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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.
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
02 Oct 2024
Housing Emergency
The award-winning journalist Vicky Spratt recently published a book titled “Tenants: The People on the Frontline of Britain’s Housing Emergency”. She points out that behind the undeniable reality of a housing emergency lies a series of separate but connected emergencies: the i...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
13 Nov 2024
Housing Emergency
Scottish Greens believe that access to safe, warm and affordable housing is a fundamental human right that is essential to our health, happiness and ability to fulfil our potential as human beings. That is why the new deal for tenants was a key priority for us in this parliame...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
25 Jan 2023
Homelessness
I begin by thanking all those people across Scotland who work day after day and night after night to prevent homelessness and support those who are at risk of homelessness or who are homeless. In particular, I thank Crisis and Shelter, which do such work and have provided brie...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
28 Nov 2024
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Presiding Officer, “I am currently a single parent working as a nurse, and this rent amount is already half my nurse’s earnings. I physically would be homeless if I was not being topped up by universal credit. I am already struggling to get by, made worse by the current cost ...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
28 Nov 2024
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I offer my sincere thanks to all those involved in the stage 1 scrutiny of the bill, including committee members, clerks, witnesses, and even those with whom I profoundly disagree. I also put on record my thanks for the on-going work with regard to the parliamentary process, i...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
24 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
In introducing the new system of rent controls and other protections for tenants, one of the biggest challenges that we face is ensuring that renters know their rights and also how to ensure that those rights are respected. The Generation Rent research on deposits that I menti...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
24 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I have several different amendments in the group and, as I have been brief in speaking to amendments in previous groups and have accepted interventions, I ask for a little bit of patience. Amendments 110 and 236 concern the power to assess someone as intentionally homeless. A...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
30 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
We have heard criticisms that the bill does not do enough to increase the supply of homes. In many ways, I agree. My amendments 21, 255 and 256, along with the associated consequential amendments, seek to address that. The Scottish vacant and derelict land survey in 2023 show...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
29 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I know that people will be sad to hear that this is my last amendment to the bill at this stage. Amendment 515 is an absolutely crucial amendment. We have heard criticisms that the bill does not do enough to increase the supply of homes, which my amendment seeks to address in...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
04 Mar 2026
Ferries
I am grateful to the Liberal Democrats for bringing this important debate to the chamber, because Scotland’s island and coastal communities deserve much better. I will focus on a specific injustice that often goes unmentioned: the cost of freight. I acknowledge and appreciate ...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Committee
06 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
If I may, I will take a little time to talk about the bill overall but, before I do that, I express my thanks to the legislation team, the minister, MSPs from other parties and the organisations with which we have all had lots of conversations over the past many months. I am ...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
15 May 2025
Second Home Ownership
I thank Ross Greer for securing the debate, and I am grateful for the opportunity to speak this afternoon. I believe that every single person deserves a safe, secure and stable place to call home—not a commodity or an investment, or a holiday retreat, but a home. We are facin...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
18 Jun 2025
RAAC in Council and Former Council Housing
I am grateful to Liam Kerr for securing the debate, and I echo other members’ comments in welcoming the cabinet secretary to her new role. At the heart of the debate are peoples’ homes. For anyone, whether they are a renter or a home owner, the thought that the safety of thei...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
24 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Pets make a house a home, and part 3 of the bill sets out a clear framework for tenants to make requests for their pet to live with them. There is a lack of pet-friendly rented homes in Scotland. A 2021 survey of landlords, letting agents and tenants on pets and rental propert...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
30 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill
New year’s day 1989 was a day of celebration for some—but, for many, it was the first of almost 40 years of runaway rip-off rents. Margaret Thatcher’s Housing Act 1988 swept away rent controls, and working people have paid the price ever since. Since 2010, rents for a two-bed...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
19 Mar 2025
Temporary Accommodation (Children’s Rights)
In closing the debate for the Scottish Greens, I reiterate my thanks to Shelter and to the researchers, children and families who made the report such a valuable, challenging and human testament. It shows us not only what is wrong, but the paths to making it right—to making th...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
20 Mar 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I am grateful to colleagues for covering all the issues in this group. It is clear that our housing system and homelessness prevention work must be sensitive to people’s particular situations and needs. We have not always been very good at recognising at-risk groups and factor...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
13 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Local housing allowance rate is determined and well understood. In fact, it is published on the Scottish Government’s website, so I am a little unsure as to why the cabinet secretary says that she does not understand what is meant by local housing allowance rate. It is publish...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
13 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Greens oppose exemptions to rent control measures. To work for renters and landlords, the system needs to be simple and transparent. We broadly have that with the system as established. Adding various exemptions—such as if the landlord is an employer of the tenant, is a milita...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
20 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Yes, absolutely, the EPC system is out of date and the review is urgently needed. We anticipate that the system will change, which is why we have not referred to EPC in my amendments. The amendments should cover the new energy efficiency rating system, for which I hope that we...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
27 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
This is another fairly lengthy—but not too lengthy—contribution from me. I know that many members of the committee and, indeed, many members of the Parliament, are pet owners and animal lovers. Emma Roddick entered Sparky, her beautiful English bull terrier, into the Holyrood ...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
13 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Over the same time period to which Daniel Johnson refers, we have also seen an increase in the number of people who are struggling to pay rent. A significant issue is the increasing unaffordability of homes and rents, with people being unable to secure tenancies, never mind ge...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
23 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I thank Willie Rennie for his intervention, but he will not be surprised that I disagree with him. The hundreds of tenants, renters and activists who gathered outside the Parliament last night would echo the concern that rogue landlords have got away with really poor practice ...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
23 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I thank Kevin Stewart for that intervention, but, again, we disagree. Renters tell us that, in their experience, properties that have been supported by build-to-rent schemes are high end and expensive. They do not sit well with the desire for mixed community living. From a Gr...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
23 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Thank you, Presiding Officer. Section 19 contains a helpful provision whereby, if there is a change of tenancy and there has been a rent increase in the previous 12 months, there cannot be another increase within the 12-month period. That vital provision means that changes of...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
04 Nov 2025
Financial Considerations When Leaving an Abusive Relationship
I refer colleagues to my entry in the register of members’ interests. Prior to my election, I worked for a rape crisis centre. I apologise—I should have said that earlier. I begin my closing speech by thanking the Social Justice and Social Security Committee members, clerks a...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
23 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will just take a wee moment to thank everyone on the legislation team for all their meticulous work, over many, many months, on this bill. I thank the cabinet secretary and her predecessors for their engagement on various issues. Most of all, I thank the organisations, the c...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
05 Sep 2024
Programme for Government 2024-25 (Eradicating Child Poverty)
In the debate and in the many briefings that were circulated before it, we have heard and have had shared with us many examples of the Christie commission’s findings of the generational effects of social and economic inequalities and of the imperative—which is more urgent than...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
02 Oct 2024
Housing Emergency
I have read that report. It depends on what we think counts as success. If it means making homes affordable for the majority of people, rent controls are a success. If it means making some rich people slightly less rich, I am not that bothered about that. In short, rent cont...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
20 Mar 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
On your points about amendments 1014 and 1070, you suggest that we need guidance rather than legislation to ensure that specific groups can get the support, housing and provisions that they need. Given that we know that particular groups have been so poorly served by our homel...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
07 May 2025
Programme for Government (Building the Best Future for Scotland)
We stand today at a crossroads. In the face of accelerating climate breakdown, deepening economic inequality and relentless attacks on the rights of the most marginalised, the choices that we make now will define our future. Our constituents, our communities and our country n...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
06 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Purpose-built student accommodation can, and does, provide an important source of accommodation for students, but the sector is, quite frankly, getting out of control. A basic room in one PBSA block—the Vita student block in Fountainbridge in Edinburgh—is £406 not a month, but...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
13 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The modelling that we have done, with the support of SPICe, has focused on the impact on renters and their ability to pay in order to have an affordable house—a roof over their heads. As I said last week, the Housing (Scotland) Bill was introduced as part of a collection of po...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
14 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I will take those in turn. There has been quite a lot of discussion about what energy efficiency would look like. We currently have the energy performance certificate ratings, but we expect those to change, which is why we have not defined those in the bill. The use of the aff...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
27 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
My amendment 190 addresses two important issues in relation to deposits. The first is the large deposits that so many landlords now require. As rents have skyrocketed, so have deposits. The average rent for a two-bedroom flat in Lothian is £1,358 a month. As landlords can ask ...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
13 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
There are three sets of amendments in this group, and I will take each of them in turn. The first set, which comprises amendment 158 and consequential amendments 148, 149, 159, 160 and 185, would allow the Scottish Government to introduce an emergency national rent control sys...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
13 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I acknowledge that the national rent cap does not take into account geographical variation, but that is the point—it is a national system that is designed for a situation in which there are external pressures that are extraordinary. I appreciate what the cabinet secretary sa...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
24 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Amendment 45 requires the Scottish ministers to reduce the maximum deposit allowed. As deposits are usually linked to rents, as rents have increased, so have deposits. The average rent for a two-bedroom flat in Lothian is £1,358 per month. As landlords can ask for up to two mo...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
08 Oct 2025
Illegal Immigration
No. People fleeing persecution, war and disaster do not lose their humanity when they cross a border. They are exercising their right to seek sanctuary, yet the Tory motion treats them as a problem to be stopped—as if people escaping conflict and trauma are somehow responsibl...
Maggie Chapman Green Chamber
08 Oct 2025
Illegal Immigration
Over the course of the debate, we have heard some of the same tired toxic rhetoric from the Conservatives—language that tries to divide, to sow fear and to cast desperate people as threats to our society. However, the truth remains: people who are seeking safety are not the ca...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
20 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I will focus my comments on my amendments in the group; I know that my colleague Ariane Burgess will speak to others. My amendments are designed to focus on the quality and efficiency of properties. We know that many landlords in the private sector provide high-quality homes,...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
19 Feb 2026
Public Services (Funding)
I am grateful to Alexander Burnett for the opportunity to speak in this debate for the communities of the north-east, and particularly the people of Aberdeenshire, who know all too well what it means to be asked to do more with less. However, he and I have quite different solu...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
29 Jan 2026
First Minister’s Question Time · More Homes Scotland (Affordable Homes)
::Given the recent publication of Shelter’s Dundee housing emergency action plan and the city’s well-rehearsed issues with reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete in residential properties, will the First Minister comment on the fact that Dundee is yet to declare a housing emer...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
24 Feb 2026
Subordinate Legislation
:Good morning, minister. Thank you for joining us and for what you have said so far. I have a couple of questions on how you intend to use the high-level action plan. I recognise that the plan is high level from the get-go. However, some significant and problematic areas of co...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
15 Jun 2022
Portfolio Question Time · Accessible Housing Need
The north-east has a significant number of military veterans, including disabled veterans, but does not have an adequate supply of accessible housing. I thank the minister for the detail that she has already provided in previous answers, but what steps can we take to ensure th...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
25 Apr 2023
Global Intergenerational Week 2023
I thank Christine Grahame for her motion, for securing the debate, and for her mischief. I should have done this earlier, but I now welcome Emma Roddick to her ministerial role. Global intergenerational week and the endeavours of Generations Working Together are probably more...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
04 Oct 2023
Pre-budget Scrutiny 2024-2025
Thank you. Stuart Black spoke earlier about the different areas of work within the regional economic partnership, and you mentioned housing as a key challenge. It is well known that housing is a challenge in the Highlands and Islands as well as in other rural areas. Where are...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
19 Dec 2023
Ukrainians in Scotland
Just a week ago, we were here discussing the human rights of asylum seekers in Scotland. Many colleagues highlighted the important contribution that asylum seekers and refugees have made and will continue to make to our communities. We know that those who fled Russia’s illegal...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
31 Oct 2024
Housing (Scotland) Bill
Scottish Greens do not believe that the current formulation will tackle the significant unaffordability of rents in many areas across the country. It does not give tenants in the private rented sector the security or stability that they have been promised. Can the minister exp...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
05 Nov 2024
One Parent Families Scotland (80th Anniversary)
I thank Karen Adam for her motion, for her opening remarks and for securing this important debate. I join her and other members in congratulating One Parent Families Scotland on its anniversary and its wonderful work. Any family can become a one-parent family. Some are planne...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
07 Jan 2025
Child Poverty
I am pleased to close this afternoon’s debate on this important issue on behalf of the Scottish Greens. As we have heard, the draft budget includes important provisions that are intended to help the thousands of children in poverty across Scotland. However, cold and hungry ch...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
20 Mar 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I thank everyone who has contributed to the debate on the group. I am grateful to Kevin Stewart for talking about the expert homelessness and rough sleeping action group, because that has set in motion a range of activities that have changed the system for the better for so ma...
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green Chamber
26 Mar 2025
Ending Destitution
Deputy Presiding Officer, “Being on the streets almost destroyed me. Walking, walking, with no sleep.” “I’d just sit on the bench by the river. It was minus 6, then minus 2 in the morning when the sun shone ... I’m not safe here.” “I can’t sleep, because ... tomorrow, what ...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
06 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The minister has mentioned that there are other rent guarantor schemes across Scotland. However, international students are quite often not allowed to access them. The minister has asked whether we can strengthen those existing avenues of support. Has he had conversations with...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
06 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Is the Scottish Government sympathetic to finding some solution for students who struggle to get guarantors, regardless of whether they are international students?
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
06 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Okay.
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
06 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I am sorry, minister. I want to ask a question about amendment 536, which is about deposits. I had thought that you might say a bit more about it.
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
06 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Okay. Apologies.
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
06 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The minister has concerns that a system that would restrict up-front rent payments would mean that international students were treated differently, but they are already treated differently by the sector. It is international students who are often asked for three, six or 12 mon...
Maggie Chapman Green Committee
06 May 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Is it the minister’s view that the PBSA sector should not be able to treat international students differently?
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 02 October 2024

02 Oct 2024 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Housing Emergency
Chapman, Maggie Green North East Scotland Watch on SPTV

The award-winning journalist Vicky Spratt recently published a book titled “Tenants: The People on the Frontline of Britain’s Housing Emergency”. She points out that behind the undeniable reality of a housing emergency lies a series of separate but connected emergencies: the instability of the private rented sector, unaffordable housing, the hoarding of property wealth, a lack of social housing and, of course, rising homelessness and all that that involves.

The housing crisis is inextricably linked to and bound up with wealth inequality, and to talk about wealth is to discuss the inequalities of class as well as gender, sexuality, race and other categories of marginalisation. If we are serious about tackling the housing emergency, we must tackle wealth inequality, yet we have heard little about that today.

The First Minister has made it very clear that the number 1 mission for his Government is to tackle child poverty. We have debated various aspects of how we should do that here before, but it has been quite noticeable that few members have linked child poverty to the housing emergency. Across the UK, there are 17.5 million adults without a safe, secure or stable home. When we include children, that number rises to 22 million people—that is one in three people.

The homelessness figures that were published last week show that women who are mothers are particularly affected. We know that 26 per cent of households assessed as homeless or threatened with homelessness contain children and that households with children spend, on average, the longest time in temporary accommodation. More than half spend more than six months there, and a quarter spend more than a year in temporary accommodation before their cases are closed. That period is more than three years for 4 per cent of households with children, compared to just 1 per cent of households without children, and 3 per cent of households with children are placed in bed-and-breakfast accommodation. As we have heard this afternoon, there were 10,110 children in temporary accommodation as of 31 March this year—the highest number in the time series.

If we are serious in our ambitions to tackle child poverty, we must consider how we tackle the housing emergency. We cannot just tweak the edges of our housing system. As Ben Macpherson said so passionately, sticking-plaster politics will not cut it. Our housing system is broken. It does not serve people. It views housing as a commodity or an investment, not a right or a home. That drives up prices and leaves many people—especially those on lower incomes—unable to afford homes. It channels investment away from affordable and social housing to speculative property investment. Without sufficient public housing, the private market dominates.

The housing market has failed to meet demand, particularly in rural areas, as Ariane Burgess and Rhoda Grant described. That has knock-on consequences for public service workers who cannot find homes where they need to be for work. The market has also failed to address environmental and quality issues. I am sure that we all have had constituents come to us with problems of cold, draughty, mould-ridden homes. Unlike Willie Rennie, I think that we should build homes that meet the standards that evidence tells us will keep people warm and healthy and so reduce the burden on other public services. That is prevention in action.

That is why the Housing (Scotland) Bill matters. It is a start at tackling some of the structural problems in our housing system, and rent controls are crucial to that. Sue Webber ascribed problems that we currently face to rent controls, and they do not even exist yet. Miles Briggs says that rent controls do not work. I presume that that is why cities across the world—from Paris, Berlin and Stockholm to New York, San Francisco and Montreal—all have rent controls. Incidentally, artists and musicians in Montreal credit rent controls for the thriving creative and cultural sector in that affordable city.

Rent controls matter because they tackle soaring rent prices that leave tenants vulnerable to exploitation by landlords. They also prevent tenants from being priced out of their homes and communities. They give tenants greater security and stability in their housing and reduce the power imbalance between landlords and renters. They contribute to long-term affordability and help to address inequality by ensuring that housing remains within the reach of people on lower incomes. They combat housing insecurity and, importantly, investment insecurity.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-14719, in the name of Anas Sarwar, on the housing emergency. I invite members who wish to speak in the de...
Anas Sarwar (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
Scotland is in the midst of a housing crisis the likes of which we have never seen before. After repeated calls, for months, for a housing emergency to be de...
Keith Brown (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Christine Grahame (Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale) (SNP) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Anas Sarwar Lab
Yes.
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
From which member is Mr Sarwar taking an intervention?
Anas Sarwar Lab
Keith Brown.
Christine Grahame SNP
Oh!
Keith Brown SNP
Good choice. Mr Sarwar will understand that part of what constitutes affordability—as well as rent and mortgage costs—is energy costs, which increased by 10 ...
Anas Sarwar Lab
I remind Mr Brown that the Office of Gas and Electricity Markets sets energy pricing in the country. That is why we have to reform our energy market, and tha...
Christine Grahame SNP
I certainly hope so. Does the member agree with me that the impact of Brexit on construction costs and on the availability of construction workers has had an...
Anas Sarwar Lab
Absolutely. That is why we have to reset the relationship with the European Union and fix the mess that is Brexit, which was left by the previous Tory Govern...
The Cabinet Secretary for Social Justice (Shirley-Anne Somerville) SNP
I would like to clarify something with Anas Sarwar—would he agree with me that the £90 million that we currently spend as a Government to mitigate the effect...
Anas Sarwar Lab
First, I will need to educate the cabinet secretary on the difference between revenue and capital, because she clearly does not understand that. Secondly, we...
The Minister for Employment and Investment (Tom Arthur) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Anas Sarwar Lab
I have taken three or four interventions already. Accepting that the housing emergency exists is only the first step in ending the crisis. We need new ideas...
The Minister for Housing (Paul McLennan) SNP
I welcome the debate. First, I will address one of Mr Sarwar’s main points. He talked about new ideas, but he did not have any new ideas whatsoever, and he d...
Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab) Lab
The minister and I have been in the same meetings. Is he seriously telling me that the industry is not naming the Housing (Scotland) Bill as the single bigge...
Paul McLennan SNP
First, I have been in a number of meetings with Daniel Johnson. One of the key things that we have said is that we would introduce amendments to the bill, an...
Craig Hoy (South Scotland) (Con) Con
Will the minister will take an intervention?
Paul McLennan SNP
I will.
Craig Hoy Con
The minister said that he is taking the issue seriously and that he is making progress, yet, in his constituency, 353 people were in temporary accommodation ...
Paul McLennan SNP
I am not going to take any lessons in financial management from the member. The biggest cut that we had last year was a 9 per cent capital cut from the UK Go...
Paul Sweeney (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
Will the minister take an intervention?
Ben Macpherson (Edinburgh Northern and Leith) (SNP) SNP
Will the minister give way?
Paul McLennan SNP
I have already taken a number of interventions, so I am struggling for time. The Government’s actions on homelessness are consistently undermined when we ar...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Thank you, minister. I call Miles Briggs to speak to and move amendment S6M-14719.2. 15:16
Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con) Con
I thank the Labour Party for using its debating time to debate the motion on the housing emergency. I also thank the organisations that have provided helpful...
Paul McLennan SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Miles Briggs Con
I will if I can get some time back.