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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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2,354,908
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1999–2026
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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
17 Sep 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Thank you, convener. Good morning, colleagues. I thank the committee for all the work that it has done to date in considering my bill. I have been following the evidence sessions with great interest, and I welcome the views of all who have contributed. I was pleased to hear co...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
22 Mar 2018
Fair Work
As the Scottish Conservative spokesperson on disability and convener of the cross-party group in the Scottish Parliament on disability, I regularly meet disabled people and disability charities. One thing that they have all identified is the critical issue of employment. Ther...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
26 Oct 2017
Scottish Disability Sport
I am delighted to have the opportunity to lead the debate this afternoon. I am very supportive of positive action that can be taken to encourage and support disabled people to participate in sport. As someone who is sport mad and was born with a disability, I can see that ther...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
08 Dec 2016
Disability Delivery Plan
I apologise to you, Presiding Officer, and to the minister for being late. It was nothing to do with disability—I just cannot read a watch. I have met a number of disabled groups since I was elected to the Scottish Parliament in May. All the groups identified the same three p...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
12 Mar 2019
Fair Work
I, too, thank the minister for bringing this important debate to the chamber today. I will touch on some of the actions in the disability employment delivery plan, which is one of a suite of labour market plans that forms the fair work action plan. I will also refer to some of...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Ind) Ind Chamber
05 Mar 2026
Disabled People’s Representation in Scottish Democracy
I am grateful to colleagues across the chamber for their support for the motion. I am sad that it has not gained the support of all parties in the Parliament. I hope that that is not a comment about their support for disabled representation, which is an issue that I am sure al...
Jeremy Balfour Con Chamber
28 Mar 2019
Disabled People
First, I put on record my appreciation for the good work that Sarah Newton did across the UK. In my meetings with her, she really understood what the disabled community wanted and pushed a very positive agenda. I agree with the member that we need a minister to be appointed as...
Jeremy Balfour Con Chamber
14 Mar 2017
Inclusive and Accessible Tourism
It is a great pleasure to take part in the debate this afternoon. I suspect that there will be a lot of consensus among the speakers. Tourism is a vital industry for Scotland and, as a representative of the Lothians, I know that we benefit from having so many people come to ou...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
29 Jan 2019
Social Isolation and Loneliness
I, too, thank the Government for bringing forward the debate. I agree with the minister that not just older people but people across the generations—including the young and the middle aged—can feel isolated. One group that is particularly affected by isolation is those who hav...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
13 Dec 2018
Demonstrating Leadership in Human Rights
I welcome the debate. Looking back over the past 20 or 30 years, I think that the issue of human rights has become much more embedded in Scottish society and our education system. About 10 nights ago, I was trying to persuade one of my daughters that she should think about hea...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
03 Dec 2019
Purple Light-up Campaign
I am delighted to have the opportunity to lead this debate to highlight the purple light-up campaign, which celebrates the economic power of disabled people around the globe. I thank the members across all parties who supported my motion. As members will be aware, today is th...
Jeremy Balfour Con Chamber
10 Dec 2024
Human Rights
Thank you. The cabinet secretary has perhaps been reading my notes: I am coming on to that this very second. Ask any disability organisation about the current state of disability in Scotland and it will paint a dreary picture. That is supposing that they are still able to op...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
02 Dec 2021
International Day of Persons with Disabilities
As other members have, I want first of all to thank Pam Duncan-Glancy for securing the debate, which provides a valuable platform not only for commending the work of those who have gone before us, but for looking forward to the progress that is yet to be made. I also thank my...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
08 Feb 2018
Social Security (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Amendment 145 is fairly straightforward. I am sure that this Government will do what the amendment requires without such provision being in the bill, but as we look forward to the years ahead, I am concerned about future Governments and members of the Scottish Parliament, who ...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
05 Dec 2019
Disability Sport and Participation
I congratulate all members who have taken part in the debate. I also congratulate the Scottish Government and the business managers. This is the third day in a row that we have had mention of disability in the chamber. It is really encouraging that that is happening. We have h...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
25 Jun 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Financial Memorandum
I have thought fairly long about that question, because I think that it is a genuine one. We have not said in the bill that the commissioner must have a disability themselves; after all, many good people out there have experience of disability through family, work or other are...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Ind) Ind Chamber
02 Dec 2025
International Day of Persons with Disabilities
Like others, I congratulate Pam Duncan-Glancy on securing the debate. I also thank her for highlighting the summit that will take place in February. It was a pleasure this afternoon to meet some of the young people who are in the gallery, and I am sure that the day will be a s...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
25 Jun 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Financial Memorandum
To some degree, yes—I think that there could be—but I am not sure that that will ever happen unless you have a disability commissioner because, once this debate goes away, local authorities will move on and deal with other things. There are also issues beyond that. There is...
Jeremy Balfour Ind Chamber
10 Mar 2026
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I have to say that that is not the evidence that the disability community has presented to me, and it is not the evidence that is coming loud and clear from those with lived experience, in particular in Canada and parts of Australia.I have to say that I disagree fundamentally ...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
17 Sep 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Interestingly, there was an argument for a disability commissioner before Covid, but, as a consequence of Covid, disabled people have been left behind by public bodies and funding organisations far more than people with any of the other protected characteristics. When I was d...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
25 Jun 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Financial Memorandum
That was one of the questions that I had in mind as I worked on the bill. I worked on a pre-bill consultation and, last year, I spent the summer doing a bit of a tour around Scotland talking to different disability groups and individuals. The experience of someone who is in a ...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
13 Mar 2025
SPCB Supported Bodies Landscape Review
Yes. As you will be aware, SCOSS scrutinises legislative proposals from the Government to see whether they reflect what the disability community wants. The work of a disability commissioner would go much further. The committee has already heard evidence from other commissions,...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
28 Feb 2019
World Hearing Day and Hearing Awareness Week 2019
I add my thanks to Alexander Stewart for bringing this important debate on world hearing day and hearing awareness week 2019 to the chamber. In Scotland, more than a million people have some degree of hearing loss, of whom approximately 546,000 are over the age of 60. In the ...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
15 Dec 2016
Draft Budget Scrutiny 2017-18
Thank you very much for coming to the meeting. There is cross-party support on the transition issue, and what the cabinet secretary has said is very helpful, particularly for those with a fairly severe disability—learning difficulties or physical disabilities—and how we work ...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
25 Jun 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Financial Memorandum
Pre-Covid, there was quite a strong argument for a disability commissioner. During the Covid period, and since then, the evidence points to disabled individuals having been left behind more than any other sector in society. If we look at the services that are currently being p...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
25 Jun 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Financial Memorandum
Good morning, colleagues. I introduced the Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill in February this year, having previously obtained the right to introduce a member’s bill. The bill would establish a disability commissioner for Scotland, whose primary function would be “to p...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
19 Sep 2018
Planning (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I will speak briefly to amendment 52. My proposed approach builds on the approach that other members have proposed and would go slightly further by stipulating that local authorities must earmark “sufficient and appropriate sites” to help to reduce the current chronic shortfal...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
09 Jun 2016
Dignity, Fairness and Respect in Disability Benefits
It is a great honour to be elected to the Parliament and an even greater honour to represent the area that I was born in and have spent most of my life in. Lothian is a great place in which to live, work, play and study, but the region faces challenges. I will seek to represen...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Ind) Ind Committee
04 Nov 2025
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Good morning, convener, members of the committee and other members. Thank you for having us at the meeting to discuss some very important amendments. I will speak to amendments 143 and 144. First, with regard to amendment 143, as the bill stands, the definition of “terminall...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
17 Sep 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
It is pretty hard, to be honest. I am not being rude about the commission, but it has a massive remit. One of the things that has become very clear to me, not just with the bill but through contacting disabled people, is how difficult disabled people find any form of going to ...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
15 Dec 2022
Year of Disabled Workers 2022
I thank my friend Pam Duncan-Glancy for securing the debate, and I commend Unison for running the important campaign. I welcome its representatives to the chamber. Disability employment is not an issue that can be wished away. It will take assertive action to bring about posi...
Jeremy Balfour Con Chamber
14 Mar 2017
Inclusive and Accessible Tourism
I absolutely agree with the cabinet secretary on that. Maybe one of the ways to do that is to create ambassadors for disability. That is happening down south—the UK Government is appointing ambassadors to work with industry and the tourism boards and tell them what people need...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
31 Jan 2019
Draft Social Security Charter
Good morning, cabinet secretary, and thank you for coming. I agree with some of what the deputy convener and convener have said. At the start, for the sake of transparency, I say that I am in receipt of the personal independence payment, and I look forward to working with the ...
Jeremy Balfour Ind Chamber
30 Sep 2025
Housing (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I welcome all the amendments in this group, and I will support them all. I am pleased that Pam Duncan-Glancy has had positive negotiations with the cabinet secretary. I will make two brief points. First, I wonder whether the cabinet secretary, in summing up, could confirm tha...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
13 Mar 2025
SPCB Supported Bodies Landscape Review
I will address your second question first, but I will reverse it. Why are we pulling up the drawbridge now? In the current session of the Parliament, it has already voted to have a patient safety commissioner. Depending on how the votes go on the Victims, Witnesses, and Justic...
Jeremy Balfour Con Chamber
03 Nov 2022
Social Security Benefits
Yes, I believe that. Let me continue. More than 8 million of the most vulnerable UK households will be directly sent a one-off cash payment of £650. The DWP has increased the winter fuel payment to £300, in addition to sending all existing recipients an additional one-off £30...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
25 Jun 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Financial Memorandum
The disability commissioner would get in at an earlier stage, to raise policy issues rather than implementation issues. Certainly, in my local authority, and, I think, in other local authorities, there is a high-level debate about what types of day centres are appropriate. For...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
17 Sep 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
At the moment, it is the only thing on the table. I am not convinced that the model of having each disability covered by a different individual or by a sub-group works. Disability issues overlap, and there are pan-disability issues, so I think that one individual can do it. Wi...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
23 Mar 2017
British Sign Language (Draft National Plan)
I am pleased that we are debating the BSL national plan for Scotland. The Conservatives will support the motion. I congratulate the minister on lodging a motion for a Thursday afternoon debate that does not mention Brexit. I also pay tribute to Mark Griffin for all the work th...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
12 Jun 2019
Transport (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I welcome all the amendments in this group; they are helpful and I hope that committee members will support them. Members will consider a number of amendments in my name that relate to disability. Disability and transport is a key issue and I welcome what the bill does in tha...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
25 Feb 2021
Child Disability Payment
I will ask a question that came up just over a year ago at the cross-party group on disability—you may have seen the letter on that. The fear for children who have a disability and who are on benefit is that, if they get slightly better, they will lose that benefit. There is a...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
25 Jun 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Financial Memorandum
The reasons for trying to get all the commissioners into one office are not purely financial. It is an opportunity for them to meet much more regularly. In my thinking—this is only my thinking—there should be some kind of memorandum of understanding between the different commi...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
25 Jun 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Financial Memorandum
On your first point, the commissioner would not be able to pick up on every local issue across all 32 local authorities. It simply would not work in that way. There would still be a vital continuing role for councillors, MSPs and MPs to advocate on local issues. What needs cha...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
28 Sep 2017
Flexible Working
I, too, congratulate Ruth Maguire on securing this important debate. Its timing is particularly apt as next week is national work-life week, which is an opportunity for employers and employees to focus on wellbeing at work and work-life balance. It is important to stress that...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
25 Jun 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Financial Memorandum
No, I hope that that would not happen. As you said, many third sector charities are quite well resourced, and they will still see such issues as for them. Some of the issues are quite complex. Disability is not like some other protected characteristics, in that there is no one...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
29 Mar 2022
Commonwealth Day 2022
I thank Sarah Boyack for securing this debate, and note the all-party support that it has received. Like you, I am sure, Presiding Officer, I was given lots of advice when I arrived in this place—some of it positive, some of it less so. One of the points of advice that I was ...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
17 Sep 2024
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
As I said to the convener, if you look at education, health, social services and even things such as changing places toilets, you see that there is mass discrimination. I will be honest. As I think that I have said previously, I was born with a disability and, before I came in...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
28 Mar 2017
Included in the Main Campaign
I thank Graeme Dey for bringing the debate to the chamber this afternoon. I also thank Enable for its report. Based on interviews with more than 800 young people with learning disabilities, and interviews with parents, family carers and educationists across Scotland, it gives ...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
13 Mar 2025
SPCB Supported Bodies Landscape Review
I think that my proposed commissioner should be 70 per cent proactive and 30 per cent reactive. I will give a quick example. Let us say that a disability commissioner is appointed. In their first year, that individual will have to go out to the disabled community. The commiss...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
22 May 2018
Disability Employment Gap
We have heard the figures; we have also heard very positive contributions from all the members who have spoken. There are a number of myths out there among employers and in the disability community—even among those with a disability. One myth is that the private sector is bad...
Jeremy Balfour Con Chamber
22 May 2018
Disability Employment Gap
I will duck that question by simply saying that I have 45 seconds left and that is a big issue to discuss. I will make two quick closing points. First, I ask the Scottish Government to work with the Department for Work and Pensions and the UK Government—and the UK Government...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
25 Feb 2020
Seclusion and Restraint in Schools
I, too, thank Jackie Baillie for bringing this important debate to the chamber. I recently had a meeting with a professional worker in the third sector who referred to learning disability as the Cinderella of the disabilities. He explained that children and adults with learni...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
12 Mar 2024
Visitor Levy (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
Good morning, minister and colleagues. Amendment 19 is specifically on people with disability but, before I go on to that, I will add one comment to my colleague’s remarks on amendment 37. In Edinburgh, we have Ronald MacDonald House, which is attached to the sick kids hospita...
Jeremy Balfour Con Chamber
31 Oct 2024
Scotland’s Commissioner Landscape
Clearly more money is required, but it is also about having a voice for disabled people. The Government has withdrawn two bills, and there has been almost no coverage of that in the national press. Glasgow Disability Alliance and Inclusion Scotland have ridiculed the Governmen...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
14 Nov 2024
Scottish Elections (Representation and Reform) Bill: Stage 2
Good morning. I intend to speak only to amendment 54, in my name, which relates to the access to elected office fund. As most colleagues will be aware, the purpose of the fund is to support and encourage people with a disability to take part in elections in a way that is simil...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
10 Oct 2024
Challenge Poverty Week 2024
I thank my friend Paul O’Kane for securing this members’ business debate. It is encouraging to have the Parliament engage in not one, but two debates this year regarding challenge poverty week. It is important that we as MSPs always remember that we are here to serve the whole...
Jeremy Balfour Con Chamber
16 May 2017
Disabled People
If Sandra White will bear with me, I will develop that towards the end of my speech, if I have time. It is important that we do not look at disability and say that a person has a disability and therefore should get an award. It is much better to ask what effect the disability...
Jeremy Balfour Con Committee
27 Jan 2022
Subordinate Legislation
As someone who has walked this journey for five years, I will vote for the amendments, but with a heavy heart. Unlike Evelyn Tweed, I see no excitement in the regulations. Both members of this committee who are actually on PIP and who have disabilities are voting for them with...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Committee
23 Jun 2022
Resource Spending Review
Good morning, and thank you for coming along. First, I would like to follow up that issue with the finance secretary. Post-Covid, people with disability are struggling to get into employment more than they were before Covid. The figures show that the problem has grown. Many p...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con Chamber
27 Jun 2024
Scottish Elections (Representation and Reform) Bill: Stage 1
I welcome the opportunity to speak. It is clear that there is a fair amount of consensus among all the parties on a way forward. That has been helpful as we have reflected on the changes that might come at stages 2 and 3. Annie Wells said that we want an open and accessible e...
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Committee

Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee 17 September 2024

17 Sep 2024 · S6 · Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee
Item of business
Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Thank you, convener. Good morning, colleagues. I thank the committee for all the work that it has done to date in considering my bill. I have been following the evidence sessions with great interest, and I welcome the views of all who have contributed. I was pleased to hear continued overwhelming support for the bill being expressed during the evidence sessions, particularly by organisations that work with and for disabled people. I think that everyone who has given evidence to the committee, including public bodies and the Minister for Equalities, accepts that the current situation that disabled people face, particularly in the aftermath of the Covid pandemic, is simply not good enough. There was cross-party consensus that, in relation to understanding, representing and actioning the needs of disabled people in Scotland, change is needed and is needed now. Disabled people cannot wait any longer for a disability commissioner. I introduced the Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill in response to such concerns, with the aim of ensuring that disabled people have a champion—someone whose sole focus is on disabled people. I acknowledge that not everyone thinks that a commissioner is the solution, but I believe that a commissioner can only have a positive impact in improving the lives of disabled people. In developing my bill, I drew inspiration from the work of the Children and Young People’s Commissioner Scotland, as that role has shown the positive impact that an advocating rights-based champion can have. I also note the work of the Older People’s Commissioner for Wales and the Commissioner for Older People for Northern Ireland. The commissioner model is popular for a reason—it works. A disability commissioner could play a similar high-profile role to those that I have highlighted by advocating for disabled people at a national level. I note that some witnesses raised concerns with the committee. For example, there was a view that there are already a number of existing commissioners and public bodies that have a remit in helping disabled people, and that the creation of a disability commissioner might lead to duplication of work and overlap of remits. I firmly disagree. I acknowledge the important and wide-ranging work of public bodies such as the Scottish Human Rights Commission and the Equalities and Human Rights Commission, but those organisations’ remits are split between multiple protected characteristics and the impact can therefore be diluted. Only a disability commissioner would be able to be laser focused on disabled people, as is urgently needed. Moreover, I believe that the work of a disability commissioner would complement that of existing bodies. For example, currently, protecting the rights of children in Scotland falls within the remits of the Children and Young People’s Commissioner Scotland, the SHRC and the EHRC, but that has not prevented those organisations from being able to carry out their roles and, as far as I can see, it has not led to any problems or duplication of work. I note that the majority of those who have raised concerns about the establishment of a disability commissioner, particularly regarding the potential for overlap of remits and the costs involved, are in positions of authority and power, such as politicians and public bodies. Very few, if any, disabled people or third sector organisations have raised those issues as major concerns. Yes, public bodies that help disabled people already exist at a national level, but we are being told by disabled people that they are not meeting their needs. I will quote Heather Fisken from Inclusion Scotland: “If the landscape is so busy, why has there been no change so far?”—Official Report, Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice Committee, 11 June 2024; c 8. We must listen to what disabled people are telling us, rather than to the public bodies that are currently not having the necessary impact. I note that the Finance and Public Administration Committee’s report on the commissioner landscape was published yesterday, as the committee is probably aware. The report calls for “a moratorium on creating any new SPCB supported bodies, or expanding the remit of existing bodies” until a review has been undertaken. I understand the instinct to have a review—I would even encourage that to happen—but it should not take place until disabled people have been given the same chance as other groups to benefit from a champion who speaks on their behalf at all levels of government. Pulling up the ladder on disabled people at this point would send a clear message that they are less worthy of an advocate than others. It is also worth noting that the recommended review would conclude by June 2025, which would, in effect, end any chance of further legislation on the proposal for a disability commissioner being introduced in this parliamentary session. I note that other concerns have been raised about the potential cost of a disability commissioner. I emphasise what I said when I gave evidence to the Finance and Public Administration Committee: I consider the costs that would be incurred in establishing a disability commissioner to be relatively modest in the context of the Scottish Government’s total budget of £30 billion, and those costs should be seen as an investment in disabled people that is long overdue and very much needed. It is my firm belief that establishing a disability commissioner will ensure that disabled people have a champion who will give them the prioritisation that they need and deserve. The commissioner’s overarching purpose will be to promote and safeguard the rights of disabled people. The bill sets out various functions that will help the commissioner to achieve that goal. Those include promoting awareness and understanding of the rights of disabled people and promoting best practice by service providers. That could be carried out in a multitude of ways, but it is important that the views of disabled people are central to that work. For that reason, the bill provides that the commissioner must consult disabled people and organisations that work with and for disabled people on the work that the commission is undertaking and must publish a strategy for involving disabled people in their work. The commissioner must ensure that those who have difficulty in making their views known or in accessing information have the means to do so when engaging with the commissioner. That could be done through the provision of information in different formats, such as Braille and easy read. The recent programme for government was yet another bitter blow for disabled people in Scotland, with the news that the Scottish Government will not be pursuing a human rights bill in this parliamentary session, as was previously planned, and that the proposed bill to create a learning disability, autism and neurodiversity commissioner has been shelved. On top of that, many disabled people’s organisations believe that the Government’s disability equality plan falls short of its promised intentions. Glasgow Disability Alliance stated that it “lacks ambition, meaningful actions or commitments needed to improve disabled lives blighted by #Poverty #Trauma #Inequality”. Inclusion Scotland stated that it was disappointed that the draft plan does not include the actions that it had discussed at a meeting with the First Minister. The Scottish Government’s disability equality plan is therefore not an effective or credible alternative to establishing a disability commissioner. If a disability commissioner is not the answer, what is? We know that disabled people need action now. They cannot wait any longer. The bill seeks to make positive changes for disabled people and is in front of the Parliament now. No viable alternative is currently on the table to ensure that disabled people have a champion who will ensure that their rights are respected and enforced. The proposed learning disability, autism and neurodiversity commissioner bill is being dangled in front of us, but, for the foreseeable future, it will remain out of reach. We are being asked to trust existing institutions to provide a voice for disabled people when they previously have not provided that voice, even though they already have that mandate. The reality is that they will never be able to prioritise disabled people because they have such broad remits. Only a disability commissioner will be able to focus their full attention on disabled people. If the bill falls, we risk this parliamentary session ending without our having passed any meaningful legislation to improve disabled people’s rights, which would be shameful. We know that disabled people need action now. They cannot wait any longer. I therefore urge the committee and the Parliament to ensure that this opportunity is not missed and to support the bill. I am afraid that disabled people will not forgive us if we do not pass it. I am happy, as always, to answer questions.

In the same item of business

The Convener SNP
Under our next agenda item, we will continue taking evidence on the Disability Commissioner (Scotland) Bill. I refer members to papers 1 and 2. I welcome to ...
Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con) Con
Thank you, convener. Good morning, colleagues. I thank the committee for all the work that it has done to date in considering my bill. I have been following ...
The Convener SNP
Thank you very much for your opening statement. The committee has heard strong support for a disability commissioner, particularly from disabled people. Why ...
Jeremy Balfour Con
Interestingly, there was an argument for a disability commissioner before Covid, but, as a consequence of Covid, disabled people have been left behind by pub...
The Convener SNP
You told the Finance and Public Administration Committee that you were concerned about the timing of its inquiry into the commissioner landscape and how it m...
Jeremy Balfour Con
Clearly, it is not ideal timing for that report to come out, but it raises an important issue that we need to explore. In the past two and a half years, all...
The Convener SNP
Concern has been expressed that setting up a disability commissioner could divert resources from work in other areas, such as the Scottish Government’s new d...
Jeremy Balfour Con
It is safe to say that none of the members who are here was in the Parliament when the Commissioner for Children and Young People (Scotland) Bill went throug...
The Convener SNP
Given the financial situation that the Scottish Government has set out, is it feasible to set up a disability commissioner at this time?
Jeremy Balfour Con
Absolutely. I appreciate that £1 million or £1.5 million sounds like a lot of money, but in a £30 billion budget, it is not so much. When the Scottish Govern...
The Convener SNP
Thank you.
Evelyn Tweed (Stirling) (SNP) SNP
Good morning, Mr Balfour. Thank you for your opening remarks. There are concerns about the duplication of work, which you mentioned in your opening statemen...
Jeremy Balfour Con
That is an important question. A lot more needs to be done on back-office sharing among all commissioners. We do not need human resources or accountancy func...
Evelyn Tweed SNP
A frequent issue raised by disability organisations in response to the call for views was that, although there are several statutory organisations that promo...
Jeremy Balfour Con
As I said to the convener, if you look at education, health, social services and even things such as changing places toilets, you see that there is mass disc...
Evelyn Tweed SNP
Thank you.
Maggie Chapman (North East Scotland) (Green) Green
Good morning, Mr Balfour. Thank you for your opening comments and for the time that you have previously given me to discuss your bill. It is much appreciated...
Jeremy Balfour Con
Without labouring the point, the present structures simply are not doing it. I do not see any reason why, if the bill goes away and everyone goes back to nor...
Maggie Chapman Green
Many of us in this place are pretty scunnered at the lack of a human rights bill and incorporation of UN treaties into Scots law. I get that very clear conne...
Jeremy Balfour Con
At the moment, it is the only thing on the table. I am not convinced that the model of having each disability covered by a different individual or by a sub-g...
Maggie Chapman Green
When we heard from the minister, she spoke about mainstreaming. We heard in other evidence—you will have picked this up as well—about some of the tensions ar...
Jeremy Balfour MSP
Obviously, it is one office, but the commissioner would have support staff and having the right team behind them would be important. Clearly, the commission...
Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I want to pick up the issues relating to the interaction of your bill and the proposed bill on learning disabilities, autism and neurodivergence. Were I to b...
Jeremy Balfour MSP
The simple answer to that question is yes, there is an opportunity to do that. Last Thursday, there was a meeting in the Parliament—I think that you attended...
Paul O’Kane Lab
Would you be concerned that one commissioner would have too much to look at? Say that we had a disability commissioner who covered absolutely everything, inc...
Jeremy Balfour MSP
I actually think that it is really helpful for a disability commissioner not to have a definition of any condition, because that means that they can go where...
Paul O’Kane Lab
I will push you on that point. People want the commissioner to have investigatory powers, and the bill has covered that aspect. However, many people are seek...
Jeremy Balfour MSP
As big as my ego is, I do not claim that everything in my bill is perfect and that it needs to go through without amendment. We need to look at that. I repea...
Paul O’Kane Lab
I will play devil’s advocate for a moment. You have listed—quite rightly—some of the challenges that we face: progress on the LDAN bill is being stalled, the...
Jeremy Balfour MSP
Ultimately, this Parliament is sovereign; it has to make the decisions. That is the starting point, but, ultimately, as politicians, we can say yes or no to ...