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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
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1999–2026
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Official Report

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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
29 Mar 2007
The Future of Scotland
An election is coming up. It must be inspirational for any pensioner who is tuned in to today's debate to hear how much all the parties are going to do for senior citizens. The Tories talked about taking 50 per cent off council tax. The SNP will take a number of pensioners out...
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
28 Mar 2007
Airdrie-Bathgate Railway and Linked Improvements Bill
I think that everyone agrees that the bill is excellent, but the missing link that no one has mentioned is the 20 per cent of the population who will not be able to afford to use the facility. Will the minister look into free off-peak travel for pensioners and ensure that the ...
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
22 Mar 2007
Scotland in the United Kingdom
Will the minister give way?
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
21 Mar 2007
Rights of Relatives to Damages (Mesothelioma) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I think that it was not so much that the employers did not know, as that they did not care. That is the difference.
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
21 Mar 2007
Rights of Relatives to Damages (Mesothelioma) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
By the law of averages, I have no right to be standing here, because I worked in the shipyards. In 1947—60 years ago now—I worked in the city of Johannesburg as a young apprentice marine engineer. I worked in an area roughly the size of the chamber with scaffolding up either s...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Age Strategy
I am happy at that.
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Age Strategy
Thank you, convener. My statement will be even shorter than I thought it would be.The strategy is strong on volunteering, because that involves people doing good work at no cost to the state. Because there are insufficient nursery and pre-school places, some parents have to le...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Age Strategy
You talked about older people starting up in business. One of the main reasons for their doing so is the obvious fact that, in the five years prior to retirement, 40 per cent of men and women find themselves unemployed. The ones with a bit of initiative go and do something abo...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Age Strategy
Can I also point out that the pensions are not carried on after the age of 75? Be warned: after the election, there will be older people than me in here. There are some very good older candidates.
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Age Strategy
But it is ageism. I am sorry, convener—we are talking about ageism, and that is an agist policy. I am asking the minister to take it up with the relevant minister.
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Age Strategy
I appreciate your sincerity on ageism and everything that you have said, which you did so lucidly. As an older person, can I give you a bit of advice? Could you get your own house in order? Parliament is agist—MSPs who are 75 or over do not enjoy the same pension facilities as...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Age Strategy
The member asked a question.
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Age Strategy
My answer to that is—
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Age Strategy
The Scottish Pensioners Forum receives funding from the Government on the condition that the forum is not political. That is a one-sided approach if the Executive then seeks opinions on political action that it may carry out.
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Age Strategy
Does the minister think that it was remiss to have a consultation on elderly people without approaching the only elected member in the UK who represents older people, or his party, for a contribution? I add that the consultation was before Rhona Brankin's time as Minister for ...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Disability Inquiry
It is not all gloom and doom, and the Executive is making its point in many areas. For the first time, I have been invited to a disabled hustings—something I had never heard of before. It seems as though a fair number of young people are involved. We are making an impact.
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Disability Inquiry
You have virtually answered my next question, which relates to recommendation 83. The committee seeks assurances from you that funding for the active schools programme will be reviewed to allow all young disabled people in Scotland—not just those who live in the council areas ...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Disability Inquiry
My question relates to access to leisure. Recommendation 82 asks that the active schools programme be reviewed, with a view to making it sustainable and funded in the long term. The Scottish Executive's response does not mention whether such a review will be carried out. Can y...
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Committee
20 Mar 2007
Disability Inquiry
I have a young constituent who went right through to the final stages of training at the Scottish Police College before it was discovered that she was mildly dyslexic. Surely a mechanism should exist for all cadets who enter the police or for people who enter other branches of...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
07 Mar 2007
Football (Sectarianism)
Does the minister agree with me that the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1980, which banned alcohol from football grounds, was a gigantic step forward in controlling sectarianism?
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
07 Mar 2007
Football (Sectarianism)
I thank Alasdair Morrison for securing today's debate. People do not realise how much progress has been made. When I went to Ibrox and Parkhead just after the war, there were problems with sectarianism. I started working in the Glasgow shipyards in 1947. One day, this little r...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
07 Mar 2007
Alcohol Misuse
Does the minister agree that a total ban on advertising alcohol would be a gigantic step in the right direction?
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
07 Mar 2007
Alcohol Misuse
Will the member take an intervention?
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
07 Mar 2007
Christmas Day and New Year's Day Trading (Scotland) Bill:<br />Stage 3
Does Karen Whitefield agree that everyone who votes for ordinary working people going to work on new year's day should be prepared to come in here on the same day for a plenary session and a full day's work?
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
15 Feb 2007
Education
It is more a point of information than a point of order. What would the procedure be if none of the Presiding Officers was able to fill the chair?
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
15 Feb 2007
Education
On a point of order, Presiding Officer.
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
07 Feb 2007
Local Government Finance (Scotland) Order 2007
That is an interesting observation, but it is of little interest to the honest pensioners who do not contribute to the 7 per cent of uncollected council tax. By and large, my generation pays its dues and does not contribute to the uncollected tax. The council tax is supposedly...
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
07 Feb 2007
Local Government Finance (Scotland) Order 2007
Bristow Muldoon was the first person in the debate to mention pensioners. Yesterday, I spoke with a pensioner who was in full-time employment three years ago, when he paid 3 per cent of his income in council tax. Three years into retirement, he pays 22 per cent of his pension ...
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
07 Feb 2007
Local Government Finance (Scotland) Order 2007
Will the member give way?
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
07 Feb 2007
Tartan
Does the member agree that, unless protection is built into the Scottish Register of Tartans Bill such that the only tartan that matters is that produced in Scotland, tartan will go into cyberspace and then out to China and the sweatshops of the far east, where it will be prod...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
25 Jan 2007
First Minister's Question Time · Senior Citizens (Poverty)
My final question is on a positive note. Will the First Minister consider fast-tracking a bill to means test prisoners? Senior citizens are currently means tested and regularly lose their homes to pay for residential care. If prisoners were means tested and they were awarded £...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
25 Jan 2007
First Minister's Question Time · Senior Citizens (Poverty)
Does the First Minister agree that fuel poverty among the elderly is a national disgrace? Fuel bills have doubled over the past three years. Since June 2006, wholesale prices of gas have dropped by more than 60 per cent, but no reduction has been offered to the consumer. Fuel ...
3. John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
25 Jan 2007
First Minister's Question Time · Senior Citizens (Poverty)
To ask the First Minister what further action the Scottish Executive will take to address the essential needs of senior citizens who are currently living below Government-defined poverty levels despite previous initiatives which provided free bus travel, free central heating a...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
20 Dec 2006
Removing Barriers and Creating Opportunities
Will the minister acknowledge the grand work that is being done by the people in the gallery who are using sign language? Their conveying of what is being said to the people in the gallery is admirable.
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
20 Dec 2006
Removing Barriers and Creating Opportunities
I will concentrate on the problems that many disabled people face with regard to physical access. The main obstacle to be overcome is complacency among people who do not have daily to overcome access problems. Until such time as we or one of our family or friends are confronte...
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
13 Dec 2006
Local Government Finance Settlement
I apologise for my late arrival, which was due to a school visit to which I was committed.Will the minister recognise people's ability to pay and the situation in which the poorest pensioners, who have been means tested, find themselves? He has already done so in reducing wate...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
12 Dec 2006
Participation (Widening Access)
Is there any legislation that we can enforce?
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
12 Dec 2006
Public Petitions Committee (Equalities Report)
Eight members' bills were passed in the first four years of the Parliament, but in this session only one has been successful. Do you think that the Public Petitions Committee could become a vehicle for members' bills?
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
12 Dec 2006
Public Petitions Committee (Equalities Report)
Do you agree that the fact that there are no MSPs from ethnic minority backgrounds is a failure not on the part of the Public Petitions Committee, but on the part of the Parliament? Do you also agree that, until we achieve that, there will always be an imbalance when it comes ...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
12 Dec 2006
Public Petitions Committee (Equalities Report)
Have you given any thought to inviting comment from a wider range of equality-related organisations?
John Swinburne: SSCUP Committee
12 Dec 2006
Public Petitions Committee (Equalities Report)
I was privileged to represent a constituent at the Public Petitions Committee. The person was concerned about having to sell their parent's home to pay for care. I compliment the committee on its excellent service. How the meeting was laid out and the way in which we were ques...
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Committee
12 Dec 2006
Public Petitions Committee (Equalities Report)
Feedback from the Disability Rights Commission suggested that the Public Petitions Committee has been successful in attracting a high level of participation from disabled people. Have you analysed why that is the case? If so, what implications might there be for your work on t...
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
07 Dec 2006
SCOTTISH EXECUTIVE · Care Homes (Highlands)
What steps are being taken to accelerate the implementation of Professor Kerr's report relative to care in the community for elderly people in the Highlands?
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
06 Dec 2006
Rural Post Offices
Does the member agree that it is not only rural post offices that are at risk, but the whole network of post offices across the country, which is under intense pressure from the Government? Does he agree that we cannot afford to lose any post offices?
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
06 Dec 2006
Council Tax
In an answer to a parliamentary question that I asked, I was told that qualifying pensioner households can get a 25 per cent reduction in their water services charges, if they know how to apply for it. That is a little step in the right direction.
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
06 Dec 2006
Council Tax
Sorry.
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
06 Dec 2006
Council Tax
I have never heard, in any debating chamber, so many people try to defend the indefensible. Indeed, I find it incomprehensible that any intelligent person can argue for the retention of a totally regressive taxation system. In response to Tommy Sheridan, Charlie Gordon said th...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
30 Nov 2006
SCOTTISH EXECUTIVE · Swimming Pool Charges (Senior Citizens)
Does the minister agree that swimming, particularly by elderly people, should be encouraged by councils? Will the minister join me in deploring the 320 per cent increase in charges to senior citizens for access to swimming baths in North Lanarkshire? Charges have been increase...
1. John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
30 Nov 2006
SCOTTISH EXECUTIVE · Swimming Pool Charges (Senior Citizens)
To ask the Scottish Executive what action it will take to prevent local authorities from increasing swimming pool charges for senior citizens to an unaffordable level. (S2O-11242)
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
30 Nov 2006
SCOTTISH EXECUTIVE · Central Heating Programme
In the event that someone's heating breaks down and they are told that it will be many months before it can be repaired under the programme, will they be reimbursed if they pay to have it repaired themselves?
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
23 Nov 2006
Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Is the main driver of the bill the medical profession, social workers, the legal profession or society in general? In the past 50 years or so there has been legislation—possibly flawed—that has dealt adequately with the problem in the majority of cases. In what way will the bi...
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
22 Nov 2006
Christmas Day and New Year's Day Trading (Scotland) Bill: <br />Stage 1
Back in 1947, when I first started work, I was amazed to find that Christmas day was not a public holiday. Strangely enough, new year's day was a public holiday. With hindsight, I realise that employers throughout the country at that time must have acknowledged that there was ...
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
16 Nov 2006
National Bed Assessment
I thank Jean Turner for bringing the matter to the Parliament today. I will read out an e-mail that I recently received, because it is relevant to the debate. It states:"Dear John, … I'm wondering how typical my 85 year old mother's experience has been of the non-provision of ...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
09 Nov 2006
Violence Against Women
Does the minister agree that it is surprising that the issue of alcohol has not been raised during today's debate as, often, the pathetic excuses for men who carry out these acts of violence are fuelled by alcohol and—in modern times—some other substances?
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
09 Nov 2006
Violence Against Women
Does the member agree that we insult men by accusing them of such abuse? The people who commit such crimes—they are crimes—against women are less than men and should be portrayed as such.
John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
08 Nov 2006
Transition from School to Work
Will the minister give way?
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
02 Nov 2006
First Minister's Question Time · Winter-related Deaths
Will the First Minister take advantage of a simple method of emulating Gordon Brown's excellent social experiment? The suggestion complies with the Scotland Act 1998. Will he exempt every pensioner household from paying the water charges element of council tax? On the basis of...
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
02 Nov 2006
First Minister's Question Time · Winter-related Deaths
Will the First Minister join me in congratulating the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, on the success of his excellent social experiment whereby, prior to last winter, when he was faced with the stark reality of more than 8,000 winter-related deaths among pensioners ...
3. John Swinburne (Central Scotland) (SSCUP): SSCUP Chamber
02 Nov 2006
First Minister's Question Time · Winter-related Deaths
To ask the First Minister what steps the Scottish Executive will take this winter to reduce the number of cold-related deaths among senior citizens. (S2F-2510)
John Swinburne: SSCUP Chamber
02 Nov 2006
Financial Powers <br />(Scottish Parliament)
Well—whatever we want to call it. We could draw up a contract with the department: it could do what it liked on the military side of things and we could settle our share of the bill by demanding an exorbitant rent for the use of Faslane. That would balance things out.When West...
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Chamber

Plenary, 29 Mar 2007

29 Mar 2007 · S2 · Plenary
Item of business
The Future of Scotland
I congratulate those nations and peoples on the success and power of their democracies for the future of those countries.

Scotland's past has not been as desperate, but our future can be even more exciting. Our place in the world is to ensure that we take the opportunity, in the third session of the Scottish Parliament, to look always to the future—the future of our communities, our country and our planet. We should go forward into our next four years with bold ambitions for that future. Our eyes and minds should be on the future, and we should take far greater notice of the people who have the biggest stake in it—the million young people in Scotland. We should have a Parliament that is ready to focus on young people, on the environment and on creating a dynamic Scottish economy.

Home rule is here and it is very solid. Only 6 per cent of the Scottish electorate would go back eight years to a Scotland run from London. However, we are not at an end point. Only 12 per cent of the Scottish electorate support the status quo, therefore devolution must develop. The Presiding Officer and I met the Scottish Youth Parliament last Saturday and heard about the plans of young people in Scotland for the future. Our task is to ensure that we have a Parliament that inspires young people to take part. That means that we must always show that we can get things done, that we can deliver and that voting really does make a difference to people in Scotland.

In the same item of business

The Presiding Officer (Mr George Reid): NPA
Good morning. The first item of business is a debate on the future of Scotland.
The First Minister (Mr Jack McConnell): Lab
There is a particular resonance to debating the future of a nation when one is that nation's First Minister. Like every Scot, I grew up proud of my country—o...
Alex Neil (Central Scotland) (SNP): SNP
On a point of order, Presiding Order. Is Mr McConnell speaking as the First Minister or as the leader of the Labour Party? He has been billed to speak as the...
The First Minister: Lab
The Scottish National Party calls for debates, but it does not like them when they happen.We will make leaving school at the ages of 16 and 17 conditional on...
Mr John Swinney (North Tayside) (SNP): SNP
The First Minister mentioned the child poverty statistics and his ambition to relieve child poverty by 2020. Has the journey towards achieving that ambition ...
The First Minister: Lab
The child poverty figures that were published this week should encourage us to redouble our efforts. Tackling child poverty should be a priority for the Scot...
Phil Gallie (South of Scotland) (Con): Con
On independence, will the First Minister join me in congratulating the organisers of last Saturday's march for the union in Edinburgh? Some 12,000 people mar...
The First Minister: Lab
It might be unwise for me to comment on the entire occasion, but I welcome the fact that there was no trouble, for which I congratulate the organisers of the...
Nicola Sturgeon (Glasgow) (SNP): SNP
Jack McConnell makes cheap jibes about Alex Salmond, but when Alex Salmond is First Minister, no one will forget his name. We relish the debate about Scotlan...
Mr Brian Monteith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Ind): Ind
If the SNP is so committed to reducing business rates, why, on the two occasions on which I sought an annulment of the increase in business rates, did the SN...
Nicola Sturgeon: SNP
The SNP's commitment not only to cutting business rates but to abolishing them for 120,000 small businesses is well known and will make a huge difference. Th...
Karen Gillon (Clydesdale) (Lab): Lab
If the SNP wins the election, we will have a referendum in 2010. What happens if the people of Scotland say no?
Nicola Sturgeon: SNP
The difference between Karen Gillon and me is that I want to give the Scottish people the right to choose and she wants to deny them that right. If she wants...
Miss Annabel Goldie (West of Scotland) (Con): Con
The future of Scotland is indeed now in the hands of the Scottish people. There are two stark choices: devolution or isolation. Those are the only two games ...
Jeremy Purvis (Tweeddale, Ettrick and Lauderdale) (LD): LD
Miss Goldie has repeatedly said that, under the Conservatives, people would serve the entire length of their sentence. Why is it that, under Conservative par...
Miss Goldie: Con
It is predictable that Mr Purvis, a representative of the desperately failed pact that has presided for eight years over the disintegration of our criminal j...
Mike Rumbles (West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine) (LD): LD
Will the member take an intervention on that point?
Miss Goldie: Con
I want to make progress.The Executive has also failed in its stewardship of the economy and our transport infrastructure. I cannot help noticing that those t...
Mike Rumbles rose— LD
Miss Goldie: Con
My party has a comprehensive manifesto of fully costed proposals to revitalise the economy, including an imaginative and positive scheme for business rates r...
Nicola Sturgeon: SNP
No, I said that we should not just judge a party by the sum of its policies.
Miss Goldie: Con
Ah well—a revised view from the SNP benches. Either way, the SNP's sums still do not add up, and there is nothing it can do to hide that. People in Scotland ...
The Deputy First Minister and Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning (Nicol Stephen): LD
It has been an interesting debate thus far. As I look around the chamber, I wonder who the floating voters are whom we are trying to influence. It is more a ...
Phil Gallie: Con
Following Nicol Stephen's comments about the collapse of the eastern bloc, will he join me in congratulating Margaret Thatcher and her Governments on playing...
Nicol Stephen: LD
I congratulate those nations and peoples on the success and power of their democracies for the future of those countries.Scotland's past has not been as desp...
Malcolm Chisholm (Edinburgh North and Leith) (Lab): Lab
I congratulate Nicol Stephen on not setting a rate of local income tax of 3p in the pound, which would result in devastating cuts in local government service...
Nicol Stephen: LD
I am happy to confirm that the Liberal Democrats support the abolition of the unfair council tax and that we support a genuine local income tax, which is not...
Fergus Ewing (Inverness East, Nairn and Lochaber) (SNP): SNP
In his party capacity, the Deputy First Minister has said that the Lib Dems are committed to scrapping red tape. Can he explain why representatives of his pa...
Nicol Stephen: LD
The more important question is why the Scottish National Party voted to introduce a third-party right of appeal. Why did the SNP want to place that burden on...
Mr Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green): Green
Will the minister give way on that point?