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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.

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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
07 Feb 2024
Social Security (Investment)
I believe that Ms Forbes has participated in a number of social security debates in which we have had this interaction before. I am very clear that Labour wants to fundamentally reform the system, because universal credit does not work and it is not working for all parts of ou...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
11 Jun 2024
Child Poverty
The First Minister will note that our amendment recognises that there is, of course, a UK context to what we are debating today. Through policy interventions at a UK level, we must do everything that we can to eradicate child poverty. I remind the First Minister that that is w...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
23 Apr 2024
Two-child Benefit Cap
Mr Balfour has heard me say before that the entire system is not working. That is why we must take a whole-system approach and look at all the facets and measures of universal credit. We will not take advice from a Tory Government that has, as I have outlined, pushed more and ...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
11 Jun 2024
Child Poverty
I am glad that the Deputy First Minister is taking the work of the Poverty and Inequality Commission seriously. When I asked her about the issue when she was deputising for the First Minister last week, I do not think that I got such a detailed response. Indeed, she affirmed a...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
06 Mar 2025
United Kingdom Government Welfare Reforms
I have just said that there are reforms that have not yet been consulted on. It is the Labour Government’s intention to ensure that people who want to work can access work and are supported to do so. I will say more about that in my speech. It is important to deal in the fact...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
04 Oct 2023
Two-child Benefit Cap
I am coming on to speak about why universal credit does not work and why it needs to be fundamentally reformed. We need to see wide-ranging change, because it is not helping people; it is failing people. The member is right in her assertion that those policies are failing peop...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
04 Oct 2023
Two-child Benefit Cap
I have said that the policy is a pernicious policy. I am committed to—and the Labour Party is committed to—examining every part of the universal credit system to make sure that it works. If the cabinet secretary wants to roll her eyes and not listen to the fact that we need to...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
04 Oct 2023
Two-child Benefit Cap
Does the minister agree that universal credit is fundamentally flawed and that all its parts need to be reformed? Such reform is about more than just one policy, as abhorrent as the policy is. It is about making universal credit a proper safety net for people who need it, and ...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
20 Feb 2024
Social Security
I ask Mr Mason to reflect on my speech, in which I spoke about the need for fundamental reform of universal credit. Surely he agrees that the 40 per cent of people on universal credit who are in work deserve a real living wage and an end to precarious in-work poverty. Surely h...
Paul O’Kane Lab Committee
08 Jun 2023
Child Poverty and Parental Employment Inquiry
I will follow up on that point. A lot of our discussion has been about universal provision for three and four-year-olds. Are there significant challenges to universal provision for two-year-olds? What work can you see being done that might move us towards that position?
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
10 Oct 2024
Challenge Poverty Week 2024
Ms Haughey and I have debated these issues many times, and she knows that I am committed to a review of universal credit that includes the two-child limit. That work has been set in the context of the child poverty task force, which the UK Government is taking forward. The Sec...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
03 Dec 2024
Social Security (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
We are now at stage 3 of the bill, having had a debate at stage 2 about the nature of pension age winter heating payment. Those who followed the stage 2 process, when Mr Balfour lodged amendments on the topic, will know that I was very clear in my remarks that it was important...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
20 Feb 2024
Social Security
I am very clear that a fundamental reform of universal credit means reform of all parts of the system. That includes the heinous and challenging policies that we see across the piece. However, on the point about economic growth, we need to ensure that we have the money to refo...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
23 Apr 2024
Two-child Benefit Cap
I am pleased to contribute to this evening’s debate. Clare Haughey’s motion provides Parliament with an opportunity to look back at social security across the UK, including here in Scotland, over the seven-year period. We know that those seven years have been part of a longer ...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
05 Sep 2024
Programme for Government 2024-25 (Eradicating Child Poverty)
The cabinet secretary and I debated issues around child poverty five or six times in the chamber pre-election, and each time that we did so, I made it clear that the financial decisions and ruinous policies of the Conservative Party have led to an exacerbation of poverty. That...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
08 Feb 2023
National Health Service Dentistry
In my speech, I think that I have outlined the importance of the relationship with the dentist in ensuring that a person’s appointment is their gateway to the services that they require for good oral health. “What’s needed now is real reform to a broken system. There can be n...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
06 Sep 2023
Equality within the 2023-24 Programme for Government
Each year, that commitment slips further and further into the parliamentary calendar for delivery. Today, along with my colleagues, I met campaigners outside Parliament on the issue. Reece, Sandy and Kerry were just some of the people who spoke to me about the huge difference...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
12 Sep 2023
Child Poverty
I would like to make some progress. The next Labour Government will fundamentally reform the universal credit system and introduce a child poverty strategy that will ensure that driving down child poverty runs through every aspect and policy area of Government, delivering a p...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
12 Sep 2023
Child Poverty
The member will have heard me refer to the fundamental reform of universal credit that is required. We need to fundamentally change the current policy, because it does not work. The social security system does not work and it needs to be changed. Forty per cent of claimants ar...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
12 Sep 2023
Child Poverty
I talk about fundamental reform of universal credit because that is what I believe in. However, unfunded spending commitments cannot be made, because working people will pay the price. Let me remind Mr Doris of the Scottish National Party’s position on the abolition of the tw...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
12 Sep 2023
Child Poverty
The minister has said that a future Labour Government would do nothing to lift children out of poverty. Would she agree with me that raising the national minimum wage to the level of the living wage, banning zero-hours contracts, ensuring rights for workers from day 1, increas...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
04 Oct 2023
Two-child Benefit Cap
I thank Mr Doris for his supportive comments on the new deal for working people. I hope that he might convince members on the front bench to back our amendment and those proposals. I do not recall using that language; I will need to check the Official Report. I am not sure tha...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
04 Oct 2023
Two-child Benefit Cap
If the cabinet secretary will allow me to make some progress, I will give way to her in a moment. As I have said, the next Labour Government is fundamentally committed to reforming universal credit, because the current system is not working and we need wide-ranging reform. It...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
04 Oct 2023
Two-child Benefit Cap
I am not entirely sure what the cabinet secretary is driving at. Angela Rayner and Keir Starmer, in conjunction with the TUC, have endorsed the document. He will back to the letter the policy that the document outlines, which we will deliver when in government. I have no idea ...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
20 Feb 2024
Social Security
In the debate, when I explained in quite clear terms how a million children were lifted out of poverty by the previous Labour Government, the minister dismissed that as though it was not actually that important. He called it history, and he did not seem to care about the diffe...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
23 Apr 2025
United Kingdom Government Welfare Reforms
The point that I was about to make is that the green paper contains a range of proposals. The cabinet secretary now wants to pick and choose and debate individual proposals, but, in her motion, she says that she wants to scrap the paper in its entirety and not have a broader d...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
01 Sep 2021
Insulin Discovery Centenary
I thank Emma Harper for helping to bring the debate to the chamber and I recognise how close the issue is to her heart. I also thank Diabetes Scotland for its work and the informative briefing. We often forget how far, scientifically, we have come in comparison to 100 years a...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
07 Oct 2021
Carer’s Allowance Supplement (Scotland) Bill
I would like to begin by restating what everyone in the chamber has said already, which is thank you. Thank you to all those who have contributed to the bill’s progress, and to all organisations that gave evidence and briefings that contributed to the passage of the bill. Than...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Committee
25 Jan 2022
Health and Wellbeing of Children and Young People
We have spoken about universal interventions and the importance of knowing young people and getting the data right. I was struck to read that 15-year-old girls continue to be the group with the lowest wellbeing scores, and I would like to take a bit of time to explore the fact...
Paul O’Kane Lab Committee
22 Mar 2022
Alternative Pathways to Primary Care
I want to explore that further. Chris Mackie’s point about who can support and advise is interesting. I am keen on what we can do in libraries in Scotland. I raised that point previously with Citizens Advice Scotland, which talked about some of its services. I am not sure, how...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
26 Apr 2022
Low-income Families (Access to School Education)
I thank my regional colleague for that intervention. There is clearly concern about the pace at which the devices are being rolled out. Last year and during the lockdown period, it was fundamentally important that young people could get access to digital devices, so that they ...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
04 Oct 2023
Two-child Benefit Cap
We meet this afternoon in the middle of challenge poverty week, and, as I have said before in the chamber, there are few issues as important as tackling poverty. It should be the focus of far more of our time in this place, particularly in terms of how we use the powers of thi...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
04 Oct 2023
Two-child Benefit Cap
The member speaks about “little hope”, but does she accept that, as I outlined in my contribution, universal credit is fundamentally broken and needs to be reformed in all its facets? Does she accept that Labour’s new deal for working people will be a huge game changer in gett...
Paul O’Kane Lab Committee
16 Jan 2024
Scottish Human Rights Commission
Sorry. I decided not to touch any buttons because of Fulton MacGregor’s experience earlier, but I should probably have pressed something. I have a question about the universal periodic review. When the commission wrote the committee about the UK’s fourth cycle of that periodi...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
20 Feb 2024
Social Security
In a moment. Forty per cent of claimants who are in receipt of universal credit are in work, so we know that we need to make fundamental changes to work in this country in order to support people. That is what a Labour Government offers. We offer a real living wage, an end to...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Committee
20 Mar 2024
Bankruptcy and Diligence (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Thank you very much, convener. Good morning, colleagues on the committee and minister. I begin by offering my apologies for the need for a manuscript amendment. In my haste to get amendments lodged before the deadline, I failed to note a typographical error in my original ame...
Paul O’Kane Lab Committee
20 Mar 2024
Bankruptcy and Diligence (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
We were looking at where the bulk of public debt falls, which is on local authorities, and we found, through some of the work that we have looked at, that there are often variances in how local authorities pursue debt and in the support that they give to people who require to ...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
23 Apr 2024
Two-child Benefit Cap
We have debated the benefit cap in the chamber a number of times, and we have been very clear in our opposition to it. However, would the member not agree that the entire universal credit system must be fundamentally looked at and reformed to ensure that all parts of it can be...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
06 Jun 2024
Bankruptcy and Diligence (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Amendment 16 is similar to an amendment that I lodged at stage 2. I took time to reflect on the process at stage 2 before lodging this amendment. Amendment 16 would grant ministers the power, if it were to be deemed necessary, to make regulations requiring local authoritie...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
11 Jun 2024
Child Poverty
Marie McNair is making a passionate speech. She referred to a family who were in work and in receipt of universal credit. Would she agree that we need a new deal for working people, that we need to increase wages to a living wage and that we need to ensure that people’s rights...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
05 Sep 2024
Programme for Government 2024-25 (Eradicating Child Poverty)
It would be useful to understand how that figure has been arrived at, because the Deputy First Minister had trouble articulating it this morning on “Good Morning Scotland”. It would also be useful if, in her summing up, the cabinet secretary could explain how the modelling has...
Paul O’Kane Lab Committee
31 Oct 2024
Subordinate Legislation
I am grateful for that. I think that we have agreed the principles that there could be flexibility in the offer to pensioners more widely and that there will be consequentials, notwithstanding what you have just said. I am keen to understand the nature of the system that was ...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
03 Dec 2024
Social Security (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I am about to talk about amendment 22, which provides a power for Parliament to consider, by using secondary legislation, whether it wants to create a mechanism by which it could claw payments back from those who have higher incomes. One reason why I lodged amendment 22 comes...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
10 Dec 2024
Topical Question Time · Two-child Benefit Cap
I welcome the Scottish Government’s on-going positive engagement with the British-Irish Council, which is a very important body for promoting peace and stability across these islands. As a dual citizen, I take it extremely seriously, and I hope that all members take its work s...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
10 Dec 2024
Human Rights
I thank the cabinet secretary for her intervention. I have more to say about the Conservative amendment and the prevailing attitude of the Conservatives towards human rights and access to them. We have more to do. We cannot just talk the talk on human rights—we need to make s...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
07 Jan 2025
Child Poverty
I will, in a moment. I was coming on to speak about the down payments that have been made to tackle those issues at the UK level: the raising of the minimum wage, the introduction of the biggest upgrade of workers’ rights in a generation, and the change to the debt repayment ...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
07 Jan 2025
Child Poverty
I will, Presiding Officer. Given that, clearly, Russell Findlay has some kind of idea that we, on this side of the chamber, should all be listening to about how to reduce child poverty, deal with the issues and invest in public services, perhaps Stephen Kerr and colleagues mi...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
03 Dec 2024
Social Security (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill
I am grateful to have the opportunity to close the stage 3 debate on behalf of Scottish Labour, and to reflect again on some of the contributions that we have heard, and some of the progress that we have made on the social security system in Scotland. During the bill’s journe...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
11 Mar 2025
Cost of Living
The cabinet secretary is shouting at me from a sedentary position, but she could not answer any of the questions that I put to her. I am trying to say that ensuring that we have a strong energy mix and keeping the lights on are important to bill payers and will, in fact, keep ...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
02 Apr 2025
Spring Statement 2025 (Impact on Scotland)
These are deeply serious global times. Already, some contributions this afternoon have acknowledged the changing nature of the western alliance and the global economic and political consensus on which so much has rested for so long. That has been fundamentally shaken. Even tod...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Education
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 Parliament—to the chamber and once again using Opposition time to debate these issues. It provides us with an important moment, ...
Paul O’Kane Lab Committee
04 Feb 2026
Children (Care, Care Experience and Services Planning) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
My amendments in this group would strengthen the duty placed on public authorities by ensuring that they must have “due regard” to guidance. Those amendments were called for by many stakeholders, including The Promise Scotland, in recognition of the well established and unders...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
27 Oct 2022
Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I am pleased to have the opportunity to contribute to this important debate at stage 1 of the bill. In rising to speak, I am pleased to follow colleagues who have made contributions that are constructive and respectful in tone, particularly Karen Adam, Pam Duncan-Glancy and Ja...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
19 Apr 2023
Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill: Section 35 Order
I thank the cabinet secretary for advance sight of her statement and for outlining to Parliament the decisions that were taken during the recess. It is critical that we do not lose sight of the purpose of reform, and every day that the bill spends in court is another day in w...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Committee
12 Nov 2024
Aarhus Convention
Good morning. I will elaborate on some of the questions that we have explored in terms of the potential for reform of legal aid. In response to a parliamentary question, the minister said: “Discussions on legal aid reform will commence this year and will include environmental...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
07 May 2025
Programme for Government (Building the Best Future for Scotland)
Of course I welcome investment in things such as relational mentoring, which are extremely important, but the point that the Wise Group is trying to make is that, after 18 years of this Government, there are still serious challenges in how public services are delivered, in how...
Paul O’Kane Lab Chamber
20 Jan 2026
Tertiary Education and Training (Funding and Governance) (Scotland) Bill
I am shocked that anyone in north-east Fife would not greet Willie Rennie at the door with an embrace of joy. He makes a fair point about our decisions having an impact. We have heard from the trade unions at SDS and from those who work in those agencies about the concern and...
The Deputy Convener Lab Committee
28 Jun 2022
Subordinate Legislation
The fifth item on our agenda is consideration of two negative instruments, which were laid on Thursday 16 June and came into force on the same day. The Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee considered the instruments at its meeting this morning. It decided to draw them to ...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
20 Dec 2022
Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I rise to speak to amendment 100, which is in my name. Throughout the legislative process I have sought to engage constructively with colleagues from across the chamber to help to deliver a robust and well-considered piece of legislation that serves to reform the process for ...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab Chamber
22 Dec 2022
Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill
I am pleased to have the opportunity to contribute to this important debate as we reach the concluding stage of the Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill. Before I start my substantive contribution, I join colleagues in putting on the record my thanks to you, Deputy Presid...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 07 February 2024

07 Feb 2024 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Social Security (Investment)

I believe that Ms Forbes has participated in a number of social security debates in which we have had this interaction before. I am very clear that Labour wants to fundamentally reform the system, because universal credit does not work and it is not working for all parts of our United Kingdom. We need to fundamentally reform the entire system so that it works and ensures that people have a sufficient safety net, as I have said. It is clear to me that we have opposed all that the Tories have done, and we are clear that the system needs fundamental reform. However, we will have to do that in terms of the fiscal situation that we inherit.

I move to the challenges that we are facing in Scotland. The current Scottish Government is presiding over a system that faces significant challenges. Today, the cabinet secretary has again repeated the words “dignity, fairness and respect” when referring to the social security system. Just saying that does not make it so, because we know that, in many ways, Social Security Scotland has failed to live up to people’s expectations and their aspirations.

We should reflect on waiting times. Last summer, the chief executive of Social Security Scotland told the Social Justice and Social Security Committee that he expected the waiting times for child disability payment to fall below the 80-day mark on average by the end of the summer. The end of the summer came and the statistical releases in September showed that the waiting times were stuck very stubbornly over 100 days, at 106 days.

Last week, at the committee’s evidence session, we asked Social Security Scotland when we would see a marked improvement in the waiting times and when it would get below the 80-day mark. I am not sure that we got any clarity on when that would happen or, indeed, on how that will happen.

It would be good to hear from the cabinet secretary about what part of keeping many families with vulnerable children in that waiting period for more than three months is meeting the aspirations of dignity, fairness and respect, because we know that people really are struggling as they wait for benefits.

It is not just child disability payment, either. As was reported over the weekend and as my colleague Michael Marra has already referred to, there are reports of almost 50,000 Scots having to wait for three months for their claims to be processed. Some have waited longer than that, and many people waiting have terminal illness. Many have also had to turn to food banks as a result of the wait. Charities such as Macmillan Cancer Support are sounding the alarm and urging the Government to take urgent action. We absolutely must reflect on that, because I do not think that people would recognise that picture as according with the aspirations of dignity, fairness and respect.

Social Security Scotland has been in development or existence for five years now. We have heard in the debate about the many benefits that it delivers and much of its work that is going on. However, I think that we are past the point where many of the delays can be blamed on teething problems. It is high time that the Government accepted that it has responsibility and must be held accountable for the significant challenges in the system.

We know that social security alone cannot solve the problem of poverty in Scotland and across our United Kingdom. More than 1 million people in Scotland still live in poverty—nearly half of them in very deep poverty—according to reports from various third sector organisations. In-work poverty is on the rise, with more than 10 per cent of workers locked in persistent low pay. The Scottish Government’s statistics show that lower and middle incomes have decreased over the latest three-year period. Yet, we hold this debate in a week in which we will debate a budget that will do nothing to stimulate economic growth and will take actions such as cutting the housing budget by 27 per cent, which will clearly impact on people who are struggling on low incomes.

It is against that whole backdrop that we consider today’s motion, which is rich in praise but perhaps lacking in the reality of the situation. If we want to tackle the cost of living crisis, inequality and poverty, we need a Government that is willing to take the decisions to make work pay and to tackle the structural causes behind poverty and inequality. Positive change can be delivered by a Labour Government that is willing to get to grips with the challenges that surround the system. The previous UK Labour Government, as I have said already, understood that when it removed 2 million children and pensioners from poverty through its action. We can do the same again, by making work pay and so ending in-work poverty, by growing the economy and by fixing the broken social security system across the UK. That is the change that I believe the people of Scotland want, the change that the people of Scotland need and the change that Labour will deliver when the SNP has failed to do so.

I move amendment S6M-12079.1, to leave out from “Government’s” to end and insert:

“Child Payment; notes the stubbornly high waiting times for Child Disability Payment, where the median processing time was 106 days, and for Adult Disability Payment, where the median processing time was 83 days, according to the latest statistical releases; is concerned by the Scottish Government’s failure to sufficiently and swiftly address these long processing times, which are driving some people to rely on foodbanks, according to reports from third sector organisations; is further concerned by the rise of in-work poverty in Scotland, with over one in 10 workers locked in persistent low pay according to the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, and agrees that a UK Labour administration will implement a New Deal for Working People that will end in-work poverty and implement a fundamental reform of the Universal Credit system to provide a real safety net for those who need it.”

15:27  
References in this contribution

Motions, questions or amendments mentioned by their reference code.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-12079, in the name of Shirley-Anne Somerville, on delivering record social security investment in Scotlan...
The Cabinet Secretary for Social Justice (Shirley-Anne Somerville) SNP
We have transformed social security provision in Scotland. We have established a radically different system that is based on dignity, fairness and respect. T...
Willie Rennie (North East Fife) (LD) LD
When the minister was at Ibrox primary school this morning, did she discuss the very low take-up of the early learning and childcare provision for two-year-o...
Shirley-Anne Somerville SNP
We have indeed spoken about that in the past in the chamber. I recognise Willie Rennie’s continued interest in the area. As he and I have discussed in the pa...
Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con) Con
I know about the cabinet secretary’s points from my committee work and agree with many of them, but what work has the Scottish Government undertaken to look ...
Shirley-Anne Somerville SNP
As Miles Briggs should know, one of the reasons why the number of complaints has gone up is that the number of cases has gone up exponentially because we too...
Michael Marra (North East Scotland) (Lab) Lab
What would the cabinet secretary say to the 50,000 people who are waiting more than three months for disability benefits, some of whom are being forced to go...
Shirley-Anne Somerville SNP
One of the very different aspects of the system that I have just discussed is the fact that Social Security Scotland will gather the supporting information. ...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con
I remind members that I receive the personal independence payment. I am pleased to take part in the debate. It is always encouraging when we come to the cha...
Shirley-Anne Somerville SNP
Does the member recognise that we are spending more money than Westminster because our values are different? That spend includes investment of nearly £500 mi...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
I will give you the time back, Mr Balfour.
Jeremy Balfour Con
I say with respect that I think that the cabinet secretary has got the wrong end of the stick. I am simply asking, if the Scottish Government is going to nee...
Kate Forbes (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
John Swinney (Perthshire North) (SNP) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Jeremy Balfour Con
I will in a second. One would think that, if the agency was spending that much on operations, it would be running a bit more smoothly, or at least the hando...
John Swinney SNP
I am grateful to Mr Balfour for giving way, because he is advancing an entirely contradictory argument. On the one hand, he is telling Parliament that the Sc...
Jeremy Balfour Con
I am always happy to try to help Mr Swinney. We have higher and higher costs of administration of the same benefits. We are spending more money on doing the ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Cabinet secretary, we need to hear the member who has the floor, which is Jeremy Balfour. Please continue, Mr Balfour.
Jeremy Balfour Con
I am grateful. Up to this point, Social Security Scotland has moved across fewer than 5,000 people per month on average. To meet the new target, the Governme...
Shirley-Anne Somerville SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Jeremy Balfour Con
I will finish this point. I would appreciate it if the cabinet secretary, now or in closing, explained why it will take so long for the report’s findings to ...
Shirley-Anne Somerville SNP
The independent review will decide its own timelines, but I suggest that, if Mr Balfour wants any changes to eligibility, it would be useful if the Scottish ...
Jeremy Balfour Con
I ask the cabinet secretary to reflect in closing that the August 2025 date came from her press release. That is the date that the Government has set. I am ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Paul O’Kane joins us remotely to speak to and move amendment S6M-12079.1. 15:19
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab
This is at least the third debate that we have had on social security in the past 12 months. As always, I will begin with a note of consensus. As in previous...
Kate Forbes SNP
I wonder whether Paul O’Kane could identify specific welfare policies that Labour would reverse that the Tories have introduced.
Paul O’Kane Lab
I believe that Ms Forbes has participated in a number of social security debates in which we have had this interaction before. I am very clear that Labour wa...
Willie Rennie (North East Fife) (LD) LD
John Swinney will recall how we got here. It was as a result of the Smith commission. I know that John Swinney was not wholly satisfied with the process, but...
Jeremy Balfour Con
Will Willie Rennie give way?
Willie Rennie LD
Not just now. Although it is right to reflect on the decline of child poverty levels, we have not dealt with the root causes of why we have such high levels ...