “Through the chair”, given those remarks, but please speak through the chair.
Martin Whitfield Lab
One of the enduring tests of education is not simply that we affirm but whether we are prepared to examine claims rigorously rather than just accept them unc...
Paul McLennan (East Lothian) (SNP) SNP
I thank the Lib Dems for securing this debate. I am delighted to speak just as we have agreed to the 2026-27 budget, as the cabinet secretary referred to. Th...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
We come to closing speeches.15:32
Paul O’Kane Lab
I will pick up on a theme that I started with, because it came up a number of times in the debate: reflecting not only on the previous five years of this Par...
Karen Adam SNP
I understand what the member says about time, but things have changed so much in the past six years since Covid. Also, young people just do not know what typ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
I can give you the time back for that, Mr O’Kane.
Paul O’Kane Lab
Of course I recognise what Karen Adam says about the challenges. Any Government has to deal with shocks and other such issues, but we are reflecting on almos...
Roz McCall (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con) Con
We all remember the “judge me” pledge that was made in 2015 by the then First Minister, and it has already been referenced today. Nicola Sturgeon asked to be...
Karen Adam SNP
Does the member agree that the two-child benefit cap and a restriction in public service spending would affect the poverty-related attainment gap?
Roz McCall Con
That is something that comes up regularly. Although I understand the Government’s position on that, we are talking about educational attainment and the situa...
Jenny Gilruth SNP
In this debate, I was keen to praise the positive behaviour of children. If everything is framed through a negative lens, all that it does is risk demoralisi...