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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.
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Chamber
28 Apr 2005
Criminal Justice Services
The Scottish Executive is to be congratulated on its in-depth examination of the criminal justice system and the resulting proposed reforms. No one can argue against the aim of creating a safer and more just society or of reducing reoffending. The task is on a huge scale and e...
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Chamber
11 Feb 2010
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System
I am pleased that we have had this debate on the Equal Opportunities Committee's report on female offenders in the criminal justice system, and I am particularly pleased that the topic of female offenders has moved up the political agenda. Members across the chamber seem to ag...
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Chamber
13 Jan 2005
Victims and Witnesses
I welcome the opportunity to speak in the debate and to talk about the fundamental reforms that the Executive has made, and continues to make, to the criminal justice system. I also welcome the opportunity in this more general debate to consider the bigger picture rather than ...
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Committee
08 Nov 2006
Criminal Proceedings etc (Reform) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Amendment 52 seeks to remove from the bill proposed new section 166B of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995. This is an important opportunity to clarify the proposed new section, which it seems would introduce a fundamental change in criminal procedure by allowing a cha...
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Chamber
14 Sep 2006
Criminal Proceedings etc (Reform) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I am pleased to speak in this debate on the bill. I will start by reiterating what many speakers have said, even if only implicitly.The extent of the reform of the justice system that the Executive proposes is truly remarkable. It is to be congratulated on its proposals, which...
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Committee
19 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
Good morning. Some of your recommendations have been accepted, and it sounds as though progress has been made, given that gender equality schemes have been in place in the UK for more than a year. The idea of justice being gender specific is really important because, too often...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
19 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
It does. I am interested in what you said about prostitution. We asked about that, but it is seemingly not dealt with in Cornton Vale. I can understand that, given the lack of resources, but there is a cost to society of not addressing such issues.My other question is about da...
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Committee
07 Jan 2004
Criminal Procedure (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
The bill proposes changes to section 196 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 in relation to the sentence following a guilty plea. Will you outline to the committee your experience of the way in which the existing provisions have operated? For example, does the existe...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
14 Jan 2004
Criminal Procedure (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I have some questions about witness non-attendance. Does the Executive have any research evidence on the extent to which non-appearance by witnesses is a serious problem in criminal courts?
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Committee
24 May 2006
Criminal Proceedings etc (Reform) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Several witnesses think that the bail system would be strengthened if the accused had to agree to the bail conditions formally, perhaps by signing a printed list of bail conditions. Do you think that there would be material advantage to the criminal justice system in taking th...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
24 May 2006
Criminal Proceedings etc (Reform) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Several witnesses think that the bail system would be strengthened if the accused had to agree formally to the bail conditions—perhaps by signing the printed list of conditions. Would taking that extra step lead to a material advantage for the criminal justice system?
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
12 Sep 2006
Scottish Criminal Record Office
You are reported to have made a public statement about the case during a lecture to the Howard League for Penal Reform at the Playfair Library in the Old College at the University of Edinburgh on Tuesday 9 February 2002. Allegedly, you praised the BBC programme "Frontline Scot...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
08 Nov 2006
Criminal Proceedings etc (Reform) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
What concerns the committee is the similarity with the issues of reluctant and obstructive witnesses. There will be accused who deliberately do not turn up and who talk to their co-accused then take turns not to turn up, and there will be accused who do not turn up because the...
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Chamber
18 Mar 2009
Offences<br />(Aggravation by Prejudice) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I am pleased to speak in support of the general principles of the Offences (Aggravation by Prejudice) (Scotland) Bill at stage 1. I hope that the bill will signal that Scottish society takes seriously and condemns incidents motivated by malice and prejudice, and that it will h...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
23 Oct 2007
LGBT Hearts and Minds Agenda
We will address education in more detail later. I had planned to ask whether there are any remaining areas of legislation in which we still need to make progress, but I am sure you agree that there are. However, progress seems to have been made.The United Kingdom Secretary of ...
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Committee
22 Apr 2008
Criminal Justice System<br />(Female Offenders)
The specialist services are not available because there are fewer women offenders. The way to solve that, obviously, is not to have more women offenders. Why are the services not available? Does it come down to cost? Would a cost benefit analysis really show that it was cost e...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
22 Apr 2008
Criminal Justice System<br />(Female Offenders)
It seems to me—it must seem the same to you—that some of the evidence has been known about for a considerable time. It would be good if it were known about more generally. You mentioned the gender duty as a hook that could be used. How can we make a difference, apart from by r...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
22 Apr 2008
Criminal Justice System<br />(Female Offenders)
Those comments are useful.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
22 Apr 2008
Criminal Justice System<br />(Female Offenders)
There are few female judges.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
22 Apr 2008
Criminal Justice System<br />(Female Offenders)
Does the organisation of the prison service reflect the particular needs and backgrounds of female offenders, or does it reflect a service that was, historically, designed for male offenders? While I was listening to the discussion, it occurred to me that the system might be a...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
22 Apr 2008
Criminal Justice System<br />(Female Offenders)
I was going to ask the previous panel about the idea of a chaotic lifestyle. Will you tease that out for me? There is a tension if women do not turn up to court because they are supporting children. We explain behaviour by saying that someone has a chaotic lifestyle, and yet w...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
22 Apr 2008
Criminal Justice System<br />(Female Offenders)
My general question is about the organisation of the Scottish Prison Service. Does it reflect—indeed, is it able to reflect—the particular needs and backgrounds of female offenders or the fact that the service was historically designed for male offenders and, perhaps, continue...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
22 Apr 2008
Criminal Justice System<br />(Female Offenders)
It was suggested that a modular approach that can be continued by agencies outside prison, following release, is more helpful for short-term prisoners. Would it be a good idea to apply to male prisoners the good practice that has been developed for women prisoners in Cornton V...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
22 Apr 2008
Criminal Justice System<br />(Female Offenders)
I suggest that programmes should be transferred mainly from Cornton Vale to other prisons, rather than the other way around, in order to break down the undeniable machismo in such environments.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
04 Nov 2008
Offences (Aggravation by Prejudice) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I have a question about how the bill might be amended. However, this evidence session is an opportunity for the three organisations present to call for a real commitment for action to be taken soon, whether in the Offences (Aggravation by Prejudice) (Scotland) Bill, the Sexual...
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Committee
10 Feb 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
I want to return to the profile of women in prison. We have already taken evidence on this, but I wonder whether the witnesses would like to add to that evidence. I appreciate that there are issues in all prisons, but some things are more of an issue in Cornton Vale. That seem...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
10 Feb 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
When we visited Cornton Vale, we saw one of the cells that had been adapted for prisoners with disabilities. Can you give us an idea of how the Scottish Prison Service copes with offenders who have disabilities?
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
10 Feb 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
Given the various duties that the Government has to fulfil, I am not reassured to learn that although the situation is bad at Cornton Vale, it is even worse everywhere else. There is a concern about prisoners with disabilities.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
10 Feb 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
I turn to the support that is available for women offenders on release—throughcare, I guess. How available is support and how effective is it? I guess that that links into a lot of what has already been said.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
10 Feb 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
I want to ask about that statutory group. The fact that all those women are centralised in Cornton Vale must add to the difficulties. Personally, I would not call an annual visit or annual case conference keeping in touch—that is quite shocking—but visiting a prisoner in Cornt...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
10 Feb 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
Do all prisoners face similar problems, given that there are smaller numbers of women in that position?
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
10 Feb 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
I just wondered whether, to put it bluntly, the programmes are mainly for men and are designed with men in mind. I suggest that trying to keep a mother in touch with her children—if she is the primary carer—is a much bigger problem than trying to keep someone who is not the pr...
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
We are all aware that hard statistics are necessary to ensure that we secure resources. Is it possible to measure objectively whether your services have, over time, improved inmates' behaviour or attitudes upon release compared with their behaviour or attitudes on admission?
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
To find out whether there was a long-term effect, you would have to do follow-up work on the same women.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
Yes, it is difficult.Are you unable to provide any services that would benefit the inmates?
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
What about the addiction side?
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
The committee has been told that many inmates, such as short-term and untried prisoners or women on remand, have limited or no access to services at Cornton Vale. Given the length of their sentences and the obvious pressure on prison resources, is it realistic to expect that s...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
I find it quite confusing that you cannot do much with short-term prisoners. I totally understand what you are saying about people who are on remand or untried and how they might not get a prison sentence, but if short term means up to four years, that could mean someone being...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
Thank you.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
With regard to your comments on improving information flow, is this simply an information technology problem that could be sorted out by putting in a new system, which would obviously cost money, or is the issue more fundamental? I am interested, for example, in the pilot in T...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
A layperson would be surprised to learn that someone who was on continuing medication did not get access to that medication when they were in a police cell and, even if that were sorted out, did not get access to it in prison until they had been assessed and diagnosed again. M...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
That is a massive problem. The committee has not touched on it to a great extent, but perhaps we should consider it in a bit more depth. When we visited Cornton Vale, we had a look at one of the cells that was adapted for prisoners with disabilities, and I was concerned about ...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
I want to follow up what Hugh O'Donnell said. The fundamental point is that a person needs good oral communication skills if they are to take part in all the rest of the therapies. If someone is trying to express their needs, but they have difficulties with literacy, numeracy ...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
Is it possible to measure objectively whether your services have, over time, improved inmates' behaviour or attitudes upon release compared with their behaviour or attitudes on admission?
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
I am concerned by what you said about the postcode lottery that means that some women have moved house so that they can access services. Can the committee have more information about such service gaps?
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
21 Apr 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
It would be useful to have information on that.
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Committee
05 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
You paint a fairly gloomy picture. I visited Cornton Vale when you were governor. It is worrying if overcrowding is making the situation worse. We will talk about alternatives to Cornton Vale later.You made an important point about the improvement in health information exchang...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
05 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
There seems to be consensus here, which should be good but is in fact depressing. If there is consensus about how good the 218 centre is, why do we not have another one or even plans for another one? We seem to agree that prisons are harmful for women offenders who are not a d...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
05 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
I think that we agree, too, that we need proper funding for community placements and that there are insufficient placements for women.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
05 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
I want to pursue that point. We do not want to go back to having small units that are not properly resourced, but I am interested in the comments about relationship building being key and it being really important for women to have a relationship with one person. If we do that...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
05 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
There are questions about the prison's location. It is in the north, but it is in the extreme north-east. That is a long distance even for someone from Dundee to travel.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
05 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
Do you wish to add anything, Dr McLellan?
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
05 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
My question is mainly for Dr Loucks. Scotland's Commissioner for Children and Young People has asked for more attention to be paid to how children are affected by the imprisonment of women. What are the most significant barriers to considering the impact on children when women...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
05 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
That sounds good.Your submission refers to the lack of family addiction programmes in Scotland. What are the benefits of such programmes?
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
05 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
I want to talk about alternatives to Cornton Vale. The 218 centre has been mentioned. I get the feeling that everyone who has given evidence thinks that the centre, which is being evaluated, does good work. Everyone seems to agree that we should replicate that elsewhere. Howev...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
19 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
It was about there being gender-specific justice, as opposed to gender-neutral justice, which is what you have been talking about.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
19 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
We talk about the cost of prison, which is perhaps unquantifiable, but the cost to women, men, their families and the public is massive.
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
19 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
The committee inquiry's remit is about how much prison helps to prevent women from reoffending. I am glad to hear that people are in discussion with Cornton Vale in that regard. There is a growing awareness among everybody that connections need to be made with services while p...
Marlyn Glen: Lab Committee
19 May 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
It is good to hear positive feedback on aspects of your work that are underpinned with data. To what extent is that data shared with other local authorities?
Marlyn Glen (North East Scotland) (Lab): Lab Committee
23 Jun 2009
Female Offenders in the Criminal Justice System Inquiry
The committee welcomes the developments in relation to domestic abuse and the good intentions that exist. However, we have taken a great deal of evidence and have discovered that women offenders are never asked whether they are victims of domestic abuse, although they are aske...
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Chamber

Plenary, 28 Apr 2005

28 Apr 2005 · S2 · Plenary
Item of business
Criminal Justice Services
Glen, Marlyn Lab North East Scotland Watch on SPTV
The Scottish Executive is to be congratulated on its in-depth examination of the criminal justice system and the resulting proposed reforms. No one can argue against the aim of creating a safer and more just society or of reducing reoffending. The task is on a huge scale and even more than reform of the criminal justice system is needed to make those changes, because the pattern of offending in our society correlates closely with offenders' family histories and social backgrounds. I agree with some of the points that previous speakers have made. Deprivation and a family history of offending drastically increase a person's chances of becoming an offender.

We need to make our society more socially just for children, to shield them not just from being victims of crime but from growing into criminals. I welcome the approach of closing the opportunity gap, which aims to prevent individuals or families from falling into poverty, to provide routes out of poverty for individuals or families and to sustain individuals or families in a lifestyle free from poverty.

I have seen how difficult it can be for the young to find their way in life, and I welcome schemes that provide them with support. However, there is concern about what happens when people have committed crimes and fallen into the system. We must work to tackle our national recidivism rates. I welcome the extra investment in treatment services, because we must help to treat drug addiction, for example, and provide support to prevent people from falling into patterns of offending. We need to examine our prisons closely and to look at society in general.

I support the prison visiting committees and praise their work in providing one of the few safeguards for prisoners' civil rights while they are in prison. That is not to detract from the work that is done by inspectors of prisons or from our efforts to visit prisons and examine their regimes; I look forward to next month's debate on the effectiveness of rehabilitation in prisons. However, our visits are organised and accompanied, sometimes not just by prison officers and governors but by representatives of the Scottish Prison Service, such as the chief executive. Although we can and do gather a great deal of information, a different perspective is gained by independent prison visitors. I look forward to their position being strengthened while their role is modernised.

Recently, publicity has surrounded the report of the chief inspector of prisons on Kilmarnock prison. The media have picked up the story as being about children in adult prisons. Society should be shocked not just by where young people are locked up, but by the fact that it is considered necessary to lock them up. There is a realisation that young people offend and that the problem must be dealt with. However, there is a distinct need for us to concentrate our efforts on supporting projects that aim to change behaviour at the earliest possible age. I refer to projects such as the Barnardo's bridge project in Dundee and Angus, one of whose slogans is

"Giving children back their future".

The project deals with young people who have been recognised as displaying inappropriate sexual behaviour, but who will be robbed of their future unless help is given to them. If we are to concentrate our thinking on young people such as those whom the bridge project helps, we must stop doling out blame and expecting that punishment alone will reduce reoffending.

What happens after prison? People—I am still concentrating mainly on young people—can lose everything after just a brief spell in prison, even for minor offences. If they have lost a tenancy and have no supportive family, everything in their house may be cleared out and thrown into a skip, including even school certificates and family photographs. That means that people come out of prison to nothing at all. How easy would any of us find it to start from scratch, probably only on benefits? If we do not spend money on supporting accommodation and job opportunities for ex-offenders, we will have to spend even more on secure accommodation and prisons. Perhaps if people were given more support and their lives were more just during their troubled childhoods, offending could be drastically reduced.

It is common for people to call for early intervention, and I welcome the minister's support for that approach in relation to addiction. Early intervention must underpin all our thinking about the justice system and other parts of government. We should not look at justice work in isolation. We need to include not just the usual parts of the system, such as criminal justice social workers and outside agencies, but social workers, youth workers and education and health workers in the drive for joint working. I welcome the attention that the Minister for Justice and the Deputy Minister for Justice are giving to the debate, but I underline the need for different ministers to work together to find and fund solutions that will halt the vicious circle of families perpetuating a culture in which offending continues through the generations.

I want to recommend some television viewing. I will not describe the programme, but I suggest that members watch "Supernanny", which is not about crime but about changing behaviour, with some spectacular results.

I will mention some of the legislative changes that are in train. We are strengthening the law to protect children from predatory sex offenders who seek to use the internet to facilitate their activities, and we are considering the Prohibition of Female Genital Mutilation (Scotland) Bill, which will protect girls from the practice of genital mutilation. I welcome the frank discussions on such issues that have taken place in the Justice 1 Committee and the Equal Opportunities Committee. It is high time that we provided such protection for children and young people, who have often suffered in silence, and I am thankful that the Executive is facing up to and acting on those matters. As society changes and the use of modern technologies increases, our law must keep up to date with new and different ways of offending. The process is on-going and requires vigilance from the Executive. I support the criminal justice plan.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Murray Tosh): Con
The next item of business is a debate on motion S2M-2736, in the name of Cathy Jamieson, on supporting safer, stronger communities and the reform of Scotland...
The Minister for Justice (Cathy Jamieson): Lab
Thank you, Presiding Officer—I was just making sure that the Minister for Health and Community Care had taken all his worldly goods with him. I am pleased to...
Stewart Stevenson (Banff and Buchan) (SNP): SNP
I welcome the Executive's proposal to bring an end to the automatic release of all sex offenders. However, will that measure apply to all sex offenders—in ot...
Cathy Jamieson: Lab
Clearly, the focus in the first instance is on those people who have been convicted of a sexual offence. I was about to move on to address that issue more fu...
Miss Annabel Goldie (West of Scotland) (Con): Con
I am comforted to hear that the minister has confidence in drug treatment and testing orders. Does she accept that, if we introduce those orders at district ...
Cathy Jamieson: Lab
As I outlined, we are examining the whole summary justice system, so I will not make a commitment at this time. However, we believe that early intervention i...
Stewart Stevenson rose— SNP
Cathy Jamieson: Lab
I am sorry, but I have to move on.Local agencies are determined to make a stand against the mindless, abusive and disruptive behaviour that undermines the fa...
Mr Kenny MacAskill (Lothians) (SNP): SNP
The Scottish National Party fully supports the motion and the minister's words. It is clear that there is a cultural malaise in Scotland that manifests itsel...
Miss Goldie: Con
Mr MacAskill might have noted that the amendment is verbatim a motion on which my party led a debate in December, when no election was in sight.
Mr MacAskill: SNP
The motion is an example of the sloganising that we have had from the Tories since the Parliament was formed without any sensible attempt to move forward.The...
Gordon Jackson (Glasgow Govan) (Lab): Lab
Like me, would the member say that we should not imprison people who have defaulted on fine payments?
Mr MacAskill: SNP
It is utterly ludicrous that we have such a large number of people, particularly women in places such as Cornton Vale, who are imprisoned—and, in some cases,...
Margaret Mitchell (Central Scotland) (Con): Con
Will the member give way?
Mr MacAskill: SNP
I have already taken two interventions.On automatic release, we welcomed the proposals with regard to sex offenders by the Executive and take cognisance of t...
Miss Annabel Goldie (West of Scotland) (Con): Con
I support the rubric to the motion, "Supporting safer, stronger communities". There is not a scintilla of difference between the minister and me in relation ...
Cathy Jamieson: Lab
I recognise that Annabel Goldie's party initiated that debate, but does she accept that the question is not one of debating a document on a one-off occasion?...
Miss Goldie: Con
We are not going to agree on the mechanics of the process, but if the proposal is as radical as the Executive suggests, it would have been timely for the Exe...
Mrs Mary Mulligan (Linlithgow) (Lab): Lab
When Labour came to power in 1997, there were 14,789 police officers in Scotland. Today, there are more than 16,000. It is clear to me that the Labour-led Ex...
Miss Goldie: Con
That might be clear to the member but it is certainly not clear to the public. Those additional officers are not appearing in the communities where members o...
Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab): Lab
Will the member take an intervention?
Miss Goldie: Con
No. I have been generous.When a prison sentence is appropriate, the term that is imposed should be the term that is served. The Executive does not agree with...
Jeremy Purvis (Tweeddale, Ettrick and Lauderdale) (LD): LD
The proposed Letwin-Monteith shadow budget—if we wish to call it that—in the election campaign points to £745 million-worth of savings, which are part of the...
Miss Goldie: Con
The member is patently misrepresenting the situation, although I accept that he is doing so inadvertently. My party has pledged that in government at Westmin...
Jeremy Purvis: LD
Only last week, Miss Goldie's colleague, the Conservative party's education spokesman, denied that the Conservatives wanted to cut £175 million from the educ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer: Con
Before we move to the open debate, I inform members that there are a considerable number of back benchers whom I want to call, so I will keep members to a st...
Pauline McNeill (Glasgow Kelvin) (Lab): Lab
I begin by putting on record my support for the Executive's approach to the reform of the criminal justice system. Prior to the Parliament, the subject did n...
Miss Goldie: Con
Does the member agree that it is worrying that three out of four incidents of criminal activity are not reported? Does she accept that that reflects a huge n...
Pauline McNeill: Lab
From time immemorial, academics have argued over what the real statistics are. If we wanted to examine what is not being reported, we would have to go back 5...
Mr Bruce McFee (West of Scotland) (SNP): SNP
As usual, there are many differing views in the chamber. One thing, though, is clear: the present system of prison is not working as it should do and it is n...