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Every contribution to the Official Report — chamber and committee — searchable in one place. Pulled from data.parliament.scot, indexed for full-text search, linked through to every MSP.

129
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2,354,908
Hansard contributions
1999–2026
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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Remote, Rural and Island Communities (Sustainability)
I thank Jamie Halcro Johnston for securing the debate and other members for their kind words.Many people in Scotland’s urban areas and central belt still care deeply for our remote, rural and island communities. I have visited a number of islands with the Parliament’s committe...
John Mason Ind Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Does the member think that he is being realistic? Edinburgh has millions of tourists who come for all sorts of reasons, but they could be put off doing so by the exchange rate, problems in the middle east and other sorts of things. Does he really think that we can pin things d...
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Would the member accept that lots of things can change after somebody books a holiday? Beer duty often goes up overnight. People buy things, and a few pounds here or there will not make a difference.
John Mason Ind Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Restraint and Seclusion in Schools (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I welcome both Daniel Johnson’s and Willie Rennie’s comments, as well as those of the cabinet secretary.Willie Rennie used the word “ambiguity”; other people would use the word “flexibility”. I fully accept that there is a balance to be struck. If we are too rigid, something m...
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Restraint and Seclusion in Schools (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Amendment 1 will provide a regulation-making power to amend the definitions of restraint and seclusion in section 1 at a future date, where ministers consider it necessary to do so. I understand that the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills is keen on such an amendment a...
John Mason Ind Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body Question Time · Lobbying Register
I thank the member for that answer, but does she agree that the lobbying register is a complete waste of money and that it serves no valuable purpose at all?
8. John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body Question Time · Lobbying Register
To ask the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body, regarding its role in staffing and resourcing the lobbying register, what assessment it has made of the effectiveness of the register in its current form. (S6O-05644)
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
18 Mar 2026
Parliamentary Bureau Motions
Is the answer not to consider compulsory voting, so that prisoners would have to vote along with the rest of the population?
John Mason Ind Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
That is fine—it is interesting.
John Mason Ind Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
Yes, probably.
John Mason Ind Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
If a young person was not into football or rugby but, say, wanted to run—I used to do cross-country running—swim or do curling or something, could they come to you or would they go to other groups?
John Mason Ind Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
That sounds good. A lot of young people—perhaps especially boys—are attracted to come to you because Spartans is very football orientated. Perhaps this is an unfair question to ask, but not every young person is into football—I was certainly not into playing football when I wa...
John Mason Ind Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
Ms McCulloch, you work with schools. Do they ever talk to you about concerns over physical activity or the lack of it?
John Mason Ind Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
I suppose that you must get a feel for how fit and active the young people are just by looking at them, and for whether that is getting worse over the years. The military say that the young people coming to them are less active than they were.
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Committee
18 Mar 2026
Community Sporting Initiatives for Children and Young People
I was going to ask about funding, but we have covered that, so I will try something else.You have both totally convinced us that you are having a huge impact on young people’s academic improvement, family issues, youth disorder and many other things, but what about physical ac...
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
17 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill
One of my colleagues suggested to me that he would rather that religious people be up front and say that they oppose the bill because of their belief in God. As that is one of my reasons, I am happy to say a little from that angle. However, I have other reasons for opposing th...
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
17 Mar 2026
Building Safety Levy (Scotland) Bill
I think that it was the member’s Conservative Government that actually brought in equivalent legislation in England, where I presume it will have a similar effect. Would it not have been better to charge a bit more in corporation tax?
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
17 Mar 2026
Building Safety Levy (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Does Michael Marra accept that the Parliament has been put into a bit of a corner by Westminster and that we have had to have such a bill, which might not have been ideal?
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
As you pointed out, it is too late for this committee, but not for successor committees in the future. The more realistic that you can be, the better. It would be better to build in some caution so that if you do a bit better, everyone is delighted. I am afraid that, if the de...
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
I fully accept that you are going to encounter problems. The question for the committee is about how well you are anticipating those problems. If you give us a forecast of 40 per cent but we hit 26 per cent or 30 per cent, that suggests that you may have been a little bit over...
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
On the NHS, your letter of 11 March says:“At Committee I noted we were targeting 40% RSS completion by the end of March. As at 3 March, we had completed 26%”,which sounds a bit short.
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
Some of that data may not even be computerised—it may be on paper records.
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
That sounds like quite a process to me.
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
We will probably never know the true estimates—certainly not in my lifetime. We sometimes look at long-term planning in this committee, and I am sure that they do at Westminster as well, so I would have hoped that somebody down there would be making new estimates.I take your p...
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
Do you mean not that you are aware of?
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
Yes, I fully understand that. However, it will obviously still affect UK finances—the figure for the UK is quite a big number—and, by default, our finances. Has nobody done a renewed estimate?
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
Okay. They are getting about £178 more per month than they would have otherwise, so that is all good. How does that impact the £1.7 billion estimate for what this is all going to cost? Are we clearer on that estimate, or has it gone up or down?
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
Perhaps we should be pressuring MPs to do something on that.Did you say that a minority of 26 per cent are choosing to change when they are given their RSS?
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
I understand that, and, therefore, I have some sympathy with you. However, it is having quite a serious impact on the 90 or so people in that cohort, is it not? They are having to continue working when they might not have wanted to.
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
I accept that, for people who have not yet retired, it is less important, although people are planning to retire, and what they get in their pension will be a factor in that.Tied to that is an article that appeared in the 1919 Magazine, which is produced by the Police Federati...
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
You talked about taking the deferred and immediate choice ones together, but my understanding was that no statements have been issued for deferred members.
John Mason Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
That is slightly reassuring.Your submission says that three public sector schemes in the UK are struggling or do not even have deadlines. You are ahead of them, obviously, but three does not seem to be very many.
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Committee
17 Mar 2026
McCloud Remedy
I will touch on some of the issues that have already been raised. I am not particularly keen on comparing with England, but I was struck by the point in your submission that“National Police Chiefs Council figures for police schemes show 96% delivery at December 2025”.You also ...
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
13 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am happy to support Douglas Ross’s amendment 256.Amendment 257 would introduce an institutional opt-out, which is an essential safeguard to ensure that no hospice, palliative care provider or other health or social care organisation is forced to participate in or facilitate ...
John Mason Ind Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I understand the risks of amendment 112, but one of our challenges has been to engage the public more in decision making. We have tried different approaches, such as citizens assemblies. It was because there was a referendum in 2014 that people thought about independence in mu...
John Mason Ind Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am on board with Mr Marra on a lot of this. However, he has not mentioned savings, which also came up at the Finance and Public Administration Committee. One of my fears with the bill is that, in future, Governments and the NHS could save money by encouraging early deaths. D...
John Mason Ind Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Will Mr Marra give way?
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
12 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
The member has had a few negative comments, so I will give him a positive reaction. Does he agree that one of the differences between the 2014 independence referendum and the Brexit referendum in 2016 was that in 2014 the whole population got really engaged, thought it through...
John Mason Ind Chamber
12 Mar 2026
General Question Time · Fiscal Framework
I thank the cabinet secretary for the fact that we are looking for an ambitious review. The fiscal framework was based on our competing with or matching the rest of the UK. We can do that with most regions in Northern Ireland and Wales, but we struggle to do that—and always ha...
3. John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
12 Mar 2026
General Question Time · Fiscal Framework
To ask the Scottish Government what its position is on whether the current fiscal framework is biased against Scotland. (S6O-05629)
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Business Motions
I largely agree with what Jeremy Balfour is saying, but we are where we are. Does he have a suggestion of when would be a better time for us to meet?
John Mason Ind Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Does it really matter what happened in the past? Perhaps that is a debate for another time. We have been here for 10 and a half hours and expect to be here until 10 o’clock tonight and 10 o’clock tomorrow night. Does he not agree that we should just get on with the detail of t...
John Mason Ind Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Will the member give way?
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind Chamber
11 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I wondered how the bill’s provisions would work in rural areas. Alasdair Allan represents quite a rural and spread-out constituency. Does he think that it would be okay for people in such areas to have in-person visits?
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
That is helpful.
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
Do you think that employers understand a lot of what is going on? All of you from whom we are taking evidence this morning are very expert on education. However, does an employer who employs somebody perhaps every four or five years understand the changes that are taking place...
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
Ms Ayed, perhaps you can say something about this. Ms Stewart mentioned the workplace, the relationship with employers and that side of things. I am interested in that, because I used to take in young people for work experience. Around October, we had young people come in for ...
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
Do you want to come in, Ms Brown?
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
Is that what the OECD was mentioning? When I read what the OECD has said, it seemed almost like it wants a more structured and less flexible approach—or am I misunderstanding what it is looking for?
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
Thank you for that.I come to Ms Stewart. It was mentioned in the previous evidence session today that different approaches appeal to different young people. I quite like the fact that I chose three subjects in S3 or S4—whenever it was—and I was then just told what else to do. ...
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
I will come to Ms Stewart in a minute. I get the bit about tram lines—you do not want people to be on a fixed course, or in silos or something like that. However, even the word “modular” seems to me like the opposite of a broad general education. I am a lay person— I do not kn...
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
I will come to Professor Hayward first. The OECD had suggested that there should perhaps be more structured pathways in place during the senior phase, including a limited number of compulsory courses, specialisation courses and space for additional or optional units. Where are...
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
I will leave it at that.
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
You say that it will be. Does that mean that it has not become more coherent in recent years?
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
Mr Bray, is the whole three-to-18 spectrum becoming more coherent?
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
It was said at one point that kids in primary school do not interact with enough adults and that, in secondary school, they may interact with too many—or, at least, too many teachers. Is that inevitable or is there a way around it?
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
I remember that, when I was at school, the big jump in my school life was from P7 to S1, not so much from age 15 to 16.
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
Mr Macluskey, is cohesion improving?
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
That suggests that the two phases are more joined up, so is that not a good thing in some ways? You are perhaps suggesting that it is having a negative influence.
John Mason Ind Committee
11 Mar 2026
School Reform (Curriculum and Assessment)
No, I got “cohesion”, which is why—
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 25 March 2026 [Draft]

25 Mar 2026 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Remote, Rural and Island Communities (Sustainability)

Before I start with some final thoughts, I want to make it clear, up front, that my comments are not personally aimed at the cabinet secretary, who I respect and with whom I enjoy working, as everybody across the chamber does. I have never felt the need to compare her to a chlorinated chicken, unlike her predecessor. Instead, Mairi Gougeon deserves recognition, not least for her decision to pull the plug on the Galloway national park, which is a rare example of Scottish Government ministers listening to the views of rural Scotland. I know how seriously she takes the health and wellbeing of all Scotland’s rural workers, which is to her credit.

In leaving, I am saddened not at the thought of going, but at the knowledge that the Parliament that I leave behind is not a true friend to rural Scotland. I share the frustrations of my constituents that Holyrood is dominated by urban, central-belt thinking and is obsessed with telling people who live in rural Scotland how to live.

When the Scottish Government is not busy banning things, it is busy imposing them. Our precious uplands are being carpeted with trees and turbines, often displacing people and changing the character of our communities for ever. Along with supporting the many community events and projects that make my Dumfriesshire constituency so special, the proudest moments I have had while in elected office have been those when I have stood alongside communities in David versus Goliath battles to see off the worst attempts to industrialise our countryside. The playing field is far from level. It often feels as if money talks, with hillsides being sold to the highest bidder without any thought about the social consequences or about how future generations will put food on the table.

Meanwhile, here in our national Parliament, tokenism too often prevails over substance. That might mean flying the European Union flag outside the building, long after we have left the EU; serving what is still labelled as “oat milk” despite court clarification that that is unlawful; or banning greyhound racing long after the last track in Scotland has already been shut. By doing those things, we do a disservice to and go out of our way to diminish the great democratic prize that others fought for. Indeed, much of the debate in this chamber seems a far cry from the genuine excitement that I witnessed as a child when I first watched Donald Dewar address the Parliament in 1999. Most institutions grow in stature as they age, but Holyrood seems to be stuck in reverse.

That fuels the growing disconnect between the Scottish Parliament and many of the people whom it is supposed to represent—decent hard-working people, who get their hands dirty and pay their taxes, just like anyone else. My sincere hope is that future sessions of the Parliament will be different and that other members will be more successful than those of us here, including me, in shifting the dial.

Instead of attacking rural Scotland, we should celebrate and back it. We must be willing to recognise that delivering rural services costs more in a country such as ours. Rural Scotland, not least Dumfriesshire, holds real potential. The answers to many of our most pressing challenges can be found in our rural and remote communities, but they must be given the freedom to flourish. Our communities need politicians who will listen to those on the ground, who really do know best. Endless legislation and policy are not substitutes for substance or real-world experience. Politicians, however green they claim to be, must understand their limitations and remember those who elected them.

14:02

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
The next item of business is a members’ business debate on motion S6M-20849, in the name of Jamie Halcro Johnston, on the sustainability of remote, rural and...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests as a partner in a farming business.I thank all those who have signed today’s motion, allow...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
Before we move to the open debate, I advise members that the debate is heavily oversubscribed. I am conscious that afternoon business starts at 3 o’clock and...
Kenneth Gibson (Cunninghame North) (SNP) SNP
Thank you, Presiding Officer. Since this will be my last speech of session 6, I thank you and the Presiding Officer team for your patience and for the fair a...
Oliver Mundell (Dumfriesshire) (Con) Con
Before I start with some final thoughts, I want to make it clear, up front, that my comments are not personally aimed at the cabinet secretary, who I respect...
Carol Mochan (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
As a South Scotland MSP, I am no stranger to the harsh realities faced by those accessing services in rural areas. I speak to constituents from across the re...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
Before I start, I want to thank Oliver Mundell. He has been a great colleague, and I thought that he gave a really good speech on rural Scotland and what it ...
Ariane Burgess (Highlands and Islands) (Green) Green
I thank Jamie Halcro Johnston for bringing this debate on rural issues to the chamber. Before I contribute to it, however, I would like to pay tribute to sev...
Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD) LD
I thank Jamie Halcro Johnston for bringing this important debate to the chamber on this, the last day of the sixth session of the Scottish Parliament. This w...
Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con) Con
It is a pleasure to follow Beatrice Wishart, who, as we all know, has been a real champion for her communities in the time that she has spent here. I also pa...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
Before I call the next speaker, in order to protect the time available for each member who wants to participate, I am minded to accept a motion without notic...
Emma Roddick (Highlands and Islands) (SNP) SNP
I thank Jamie Halcro Johnston for allowing us to debate, on the final day of the parliamentary session, the many issues that he and I have fought most hard o...
Finlay Carson (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con) Con
I pay tribute to my colleagues who will not return next session, particularly Oliver Mundell, who has spoken out so well for Dumfriesshire, John Mason and my...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
You have run out of time. Could you wind up, please.
Finlay Carson Con
Rural Scotland does not need more recognition of the problem; it needs action. We need policies that reflect rural realities, investment that matches rural n...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
John Mason is the final speaker in the open debate.14:31
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (Ind) Ind
I thank Jamie Halcro Johnston for securing the debate and other members for their kind words.Many people in Scotland’s urban areas and central belt still car...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
Thank you, Mr Mason. As a resident of Burray, I can assure you that the linked south isles in Orkney are definitely islands.With that, I call Mairi Gougeon t...
The Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs, Land Reform and Islands (Mairi Gougeon) SNP
I am grateful to Jamie Halcro Johnston for securing the debate. Given the breadth of the areas that are covered in the motion, any one of my colleagues could...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
That concludes the debate. I will briefly suspend the meeting, and I look forward to regathering with you, cabinet secretary, and a few other colleagues at 3...