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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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415
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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.
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · NHS Grampian (Savings)
I was delighted to get the final health question of this parliamentary session. Ahead of today’s questions, I asked the people of Moray what issues I should raise. Katrina asked about attracting health professionals, and Helen raised concerns about children and young people. Z...
8. Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · NHS Grampian (Savings)
To ask the Scottish Government, in light of reports that NHS Grampian is looking to save £177 million over the next five years, what impact this will have on the board's staff and services, and, in particular, on Dr Gray's hospital. (S6O-05708)
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Portfolio Question Time · Direct Support Payments
The rural support plan that was published just yesterday is a huge let-down. It is not just me who is saying that—many stakeholders are, too. Importantly, the figures in the plan amount to a real-terms cut of about £250 million, which is a huge decrease in funding to our rural...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
Remote, Rural and Island Communities (Sustainability)
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 means.I also thank Mairi Gougeon for the work that I have been able to do with her over the past year. It is frustrating...
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
First Minister’s Question Time
Answer the question.
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
25 Mar 2026
First Minister’s Question Time
I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests—I am a small farmer.This is one of those moments not of anger, but of disappointment. It is disappointing that the Scottish Government waited until the last days of the parliamentary session to release the rura...
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
24 Mar 2026
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 3
My apologies, Presiding Officer.Finally, I thank my colleague Edward Mountain, who has been an incredible campaigner for rural Scotland. This Parliament will miss Edward Mountain greatly. He has worked across benches and within the Scottish Conservative Party, and he has done ...
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
24 Mar 2026
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 3
You see why I did not want to say that on the public record.
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
24 Mar 2026
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 3
I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests: I have a small farm, albeit that it is not a croft.Crofting is one of the defining features of life in the Highlands and Islands. I am certainly not the first to say it, but crofting is not simply a system of ...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
24 Mar 2026
Sport and Activity as a Force for Good
I thank Brian Whittle for securing the debate. I have been here for two years, and he and I have had more conversations in the stairwells about sport, and the power of sport in people’s lives, than I care to remember. He is a true champion of sport in Scotland, and I hope that...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 3
Amendment 35 is my only amendment to the bill, so I will just speak briefly to it.Section 8 of the bill, which deals with assignations to family members, will amend the 1993 act. The bill, as amended at stage 2, will insert two new subsections in section 8 of the act.The 1993 ...
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
There is no doubt that we will fix the problem today. Willie Rennie is right that we all want the bill to be passed, because that is the right thing to do. However, there are little things that we could have added—the bells and whistles, as he says. Amendment 33 would be one o...
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
On Willie Rennie’s advice, I did not lodge hundreds of amendments to the bill, which I was going to do. I thought that I would be reasonable and lodge just three. I have lost on two of my very reasonable amendments, but I hope that I will not lose on amendment 33.For, I think,...
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I could just say “Ditto” to what Murdo Fraser said, as my amendment 27 is almost exactly the same as his amendment 12, with just a wee difference.We need to consider the real effect of the liability on destination management companies and businesses that have booked way in adv...
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I want you to reconsider that position. I am not sure that I understand what the objection is to having such exemptions, because it seems perfectly right to do so. We are not talking about a huge amount of people, and there is already the example of Edinburgh, which has proved...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I do not intend to speak for very long.At stage 2, I brought to the committee a concern and a national exemption on health grounds. My theory is that, in the Highlands and Islands—and, in fact, across the north-east—it is very common for people to have to travel for healthcare...
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body Question Time · Oral Questions (Annual Staff Resource Cost)
I did not think that there would be much of a cost, but the wasted parliamentary time is another matter. Since January last year, there have been 55 not lodged questions, 38 of which were from the Scottish National Party, with one former First Minister failing to lodge a quest...
3. Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
19 Mar 2026
Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body Question Time · Oral Questions (Annual Staff Resource Cost)
To ask the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body what the estimated annual staff resource cost is to the SPCB of administering the random selection and processing system for oral questions that result in a “not lodged” status. (S6O-05646)
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
17 Mar 2026
Topical Question Time · Cost of Living (Support for Families)
Let me get to my constituents, who are deeply troubled. It is great that we have extra money coming in from the Scottish Government, and I applaud that, but we need it now. When are we going to get the details of how people can apply? People say that the weather in March comes...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
17 Mar 2026
Topical Question Time · Cost of Living (Support for Families)
Isn’t it crazy? People across Scotland are suffering with heating oil prices and we are here talking about independence. This is just the Scottish National Party going mad, isn’t it? It is absolutely crazy. Interruption.
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I have to be quiet now.
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
It is about sending a clear message that the Government is genuinely trying to make sure that this industry is viable in the future while also protecting our landscape, our seabed and everything else, and ensuring the welfare of the sea salmon population. Maybe I am alone on t...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
My understanding is that, when the Norway model started, in 2017, it was primarily for sea lice on wild salmon, but since then it has expanded to take other factors into account. That is my understanding—please correct me if I am wrong.I am trying to consider the importance of...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I think that it can be.
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
Oh, but can it be?
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
It is a difficult situation, is it not? I found that when we discussed our report previously. We all want to tackle rural depopulation and support an industry that is valuable to Scotland, but, at the same time, we want to ensure that the industry works for communities and the...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
Convener, my earlier question might fit into this aspect. Should I ask it now or leave it to the end?
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
On the wider point about what is going on in the background, not directly related to this matter, there is a lot of private work going on to restore salmon populations in rivers. I do not want to get too distracted by that, because we are talking about salmon farming, but it i...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
Some of this has been touched on, but the committee recommended an immediate end to the siting of salmon farms in the close vicinity of known migratory routes for wild salmon. There is a massive on-going discussion about the interaction between salmon farming and wild salmon a...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I mean in relation to sea lice and the wider points relating to escapes, wild salmon interactions and so on.
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
Are you putting in place any interim measures relating to environmental harm while all of that is going on in the background?
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I understand that the implementation of several key recommendations on sea lice escapes and wild salmon interactions is being delayed because of on-going legal proceedings, with the timetables not going forward. Fisheries Management Scotland has raised concerns that the absenc...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
Thank you for your patience, convener.
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
It is not as though these proceedings are being broadcast. .
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
Maybe not if it was a one-off event, but if it happens year on year—
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I am trying to get to the day-to-day practicality. It goes back to Fin Carson asking whether a fish farm would need to be shut down. I wrote down what you said earlier about that, because you said that companies are not in control because of various other factors. My point is ...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
But we have repeated evidence of significant mortality—even 80 per cent and above in some cases—and a mortality rate of 20 to 30 per cent, whereas Norway is trying to keep the rate between 5 and 15 per cent.
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
You have repeatedly said this morning that you do not think that there is persistent high mortality, yet we do not set a figure for what constitutes high mortality. In the initial evidence session on the matter, you said that you did not think that that was a helpful conversat...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I think that this committee is great, but this is not the opening night of a blockbuster and yet we have a packed public gallery today, because public confidence in the sector is at its lowest level and people are genuinely very interested in this issue. What I am trying to ge...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
So, all of that data is out there, but it is not easily comparable.
Tim Eagle Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
Do you publish the data that you hold?
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Committee
11 Mar 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I was going to ask a few of the questions that Emma Roddick has just picked up on, but there is something that I want to be absolutely clear on, given that we must finalise our report at the end of this and identify updates. Is it right that we have data for individual fish fa...
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
05 Mar 2026
General Question Time · Infrastructure (Local Authority Support)
That seems to be passing the buck back to councils, which simply do not have the capital budgets to do the work. My constituents do not want to hear about who did or did not support the budget or what council budgets are not. They care about the fact that bridges are crumbling...
3. Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
05 Mar 2026
General Question Time · Infrastructure (Local Authority Support)
To ask the Scottish Government what additional support it will provide to local authorities to address ageing infrastructure, including bridges. (S6O-05597)
Tim Eagle Con Committee
04 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I seek to withdraw the amendment. I was simply trying to reiterate the point about the struggle that some caravan parks in rural Scotland are facing.Amendment 28, by agreement, withdrawn.Section 3 agreed to.After section 3
Tim Eagle Con Committee
04 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I will be very quick. My amendment 28 would add to the list of accommodation providers. It would extend the list to include all sites operated by a local authority. Concerns have been raised that a visitor levy will drive people out of regulated spaces such as caravan parks—ca...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Committee
04 Mar 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I draw members’ attention to my entry in the register of members’ interests. I am a small farmer and therefore operate a business in a rural area, albeit that the visitor levy would not apply to me.I will speak briefly to my amendments 23 to 27, 30 and 31, all of which seek to...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
04 Mar 2026
Wildfires in Scotland
This is my final question. I do not want to use the term “silly question”, because it can be quite a serious one, but it needs to be asked. Michael Bruce made a good point. It is more than just an issue for the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service—it is one for everyone. At the mo...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
04 Mar 2026
Wildfires in Scotland
Staying with Jon Henderson, I might have picked this up completely wrongly, but when I was speaking to people in Carrbridge, some of the gamekeepers told me that there used to be a system whereby equipment on the estate could be used, and was insured by, the Scottish Fire and ...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Committee
04 Mar 2026
Wildfires in Scotland
Thank you, convener. Feel free to encroach on anything. Yes, theme 2 turns to short-term and long-term planning.I am up in Moray, so I was quite close to the big wildfire at Dava and Carrbridge last year, and I went out to see some of the communities afterwards. The two things...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
03 Mar 2026
Accident and Emergency Services (Pressures)
I declare an interest, in that my wife is a practising GP with the national health service.I thank Jackie Baillie for bringing this important debate to the chamber. We had a bit of back and forth with Labour’s business manager about the content of the motion, but that was not ...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
26 Feb 2026
Childcare Support for Parents
I, too, congratulate Roz McCall on securing the debate. It is interesting to hear, from across the chamber, about situations that I found myself in years ago. I am lucky in having three children, the youngest of whom is now 10, so the immediate, early years of childcare have g...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
25 Feb 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
Okay.
Tim Eagle Con Committee
25 Feb 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I know that there is a complexity behind this, because we have had reports and various responses to consultations from certain groups arguing strongly against the salmon farming industry. It would just be interesting to know the sort of thing that I have been asking about, giv...
Tim Eagle Con Committee
25 Feb 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I would agree. We do not live in a simple world, do we?
Tim Eagle Con Committee
25 Feb 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I appreciate that. I guess that every complaint has to be taken on its merits, but it would be interesting to know whether the majority of complaints come from, say, local people who might have seen something whilst out walking their dog or whether most of them come from large...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Committee
25 Feb 2026
Salmon Farming in Scotland
I see from our papers that Salmon Scotland has questioned why the committee has not looked more into anti-salmon farming campaign groups and what that means. When we talk about complaints and such, do you think that there are more vexatious complaints that are trying to close ...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
19 Feb 2026
Visitor Levy (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
First, I want to respond to Willie Rennie—ever the father of the house—giving us that guidance on bells and whistles. I have to throw a tantrum and tell him that I like bells and whistles and I want to put lots of things into this vital bill. However, I thank him for his advic...
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
19 Feb 2026
Public Services (Funding)
That is not what I said.
Tim Eagle Con Chamber
19 Feb 2026
Public Services (Funding)
I want to focus on that point, because it is crucial. I came down to the Parliament in 2018 to discuss it with the then Cabinet Secretary for Finance and the Constitution, Derek Mackay. The problem with the COSLA funding formula is that it requires the entire COSLA body—all th...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 24 March 2026 [Draft]

24 Mar 2026 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill: Stage 3
Fairlie, Jim SNP Perthshire South and Kinross-shire Watch on SPTV

From the crofters uprisings in the late 1880s to the Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886 and the 10 major acts of Parliament on crofting that have been delivered since then, with the last one being the Crofting (Amendment) (Scotland) Act 2013, we can see the evolution and the embedding of Scotland as a unique crofting nation. Our crofting communities are the very heart and soul of what, arguably, makes Scotland the best small country in the world. The bill that we will vote on today is the latest instalment, but certainly not the last, in Scotland’s crofting story.

I thank the Rural Affairs and Islands Committee for its work, its diligence, its scrutiny and its evidence gathering, which have helped to shape and reshape the bill so that it will do what we collectively set out to achieve—that is, a simplification of the accumulation of bills that I mentioned, which have, in all honesty, left us with remedial work to do in order to make the crofting legislation fit for purpose in modern Scotland. I believe that the bill will take us to that place.

I place on the record my profound and sincere appreciation for the incredible amount of work and engagement that my officials and policy development teams have put in. It has been a gargantuan effort, with engagement across the crofting communities, the Crofting Commission, the Scottish Land Court and the Lands Tribunal for Scotland. Because of the time that has been spent, the diligence and the extensive engagement, we come to today’s stage 3 debate knowing that no opportunity has been lost to maximise the potential to get to a point where our aims and objectives for the bill are met. I thank everyone who has had a role in helping us to get to where we are.

My final and, I believe, most important thanks go to the crofters and the stakeholders. I have had the great pleasure of meeting many of them. I enjoyed their craic and their hospitality but, most important, I took away the sense of community, of family ties and of the anchor to the land that makes crofting the very heart and soul of our crofting counties. That understanding of what it means to be a crofter is at the epicentre of many of the provisions in the bill and has helped us to shape it so that it can deliver the improvements that I believe that it will.

As I explained in the chamber at stage 1, this crofting reform should be viewed not in isolation but alongside the work of the Crofting Commission. It is important to understand the interplay between the legislation and the commission’s policy plan. The bill provides the necessary framework and the plan provides the detail of how the commission will administer and regulate. I meet the Crofting Commission regularly—in fact, I met its chair and chief executive officer today, and I know that they care deeply about the communities that they serve.

The bill provides the commission with the tools to support crofters by tackling breaches of duty and making stronger decisions on crofting applications that will support active crofting. It will also strengthen the role of grazings committees in managing common land and give crofters, and their communities, a greater say in how the land that they work is used.

We know how complex crofting law is, but the bill takes out some of that complexity. I will take a moment to outline some of the real-world improvements that the bill will deliver. It will give crofters more options in how they use their land. It will allow approximately 700 people to apply to become crofters. It will streamline the enforcement of duties and the family assignation processes. It will prevent crofters who are in breach of their duties from profiteering and removing land from crofting tenure. It will prevent the separation of a grazing share from the inby croft, unless that is specifically approved by the commission. It will give more power to the commission to approve crofter-led environmental uses of common grazings. Crofters will be able to apply to the commission for boundary and registration changes. The bill will create a power to regulate the transfer of owner-occupier crofter status.

All of that represents significant change. The bill will make crofting regulation less onerous for active crofters and the commission, and flexible enough to allow them to grasp new opportunities and cope with future challenges. However, it goes further. It also commits any future Government to scoping and launching a review of crofting law within three years of royal assent at the latest. I have put it on record that, if my party is in Government, it will take place sooner than that.

Crofters and stakeholders have been clear about the need for a broader review of crofting legislation and subsequent future reform. The bill will help to lay the foundations of a stronger and healthier future for crofting, in which we will aim for increased residency levels and more people actively using their crofts and common grazings. The provisions of the bill will support our joint endeavour to breathe new life into crofting communities and to enable rural repopulation.

On part 2 of the bill, I recognise the contributions of both the former and the current chairs of the Scottish Land Court, who have each played an important part in the consideration and development of that reform. Part 2 creates a single judicial body for resolving disputes that relate to crofting, agricultural land or valuation. It brings together the Land Court’s specialist remit and the Lands Tribunal for Scotland’s wider land, title and valuation functions.

The court will continue to work in the long-standing traditions that matter deeply to the community that it serves. Rightly, the statutory requirement for a Gaelic-speaking member and local sittings, and the specialist character of the court, will remain. The reform is proportionate and practical, and will provide the flexibility that is required to respond to future demands.

In concluding my opening remarks, I reflect on the deep connection and sense of belonging that characterise our crofting communities. The pull and draw of the land, its stewardship through generations and that deep sense of community and culture are things that we must cherish and support. That is why I assure members of the Government’s commitment to our crofting communities and to a unique way of life, which is built on the hard-won rights of those who refused to be forced from their own land. In this age of instability, their courage and persistence are a lesson to us all. Today, through the bill, we honour that proud legacy as we seek to build on it to secure crofting’s place in Scotland’s future.

I move,

That the Parliament agrees that the Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill be passed.

17:03

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-21104, in the name of Jim Fairlie, on the Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill at stage 3. I invite memb...
The Minister for Agriculture and Connectivity (Jim Fairlie) SNP
From the crofters uprisings in the late 1880s to the Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886 and the 10 major acts of Parliament on crofting that have been del...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
I remind members of my entry in the register of members’ interests: I have a small farm, albeit that it is not a croft.Crofting is one of the defining featur...
Tim Eagle Con
You see why I did not want to say that on the public record.
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
I am rather relieved that you did not say that through the chair, Mr Eagle.
Tim Eagle Con
My apologies, Presiding Officer.Finally, I thank my colleague Edward Mountain, who has been an incredible campaigner for rural Scotland. This Parliament will...
Rhoda Grant (Highlands and Islands) (Lab) Lab
I thank Tim Eagle for his kind remarks. There will be a lot of thank yous in this contribution, because I also want to thank all those who helped us with our...
Ariane Burgess (Highlands and Islands) (Green) Green
Crofting is a vital part of Scotland’s cultural and social heritage, as well as its future. It is a social and economic glue that holds rural and island comm...
Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD) LD
I am pleased to speak for the Scottish Liberal Democrats on the Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill at stage 3. I, too, thank the Rural Affairs and Islands...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
We move to the open debate.17:22
Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP) SNP
I am pleased that my final speech in this session of Parliament is about such an important subject to my constituents as crofting. I, too, pay tribute to the...
Edward Mountain (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
As this will be my last speech in the Parliament, I hope that the minister will excuse me if I touch only briefly on the Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bil...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
We move to closing speeches.17:30
Ariane Burgess Green
I pay tribute to some of the members who have spoken today and who are stepping down. I hope that I do not pick up the tears that my colleague Edward Mountai...
Richard Leonard (Central Scotland) (Lab) Lab
This is my last speech to Parliament as a member, after 10 years. As a back bencher and a front bencher, as a party leader and a committee convener, I have a...
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
Now for something different. I draw members’ attention to my entry in the register of interests, as a partner in a farming business, a member of Scottish Lan...
Stephen Kerr (Central Scotland) (Con) Con
Will the member give way?
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con
Not if the member is going to demonstrate a crush.
Stephen Kerr Con
I do not have a crush on Richard Leonard, but I have known him for more than 40 years. He has lost none of his fire, passion and principle, and, for that rea...
Jamie Halcro Johnston Con
I agree with that. I served with Richard Leonard on the Economy, Jobs and Fair Work Committee in session 5, and, although I accept that his politics and mine...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
I call the minister to wind up the debate.17:46
Jim Fairlie SNP
In closing the debate, I take a final opportunity to thank all the stakeholders who contributed to the development of the bill. As I said in my opening remar...
Rhoda Grant Lab
Although the minister did not promise an overarching bill, his predecessors did, and it was supposed to be introduced in the last parliamentary session, not ...
Jim Fairlie SNP
I reiterate the point that I just made: the 2017 consultation was split on what the bill should deliver, which is why the bill is one that makes technical fi...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
That concludes the debate on the Crofting and Scottish Land Court Bill at stage 3.