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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
27 Jan 2021
Prioritising Covid-19 Vaccination and Economic Recovery
As we gather today for this important debate, it is perhaps fitting to acknowledge the sombre fact that, earlier this week, we learned that deaths from coronavirus in the United Kingdom have surpassed the 100,000 mark. Over the past 10 months of this terrible pandemic, we have...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
23 Jun 2021
National Gaelic Language Plan
I am very grateful to Alasdair Allan for securing the debate, especially this early in the new session of Parliament, which highlights the urgent need to address many of the issues that he raised and that others will no doubt raise. In the previous session, several MSPs, of a...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
27 Oct 2021
Ferry Services
Like others, I am grateful to Jamie Halcro Johnston for securing debating time on this exceptionally important issue. I acknowledge the contributions that have been made by colleagues across the chamber. There is obviously a lot of commonality in what we are saying. For many,...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
26 Apr 2017
Carers and Social Care
This has been an extremely interesting debate on a significant and important matter, so I am delighted to contribute to it. I join other members in paying tribute to those who work in the social care sector and those who care for loved ones, often unpaid and thanklessly, becau...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
11 Dec 2018
Fisheries Negotiations
Let me quote the Prime Minister herself. She said: “We would become an independent coastal ?state, with control over our waters so that our fishermen get a fairer share of the fish in our waters. We have firmly rejected a link between access to our waters and access to market...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
16 Mar 2023
Bail and Release from Custody (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I would love to take an intervention from Mr Johnson, but I do not have time, because I have only five minutes. The backlog is objectionable because it will lead to unnecessary suffering for victims and their families, and we must take action to ensure that the court system r...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
23 Nov 2016
Year of the Dad
For many reasons—not least because I am the father of three young children—I am more than happy to support Bob Doris’s motion today and the year of the dad campaign in general. Recently, my six-year-old son had to fill in a school questionnaire about his dad’s appearance. In t...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
18 Apr 2017
Preventative Health Agenda
I am delighted to open for the Scottish Conservatives in this Health and Sport Committee debate on preventative spending. It raises issues that require urgent attention as we consider the health of Scotland’s population and the consequences that that has for our NHS—not just i...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
02 Sep 2020
Programme for Government 2020-21
The referendum was meant to be once in a generation. The lack of appetite for another referendum is clear for everyone to see. A poll that was published only last month showed a second independence referendum being seventh in people’s list of top priorities. If there was ever...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
08 Sep 2021
Programme for Government 2021-22
The First Minister describes her Government’s new partnership with the Scottish Greens as “genuinely ground-breaking” and a new and better “way of doing politics”, and she argues that it provides a “strong foundation” for strong and decisive action. However, yesterday’s progra...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
29 Nov 2022
Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill
No. I have already taken an intervention. Today’s debate is contrary to the principle of proper and objective scrutiny by the Parliament. By holding the debate now, the entire scrutiny process has been undermined. What is the purpose of our committee continuing to look at ...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
14 Jun 2023
Caledonian MacBrayne Services (Resilience Fund)
I also begin by welcoming Fiona Hyslop to her role as transport minister. She undoubtedly comes into that position with significant experience in Government, which is desperately needed at this time. One of the problems has been that no transport minister has been in place lon...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
21 Nov 2023
Situation in the Middle East
I begin in the spirit of the consensus that the First Minister achieved in his speech, during what is unequivocally a desperate and tragic situation. It is worth stating at the outset that there are broad areas of common agreement within the Scottish Parliament—more than many ...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
26 May 2016
Taking Scotland Forward
Although I am an advocate by profession, as an undergraduate I studied history, and I will begin with a brief foray into the past. Edinburgh has seen many invasions, as occupying forces have swept in and out of the city. One such invasion famously occurred in the autumn of 17...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
21 Sep 2016
NHS Staffing
No, the Government is not doing enough, and I will come on to GPs in a moment. Let us stick with the RCN, which has said several times: “without changes to the way health services are delivered, there’s a risk that Scotland could return to the ... ‘boom and bust’ years, whe...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
24 Jan 2017
World Cancer Day
I open by thanking Cancer Research UK for providing the impetus for this debate about world cancer day, which takes place a week from next Saturday, on 4 February 2017. Given the nature of cancer, and the importance that society places on fundraising to find cures and to supp...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
22 Feb 2017
Motor Neurone Disease (Gordon’s Fightback Campaign)
It is a special honour to take part in this debate and, at the outset, I inform members that the Scottish Conservatives will support the Government motion and the Labour amendment. I start in the same vein as Shona Robison and Kezia Dugdale by paying tribute to Gordon Aikman,...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
21 Mar 2017
Independence Referendum
I am grateful to the member for that intervention. I evoked Margaret Thatcher because the First Minister evoked Margaret Thatcher in her column for the Daily Record just the other day. For years, we have put up with SNP members stating that they alone speak for Scotland. With...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
06 Jun 2017
Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service
I begin by referring Parliament to my entry in the register of members’ interests as a practising member of the Faculty of Advocates. I would like to pick up on a point that was made by Claire Baker. Despite the fact that this is a committee debate, and despite the fact that ...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
21 Jun 2017
Motor Neurone Disease Global Awareness Day
I am delighted to contribute to the debate and I thank Christina McKelvie for bringing it to the chamber. Although we debated issues around motor neurone disease back in February, when the Parliament commemorated the life and achievements of Gordon Aikman, it is crucial that w...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
05 Oct 2017
Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I commend the committee’s report and the convener’s comments, which we have just heard. The Scottish Conservatives will support the Government’s motion, and I want to reiterate many of the points that the convener has already made. However, before I do so, I feel it necessary...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
01 Nov 2017
Health
No—I have already taken an intervention and I have limited time. Instead of talking about challenges and difficulties to overcome, will the SNP accept the sheer enormity of the problem at hand? I want to turn to some of the important remarks that members from across the cham...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
17 Jan 2018
Public Services
I am sorry, but I do not have time. That is our message, and we will continue to stand by it. We have focused on investment in the NHS, in schools and in transport, but we should not forget one area that has taken a battering: local government. Local councils have been hit ti...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
07 Mar 2018
UK Withdrawal from the European Union (Legal Continuity) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I am sorry, but I do not have the time. Labour and the Liberal Democrats might piously express concern today, but they voted for the bill and for the timetable. We have also previously heard complaints from the SNP about not having enough time to read the Brexit impact papers...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
17 Apr 2018
Air Quality
I refer members to my entry in the register of members’ interests, and to the fact that I am a non-executive director of Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust, which is a company that has investments in electric vehicles, fuel-cell companies and automobiles. I am delighted to ...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
04 Apr 2019
Transport (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I am grateful to be able to contribute to this stage 1 debate, particularly given that many people who live in the Highlands and Islands see public transport as a lifeline service, not just as an alternative to other modes of travel. Indeed, many rural and remote communities r...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
16 May 2019
Brexit (Impact on Food and Drink)
I do not have time, I am afraid. What grates for members on the Conservative benches is that one of the greatest threats to the growth of the food and drink sector is the SNP’s recent announcements relating to a second independence referendum. That is the reality. Independen...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
07 Nov 2019
Referendums (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Usually, I welcome the opportunity to speak in this chamber, especially on legislation and matters that will have a meaningful impact on the lives of the people whom we serve, as Colin Beattie said. Unfortunately, I cannot do that today, because the bill does not address those...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
15 Sep 2020
Migration and Care Workers
I do not agree that it is broken, but I think that it is in need of change and we need to review it. I am glad that the member intervened, because I remember that, when he was convener of the Health and Sport Committee, I had one of the most salutary moments that I have had as...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
15 Sep 2020
Migration and Care Workers
No, I will not—sorry. The minister will be able to close for his party. Conservative members remain willing to meet local care operators and, most important, local carers to listen to their views and concerns and to act appropriately, where there is a need to do so. Many in...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
04 Nov 2020
Care Homes
The cabinet secretary mentioned the guidance on 26 March. That guidance also stated that individuals who were being discharged from hospital did not routinely need confirmation of a negative Covid-19 test. We cannot pick selectively from the guidance, despite its terms. Yeste...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
19 Nov 2020
Coronavirus (Scotland’s Strategic Approach)
As I said, the Parliament agreed the process of emergency legislation in spring this year. Two committees of Parliament will have the opportunity to interrogate that legislation and the whole chamber will have an opportunity to vote on it. We welcome news of further financial...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
11 Feb 2021
Coronavirus Acts Report
I thank the cabinet secretary for prior sight of his statement. On behalf of the Scottish Conservatives, I welcome the fifth report on the coronavirus acts, which has been published today. I also emphasise the importance of the Government reporting regularly under the legislat...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
10 Mar 2021
University of St Andrews (Degrees in Medicine and Dentistry) Bill: Stage 3
I welcome the opportunity to open for the Scottish Conservatives in the stage 3 debate on the University of St Andrews (Degrees in Medicine and Dentistry) Bill. I confirm, of course, that the Scottish Conservatives will support the bill at decision time. I thank my colleagues ...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
06 Oct 2021
Rest and Be Thankful
I thank members from across the Parliament who have supported my motion for debate and those who will speak in the debate. I particularly welcome the cross-party effort on this important issue from MSPs past and present, including my old adversary Mike Russell, who I know was ...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
27 Apr 2022
United Kingdom Shared Prosperity Fund
Here we are, for the third time in less than a year, debating the investment that is going to Scotland’s communities via the UK’s shared prosperity fund. For the third time, the SNP has manufactured yet another row to complain about that. As surely as night follows day, an ...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
27 Sep 2022
Scotland’s Population
I acknowledge the problem, but it is worth noting that the UK Government took action in 2018, and that that action continues. I turn to the Scottish Government, which indicated in its national strategy for economic transformation that it wanted to target inward migration from...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
02 Feb 2023
ME Services
I thank Clare Adamson for her intervention, and I am very glad that she made that point. I completely agree that there needs to be a consistent approach and that we must remember young people in this discussion. In a moment, I will talk about a young person who had ME at the a...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
23 Feb 2023
Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill
I refer to my entry in the register of members’ interests. I am a member of the Faculty of Advocates. This is, of course, the second time that I have risen to speak in a Scottish Government debate on the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill—this time for an LCM debate...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
14 Nov 2023
Migration to Scotland: Scottish Government Proposals
No. I have already taken several. The reasons for that are many. It might be because Scotland is the highest-taxed part of the UK, with anyone who earns more than £27,850 in Scotland paying more in income tax than someone earning the same elsewhere in the UK. It might be beca...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
07 Jun 2016
Taking Scotland Forward: Health
Thank you, Presiding Officer. I reiterate my congratulations to Shona Robison on her reappointment as health secretary, and I welcome the other members of her team. I am delighted and humbled to have been appointed shadow Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport. The portfolio...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
21 Sep 2016
NHS Staffing
I am delighted to open this afternoon’s debate on staffing in Scotland’s health and social care services. I begin with a tribute to the incredible work that dedicated staff in our national health service and social care sector carry out on a daily basis. It can be difficult w...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
06 Oct 2016
Island Health Boards
I thank Liam McArthur for bringing the debate to the chamber. I commend him for his efforts not just in highlighting concerns about health services in his Orkney constituency but in acting as a champion for the islands. I signed his motion and I support the principles that it ...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
24 Nov 2016
Island Communities (Support)
The board of HIE is what is important; it is that which gives voice to local people on the ground. It is ironic for the Scottish Government to hold a debate that is entitled “Supporting and Strengthening Scotland’s Island Communities” on the very day after it has announced its...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
06 Dec 2016
Renewables
Sorry—I do not have time. In a different manner, the aluminium smelter in Fort William—much in the news recently—is of course also a massive hydro power station. As a child, I recall looking at the two massive pipes running down the side of Ben Nevis towards the smelter and a...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
18 Jan 2017
Highlands and Islands Enterprise
At the outset of the debate, it is worth casting our minds back some 50 or so years to 1965, when Highlands and Islands Enterprise’s predecessor, the Highlands and Islands Development Board, was set up. At that time, the Highlander was described as “the man on Scotland’s cons...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
18 Jan 2017
Highlands and Islands Enterprise
I do not have time. The minister will have time to respond in his speech. The narrative of centralisation is fixed and unrelenting. A Convention of Scottish Local Authorities report in 2014 described Scotland as the “most centralised country in Europe.” It is no wonder tha...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
25 Jan 2017
Draft Budget 2017-18
I am sorry, but I do not have time. If members of the Government party do not like to hear that, they should not take my word for it, but should listen to the Institute for Fiscal Studies, which has said that “the Scottish government has chosen to protect the NHS in Scotland...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Committee
07 Feb 2017
Child Protection in Sport
Although we have spent a lot of time on child protection, PVG checks and similar processes—and quite rightly so—I want to ask you about a range of conduct that is much less serious but which it is still important to monitor. It all comes back to the question of culture and ...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
25 Apr 2017
Topical Question Time · Queen Elizabeth University Hospital (Staff)
The cabinet secretary will be aware that GMB Scotland recently commented that, “Due to staff shortages and extra demands that are being placed on them, many hard working hospital staff are struggling to cope and sadly for many of them they need to take time off to recover.” ...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
10 May 2017
National Health Service Pay
The debate is about the priorities and choices for our national health service. Do we want a strong NHS that is able to cope with rising demand, an ageing population and the pressures that are placed on its staff, or must we have an NHS that is unable to handle the heat, with ...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
10 May 2017
National Health Service Pay
I want to carry on. We are going to be 820-odd GPs short by 2021, many NHS staff are close to retirement and those who are left are overworked and under immense pressure. The NHS workforce in Scotland is in crisis due to nearly a decade of SNP mismanagement, so let us not hea...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
10 May 2017
National Health Service Pay
The point that I make to Mr Findlay is that he has given no details of how much it will cost. How is it going to be funded? UK Labour has estimated that every 1 per cent extra on pay will cost the NHS £350 million. However, other figures suggest that the cost could be higher. ...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
17 May 2017
Portfolio Question Time · Scottish Church Census 2016
I thank the cabinet secretary for her answer. She will be aware that the report suggests that Christian denominations are seeing falling church attendances. Given the importance of all faiths to the wellbeing of people and society, what support can the Scottish Government offe...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
01 Nov 2017
Health
I welcome the opportunity to close for the Scottish Conservatives, although I, too, have an eerie sense of déjà vu. This time last year, I stood up in the chamber and raised the many issues that were contained in Audit Scotland’s 2016 report. I noted how very few targets had b...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
01 Nov 2017
Health
As I have said many times, the idea that the workforce crisis began on 24 June 2016 is ludicrous. Clare Haughey should know that. Time and again, we have spoken of the need to implement rather than simply talk about strategy. Time and again, we have flagged up the concerns of...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
07 Feb 2018
Single-use Plastics
I am sorry. I do not have time, I am afraid. As Maurice Golden said, there has been a twelvefold increase in incineration. It is appropriate to put a marker down about incineration and reduce the need to burn what has been used. I welcome the sympathy that was expressed by Ma...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con Chamber
20 Dec 2017
Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
Here we are again, ringside, at stage 3 of the bill. In sincerity, I am delighted that, as we reach the end of what has been an eventful year in politics, we are here today to discuss legislation that will protect many wild animals and prohibit their use in Scotland within the...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
07 Mar 2018
UK Withdrawal from the European Union (Legal Continuity) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
No. The UK Government has made a big concession in relation to immediate devolution of powers. It made a major move towards the SNP and marked a substantive change in position. The SNP faced a choice: either it could focus in good faith on the discussions that are coming to a...
Donald Cameron Con Chamber
21 Mar 2018
UK Withdrawal from the European Union (Legal Continuity) (Scotland) Bill
That has not been helped by the fact that the bill is emergency legislation. I have no hesitation in continuing to decry that disgraceful decision. We simply have not had enough time. The fact of the matter is that the bill has had insufficient scrutiny and debate, and there h...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid) 27 January 2021

27 Jan 2021 · S5 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Prioritising Covid-19 Vaccination and Economic Recovery
Cameron, Donald Con Highlands and Islands Watch on SPTV

As we gather today for this important debate, it is perhaps fitting to acknowledge the sombre fact that, earlier this week, we learned that deaths from coronavirus in the United Kingdom have surpassed the 100,000 mark. Over the past 10 months of this terrible pandemic, we have become used to hearing a plethora of statistics and numbers when it comes to the virus, whether they relate to positive cases, transmission rates or infections. The sheer enormity of the huge number of deaths is matched by the need to recognise that that number represents 100,000 individual lives, 100,000 grieving families and sorrows more numerous and infinite than can ever be counted.

This will be no comfort to those who have lost their beloved family members or their friends, but the future holds some hope for those who are still vulnerable to the virus. We know that, across the United Kingdom, more than 6.8 million people have now received their first dose of the Covid-19 vaccine and that just over 462,000 people in Scotland have received it—I am using figures from today. Some 470,000 people across the UK have received their second dose, too.

Three vaccines have been approved for use. Two are in full circulation, and the third is due to arrive in the spring. The last of those—the Moderna vaccine—is showing signs that it is effective against the known variants of the virus.

As was announced last week, the Army is working in close partnership with NHS Scotland to establish 80 additional vaccination centres across Scotland, with 98 military personnel working to set up the sites and get them running before they are handed over completely to the NHS.

Those are all positive developments, which I know will be welcomed by members across the Parliament. However, it remains the case that we are not out of the woods. In addition to the figure that I mentioned, according to National Records of Scotland, in the period to 24 January 7,902 deaths were registered in Scotland in which Covid-19 was mentioned on the death certificate, and some 175,000 people have tested positive since the start of the pandemic. It is clear that cases remain stubbornly high and, given the concern that the new variants pose, it is right that we remain vigilant and continue to stay at home, protect the national health service and save lives.

None of us underestimates the challenges that the current restrictions present for people throughout Scotland. As a father of three young children of primary school age, I particularly sympathise with parents who are having to balance work with looking after their children and ensuring that they continue to receive a good education from home.

I also understand the frustrations of the many businesses in Scotland that fear for their future, as well as the fears of their employees, who do not know whether they will have a job to go back to. I represent the Highlands and Islands region and I have been contacted by many small hospitality and retail businesses, which in many cases are not receiving significant financial support and fear that they might go to the wall if restrictions are not eased soon.

We should continually acknowledge the sacrifices of the many people who are shielding. Whether people are facing loneliness, feeling worried about going to the shops and collecting medicines or simply frightened of catching the virus, the pandemic is taking its toll on many people in our society.

With that as a backdrop, and with all the anxiety and uncertainty that the situation entails, it is baffling that the Scottish National Party Government has spent days if not weeks trailing its plans for a second independence referendum. After everything that Scotland has gone through and is still going through, it beggars belief that the Government thinks that it is right to talk about indyref2 at this time. For some unfathomable reason, the SNP has chosen the middle of a global pandemic as the right time to serialise its never-ending obsession with independence.

It is not just unfathomable; it is unforgivable. Let us look at a timeline of recent events. In September last year, the First Minister presented her headline announcement in the final programme for government of this parliamentary session. She said:

“we will publish, before the end of this session of Parliament, a draft bill setting out the proposed terms and timing of an independence referendum as well as the proposed question that people will be asked in that referendum.”—[Official Report, 1 September 2020; c 19.]

At the time, the First Minister had announced significant new Covid-19 restrictions in three local authority areas in the central belt, and it was clear that cases were on the rise again. However, she indicated to the Parliament not only that vital civil service time would be spent on drafting a new independence referendum bill but that the Scottish Government would be focus grouping on its referendum question.

Earlier this month, John Swinney told the BBC programme “Politics Scotland” that independence is “an essential priority”. Let us fast forward to the middle of January, when the SNP announced that it would establish an indyref2 task force, which it described as

“the final piece in the jigsaw that will help deliver independence.”

This weekend, the SNP made another proclamation when it produced its 11-point road map for a second independence referendum, which includes a proposal to hold an unlawful referendum after the Scottish Parliament elections.

Not only is all that breathtakingly irresponsible, it flies in the face of what the people of Scotland want. Just last year, polling showed that the constitution question was low on the public’s list of priorities—it came in at seventh, with just 15 per cent of people listing it. It was not surprising to learn that people care more about improving our NHS, schools and economy than they do about the constitution—even when the current pandemic is taken out of the equation. Government is about making choices and, to its eternal discredit, this Government is choosing—of its own volition—to prioritise more constitutional division over the deep and pressing issues that are thrown up by the Covid-19 pandemic.

One such issue is the economy, and I am sure that other members on the Conservative benches will talk about the imperative to prioritise the economic recovery. I want to concentrate on vaccine roll-out, which should be the Government’s immediate priority. The fact is that the vaccine roll-out fits a pattern in which the delivery of important health policies during the pandemic has been poor. Over the past year, regrettably, there have been a number of failures by the Government in relation to the Covid pandemic. In many instances, the Government has simply refused to take responsibility for those mistakes; all too often, Opposition parties and the media have had to force the Government to apologise for its failings and provide solutions for problems.

On care homes, the Scottish Parliament twice voted for an urgent public inquiry to take place when it was found that Covid-19-positive hospital patients were being transferred into care homes and other patients were being moved in without being tested at all, putting care home staff and vulnerable residents at risk.

On personal protective equipment, the SNP has failed time and again to properly protect our front-line NHS and social care staff. I do not need to remind members that, at the beginning of the pandemic, more than 1,000 Scottish care workers wrote to the First Minister and said:

“We do not feel safe at work. By not giving us the PPE we need and by not testing front line workers, we are being forced to put not only ourselves but our family and our clients at risk.”

As I noted in the chamber last week, BMA Scotland had raised concerns over protection against the new strain of Covid-19, stating that

“The currently recommended PPE may not offer the best protection in some clinical environments.”

Similarly, we are seeing real and concerning failures in the SNP Government’s handling of the roll-out of the vaccine. The Scottish Government has had months to prepare for this moment. We all want and need the roll-out of the vaccine to be a success, but on Sunday we saw the lowest published figure of people vaccinated since the daily figures began; it was less than half the number of people who were vaccinated on Saturday. Last week, the First Minister effectively conceded that the SNP Government’s target of vaccinating 560,000 people by the end of January will not happen, saying that the target date has been “refined”—a convenient shorthand for the fact that timetables have slipped and the goalposts accordingly moved.

We know that the issue is not one of vaccine stock levels, despite the claims by the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport that vaccines were being “back-ended” by the UK Government. It is an issue of roll-out and blockages in the system here in Scotland. I will repeat the remarks of the BMA Scotland’s general practitioners committee that I referred to last week, because they are important. That committee noted the

“variable and sometimes slow rate that vaccines were being made available to GP practices”.

We also know that BMA Scotland asked the Scottish Government’s interim chief pharmaceutical officer to consider allowing GPs to directly order the supplies that they need to vaccinate their patients, in effect bypassing health boards. We all accept the logistical challenges here, especially given Scotland’s geography, but clearly something is not working.

The views of our GPs and other healthcare workers are vital to this debate, but so too are the stories of our constituents, and we will all have had those in our mailboxes. I have received some particularly distressing and worried emails from people right across Scotland. People feel that they are in the dark. One lady from Perthshire emailed me on Monday to say that her parents are both in their mid-80s but have not yet been given a vaccination appointment. When she contacted the local GP to inquire, she was told that they did not know when they would receive more vaccines or how many doses would be available. Another lady got in touch with me to say that a 98-year-old family friend from Renfrewshire who lives by herself had not yet received an appointment. Today, someone emailed me saying that he is 85 years old and that, two weeks ago, he received a text from his surgery saying that he would shortly be called in for a vaccination; since then there has been silence, but his wife, who is 77, has received an appointment for next week at a nearby community centre.

Those are the real stories of people who are being impacted by both the lack of information and the lack of action. This is genuinely a postcode lottery between health boards, within health boards, and even within families, and it is affecting some very old and very vulnerable people and playing havoc with their hopes and expectations, given what is at stake.

When those aged 80 and over and their families see others elsewhere in the UK being vaccinated, it is only right that they will question what is happening in Scotland. All of that points to a disorganised and chaotic roll-out process with no clear direction or leadership.

It also does not bode well for the future, when we will get to the next priority groups in the coming weeks and months. That is why the Scottish Conservatives are today calling on the SNP Government to establish a vaccine task force. Such a task force must have a primary focus on supply and vaccination methods throughout Scotland. The task force should ensure that supplies get to GP surgeries and other places that are administering the vaccine within the right timeframe and it should aim to keep GPs informed of progress with supplies on a regular basis. It should also make recommendations on which methods are being used across the country to carry out the vaccination programme. That would allow any gaps to be seen quickly, the methods that are working best to be identified and best practice to be shared and used. We believe that that is critically important so that we can ensure that targets are met and, most importantly, that people are protected against this awful and deadly virus.

The Scottish Conservatives urge the chamber to support our motion. It is abundantly clear that the very last thing that Scotland should be doing at this critically important moment is planning for a referendum of any kind, let alone one carving Scotland out of the United Kingdom. People do not want an indyref2 task force; they want a vaccination task force. The people of Scotland want all of us to focus on rolling out vaccines, reducing the number of deaths and cases of Covid-19 and rebuilding our economy. Regardless of our views on the constitutional debate, we urge the Scottish Government to pause, reflect and realise what is at stake if we take our eye off the ball at this critical juncture in the pandemic. Now is not the time to divide communities all over again. Instead, now is the time to unite people across the country, as we, hopefully, enter the final chapter of our collective struggle against the pandemic that has wrought much sadness across Scotland.

I urge the chamber to support our motion.

I move,

That the Parliament believes that planning an independence referendum in 2021, during an ongoing global pandemic, would be reckless and damaging; notes the Scottish National Party’s plans to establish an independence taskforce and believes that this will divide Scotland when people should be united in tackling COVID-19 and supporting the economic recovery, and calls on the Scottish Government to instead establish a taskforce to speed up the roll-out of the COVID-19 vaccination programme across Scotland.

15:31  

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Lewis Macdonald) Lab
I remind members that social distancing measures are in place in the chamber and across the campus. Please observe those measures, including when entering an...
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
As we gather today for this important debate, it is perhaps fitting to acknowledge the sombre fact that, earlier this week, we learned that deaths from coron...
The Cabinet Secretary for the Constitution, Europe and External Affairs (Michael Russell) SNP
No one can doubt that we live in troubled and difficult times, and no one, no matter our political divisions, can fail to pause today and remember that, what...
Mike Rumbles (North East Scotland) (LD) LD
On a point of order, Presiding Officer. I know that, in your role as Deputy Presiding Officer, you attend Parliamentary Bureau meetings. I know that it is no...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
Thank you, Mr Rumbles. It is for you to raise the matter with your business manager, and it is for business managers to make suggestions at bureau meetings. ...
Monica Lennon (Central Scotland) (Lab) Lab
Covid-19 is a vicious virus that does not care about politics or the constitution. It is a virus that harms and kills regardless of people’s opinions, and it...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
I call Willie Rennie.
Mike Rumbles LD
Go on—take an intervention. Laughter. 15:49
Willie Rennie (North East Fife) (LD) LD
The pandemic has knocked the country sideways, with 100,000 lost lives, grieving families and broken friends. Unemployment is skyrocketing, children have los...
The Minister for Public Health, Sport and Wellbeing (Mairi Gougeon) SNP
I must counteract some of the nonsense that we constantly hear about supply and delivery, or comparing us to England or to other parts of the UK. We have fol...
Willie Rennie LD
There are lots of words, but very few facts come from the Government. I can give an example from care homes. There are only 30,000 care home residents in Sco...
Patrick Harvie (Glasgow) (Green) Green
The Conservatives could have brought a motion for debate that was purely about the Covid response, and they might well have found that they could win majorit...
Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con) Con
A fanatic is someone who cannot change their mind and will not change the subject. The SNP will clearly never take a referendum result against independence a...
Mairi Gougeon SNP
If Brian Whittle feels that our sheer priority should be tackling the pandemic—which I agree it should be—how does he explain his party’s focus on Brexit in ...
Brian Whittle Con
Because the vote on Brexit took place before the pandemic, and the timetable for it was already set out. This is not about denying the SNP its right to beli...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
I encourage Mr Whittle to conclude his remarks.
Brian Whittle Con
I am sorry, Presiding Officer. I thought that I had six minutes.
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
You may carry on.
Brian Whittle Con
How long do I have?
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
You are absolutely right—my apologies.
Brian Whittle Con
How about a plan to give loved ones access to care homes as our most vulnerable people are vaccinated? Again, we have had no answer and no plan. Education w...
Shona Robison (Dundee City East) (SNP) SNP
It was a year ago to the day that China reported its first death from coronavirus. No one knew then how quickly the virus would spread and become a global pa...
Alex Rowley (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab) Lab
I begin by recognising the massive challenges that our country is facing and the incredible pressure that individuals and families are living under, with a c...
Stuart McMillan (Greenock and Inverclyde) (SNP) SNP
I agree with colleagues’ comments about the sad deaths of more than 100,000 UK citizens as a result of Covid. With every death, families mourn and communitie...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Linda Fabiani) SNP
Will you come to a close, please?
Stuart McMillan SNP
That is something that the population is talking about, and it is clearly an issue for people. As we know, it has been obvious for many, many years that the...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Will you come to a close, please?
Stuart McMillan SNP
—but it has resorted once again to telling people a lot of nonsense. I know that the population of Scotland wants a referendum after the pandemic. The actio...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Will you come to a close, please?
Stuart McMillan SNP
—and I support the amendment in the name of Michael Russell.