Category: Scotland

  • Keir Starmer – 2025 Comments on the Strategic Defence Review

    Keir Starmer – 2025 Comments on the Strategic Defence Review

    The comments made by Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, in Scotland on 2 June 2025.

    Good morning to all of you, thank you for being here this morning –

    Thank you for sharing the work that you are doing here, some of which we can see right behind us.

    Because this is a legendary Govan shipyard.

    And it’s really good to be able to be here in this massive space, and to be back on the Clyde.

    As you may have seen a couple of months ago –

    Just after dawn, on a drizzly morning –

    If you can believe it –

    I took a boat out onto the firth,

    To meet one of our vanguard-class submarines…

    As it came back in off patrol.

    And it was a record-breaking patrol.

    And we boarded the sub. It had just surfaced. It had been at sea…

    Maintaining our continuous-at-sea deterrent…

    For months on end –

    A really long shift –

    And met what was quite a remarkable crew.

    And I will remember that day for the rest of my life.

    Because it was very clear to me that there is no greater duty than the one that they carry –

    No task more vital.

    Our security…

    NATO’s security…

    Depends on them.

    And I had the privilege of being shown around and talked to many teams on the sub…

    Saw them rushing to their battle stations to conduct a firing drill…

    And wherever I went on the sub, whichever team I was talking to…

    From the engineers, the cooks, the navigators –

    Over and over again –

    There was a sort of unofficial motto that they told me – their motto:

    “Nothing works unless we all work together.”

    And in this moment of danger and threat for our country –

    That is the spirit we need.

    The Strategic Defence Review that I am launching today…

    Will bring that unity of purpose to the whole of the United Kingdom…

    To mobilise the nation in a common cause…

    Recognising, in these dangerous times,

    That when it comes to the defence of the realm…

    And the defence of everything we hold dear…

    Nothing works unless we all work together.

    From every man and woman serving in uniform,

    To the workers building the next generation of subs in Barrow…

    From the brilliant workers and apprentices right here in Govan…

    Building the new Type 26 frigates – like the two you can see being built behind me today…

    To our tech experts, our scientists, our engineers –

    Who are pioneering battlefield innovations and cyber defences –

    Every part of society…

    Every citizen of this country…

    Has a role to play.

    Because we have to recognise that things have changed.

    In the world of today –

    The front line, if you like, is here.

    The threat we now face is more serious, more immediate and more unpredictable…

    Than at any time since the Cold War.

    We face war in Europe, new nuclear risks, daily cyber attacks…

    Growing Russian aggression in our waters…

    Menacing our skies…

    Their reckless actions driving up the cost of living here at home…

    Creating economic pain…

    And hitting working people the hardest.

    A new era in the threats we face,

    Demands a new era for defence and security…

    Not just to survive in this new world –

    But to lead.

    We will never gamble with our national security.

    Instead, we will act –

    In the national interest.

    And that’s why I placed national security…

    At the heart of our Plan for Change…

    That’s why I launched this Strategic Defence Review…

    Within days of becoming Prime Minster.

    And now it has delivered.

    And I want to thank the reviewers –

    Especially Lord Robertson who is with us today.

    Thank you so much for your work and the work of the other reviewers.

    What you have delivered is a blueprint to make Britain safer and stronger:

    A battle-ready, armour-clad nation…

    With the strongest alliances…

    And the most advanced capabilities –

    Equipped for the decades to come.

    And we have already acted –

    Announcing the largest sustained increase in defence spending since the end of the Cold War.

    Raising it to 2.5% of GDP by 2027 –

    Setting the ambition to hit 3% in the next Parliament…

    Subject to economic and fiscal conditions.

    And today – following through on this review –

    I want to set out three fundamental changes that we’re going to deliver.

    First, we are moving to warfighting readiness –

    As the central purpose of our armed forces.

    When we are being directly threatened by states with advanced military forces…

    The most effective way to deter them is to be ready –

    And, frankly, to show them that we’re ready –

    To deliver peace through strength.

    Now Britain has the finest service men and women in the world.

    We’re showing them the respect that they deserve

    By delivering the biggest Armed Forces pay rise in 20 years,

    And by pledging, today, that we will end the hollowing out of our Armed Forces.

    We’ll build a fighting force that is more integrated, more ready, more lethal than ever –

    Backed by a stronger Strategic Reserve – fully trained and ready to mobilise at any time.

    Second, everything we do will add to the strength of NATO,

    As we step up to take greater responsibility for our collective defence.

    The NATO alliance means something profound:

    That we will never fight alone.

    It is a fundamental source of our strategic strength.

    That’s why our defence policy will always be “NATO first.”

    Something that is written through this review.

    The transformation we are driving in our defence must add up to…

    Britain’s biggest contribution to NATO since its creation.

    So that when we are building new capabilities at home –

    We are making our allies safer too –

    Strengthening Europe –

    And strengthening our bridge to the US,

    As Britain’s first partner in defence.

    Third, we will innovate and accelerate innovation to a wartime pace…

    So we can meet the threats of today and tomorrow…

    As the fastest innovator in NATO.

    Now this doesn’t mean replacing people or hardware –

    Quite the opposite –

    It means learning the lessons of Ukraine, which I have discussed many times with President Zelenskyy…

    To ensure every capability we have works seamlessly together –

    Drones, destroyers, AI, aircraft…

    Each different branch of our armed services…

    Fully integrated…

    To create an Army which is ten times more lethal by 2035.

    And in delivering all of this –

    We are more ambitious than ever for the change it can bring.

    To deliver…

    Not just security for our country –

    But renewal too.

    After the Cold War, many nations cut defence spending,

    Freeing up public funds…

    Creating what was called a “peace dividend”

    Which people felt in their public services and the quality of their lives.

    Faced with new circumstances today –

    We must deliver for working people again –

    To seize, now,

    A “defence dividend” for the British people…

    Using this moment to drive jobs and investment…

    Throughout the country –

    Like here in Govan…

    Providing local opportunities, skilled work – community pride.

    Ensuring that everyone across the United Kingdom has a role to play in this effort, yes –

    But, also, that everyone has a stake in its success.

    And – I want to spell this out very simply…

    To achieve this…

    We’re going to build.

    We’re going to use this investment –

    And this once-in-a-generation reform…

    To drive renewal up and down the nation…

    Creating new jobs…

    Creating skills and opportunity…

    Driving huge growth in industrial capacity.

    Let me give just one or two examples.

    I can announce today…

    That we are going to build at least six new munitions factories in the United Kingdom –

    Generating over 1,000 jobs.

    We will build thousands of new long-range weapons in the United Kingdom…

    To boost European deterrence…

    Supporting around 800 more jobs.

    We will defend our homeland…

    By investing in our air and missile defence –

    To better protect these islands.

    We will create a hybrid Royal Navy…

    Blending drones with warships, submarines, and aircraft to patrol the North Atlantic and beyond –

    Supporting thousands of brilliant shipbuilding jobs –

    Including right here in Govan.

    Under our Aukus alliance with the US and Australia…

    We will now deliver up to 12 attack submarines –

    Protecting Britain’s waters…

    Scaling up the industrial base in Barrow –

    And all along the supply chain…

    To deliver a new sub every 18 months –

    Again, creating thousands of jobs.

    We will also invest in world-leading drone capabilities and battlefield technology…

    In better kit for our warriors abroad…

    And better housing for them and their families at home.

    And – finally…

    I can confirm today that we are investing £15 billion…

    In our sovereign warhead programme…

    To secure our deterrent for decades to come –

    Creating 9,000 jobs…

    And thousands more in the supply chain across the country,

    Part of the historic renewal of our nuclear deterrent –

    As the ultimate guarantor of our safety and our security.

    The moment has arrived –

    To transform how we defend ourselves…

    And to renew our nation –

    An investment in British pride and the British people…

    A defence dividend –

    That will be felt in the pockets of working people…

    And the prosperity of the country…

    Securing growth for generations to come…

    Part of a new contract to unite the Kingdom…

    A new spirit of service, flowing from every part of society –

    From the supply lines to the front lines –

    Everyone benefitting, everyone playing their role –

    Doing their duty to the nation and to each other –

    To preserve our way of life –

    And the things that we hold dear…

    Because when it comes to security and renewal:

    Nothing works unless we all work together.

    Thank you very much indeed.

  • Martin Rhodes – 2025 Parliamentary Question on the Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games

    Martin Rhodes – 2025 Parliamentary Question on the Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games

    The parliamentary question asked by Martin Rhodes, the Labour MP for Glasgow North, in the House of Commons on 3 April 2025.

    Martin Rhodes (Glasgow North) (Lab)

    What discussions she has had with the Glasgow 2026 Organising Company on the 2026 Commonwealth games.

    The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport (Stephanie Peacock)

    My Department is in regular contact with the organising company, and I was pleased to meet recently with both the CEO and the chair to discuss progress on delivery, at a meeting in my Department and when I was delighted to attend the King’s baton relay launch at Buckingham Palace with His Majesty the King to mark 500 days until the games. The UK has been proud to host the Commonwealth games twice since 2014, and I am delighted that the UK Government have been able to get behind and support Glasgow 2026.

    Martin Rhodes

    I thank the Minister for her response. Does she agree that it is important that the games bring benefits to local communities? What discussions is she having with colleagues in the Scotland Office, the Scottish Government and Glasgow city council to ensure that local communities in Glasgow benefit from the games in 2026?

    Stephanie Peacock

    Of course, I agree with my hon. Friend that it is important that a successful games supports lasting benefits for the city and the region. As I said, I met with the CEO and chair two weeks ago. I was in Edinburgh to meet with my counterpart in the Scottish Government to discuss the games. My team is in close contact with the Scottish Government, the Scotland Office and other delivery partners to understand the games’ ambitions for these wider benefits. The organising company has already confirmed that the games will include £6 million of investment in existing sporting venues, as well as 3,000 trained volunteers and a cultural programme.

    Joe Robertson (Isle of Wight East) (Con)

    The Minister will know the springboard that hosting international events is for the economy, grassroots participation and sporting facilities in the UK. Under the last Government, we secured and hosted a number of major events, with a pipeline of events. What steps are this Government taking to ensure we have that pipeline of major events in the future?

    Stephanie Peacock

    The hon. Member is right to pay tribute to the economic contribution and the huge inspiration of these events. We have a number of exciting events coming up, whether that be rugby or cricket, and the Government are hugely supportive of major events.

  • Ian Murray – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    Ian Murray – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Ian Murray, the Secretary of State for Scotland, on 23 September 2024.

    Conference – it is a privilege to be here in Liverpool as just one of Scottish Labour’s 37 Members of Parliament.

    Let me just say that again – 37 Scottish Labour MPs.

    Conference,  they are all fantastic and they will do wonderful things in their communities

    Each of them will do wonderful things in their communities and for Scotland. Thank you to each and every one of them.

    Dare I say I’m as happy as Larry. Although, as some of you may have heard, he isn’t always happy to see me.

    In his final campaign visit to Scotland, the Prime Minister, first time saying that as well reiterated what he first said back in 2020, that “the route to a Labour government runs through Scotland”.

    By voting Labour, Scottish voters kicked out the Tories and put Scotland at the heart of government. It is the privilege of my political life to serve in Keir Starmer’s cabinet, working alongside the brilliant Kirsty McNeil as Scotland Office minister and Melanie Ward as PPS.

    We’ve got Martin McCluskey in the Whips office, Douglas Alexander serving as Trade Minister, and of course Energy Minister Michael Shanks, whose seismic by-election victory in Rutherglen a year ago kick-started our most successful general election campaign in a generation.

    But conference – none of this was inevitable. There is nothing in the political rule book which says a failing government must give way to the opposition.

    We won in Scotland because we planned and executed a winning strategy – which promised what the Scottish people demanded- change. It began with Keir Starmer changing our party to put it back in the service of working people.

    And it was powered by the energy, enthusiasm and maybe a wee bit of dancing of Anas Sarwar. Our campaign was implemented meticulously by a world class team of Scottish Labour staff and activists, led by our fantastic Scottish General Secretary, John Paul. John Paul thank you to you and your team.

    As co-chair of the Scottish campaign, along with that indefatigable legendary Dam of Dumbarton, Jackie Ballie, I was so proud to see that hard work pay off. Jackie   Thank you for everything you did.

    Conference – we should be proud of our success. It took us 14 years to get rid of one of Scotland’s two failing governments but the real hard work started the day after the election to get rid of the other one.

    There are only five hundred and ninety-two days until Scots return to the polls.  Or 591 sleeps as my daughter would say.

    And as wonderful as July’s result was, we can take nothing for granted.

    Those who voted for Labour in Scotland on the 4th of July voted for change because they had been let down badly by their two governments.

    They did not ‘come home’ to Labour.

    They chose us in the hope and expectation that we will deliver for them.

    And that is what we must, and are determined, to do.

    We know it will not be easy but there is a real sense of this Labour purpose to the tough choices that will need to be made to fix the foundations. By fixing those foundations we can build that brighter future for every part of our country.

    And as the Prime Minister, the Chancellor just before lunch and Anas Sarwar have said repeatedly  there will be no return to austerity.  And I want to say that again – there will be no return to austerity.

    My team and I in the Scotland Office will play our part. Supported by the most dedicated and professional team of civil servants, we have reset the relationship with the Scottish Government.

    There are many, many, many things on which Labour and the SNP will never agree, but grown-up politics means two governments working together. It’s what most Scots expect and what we will deliver.

    But Conference, I will also not shy away from calling out the tragic failure of the SNP. 860,000 of our fellow Scots stuck on NHS waiting lists. 10,000 of our children with no home to call their own.

    The worst attainment gap between the richest and the poorest pupils on record. Tax decisions this year that cost more than they raised, with working people paying more but getting less, while the SNP make £500m cuts to services, all to pay for their financial incompetence.

    The Scottish people deserve better – and my department The Scotland Office has a crucial role in changing things now.

    The Scotland Office has four priorities to help deliver our governments’ missions.

    Economic growth. Green energy. Brand Scotland. And of course Tackling Poverty.

    I want to see the Scotland Office working directly with the Scottish government and local governments in Scotland to drive growth in every community.

    Powering that growth will be GB Energy to create jobs, drive down bills and ensure our existing world class energy workforce can lead and benefit from these new industries of the future.

    GB Energy will be owned by the public, and, Conference I can exclusively announce today, headquartered in Scotland.

    We will also drive growth by promoting Brand Scotland. From shipbuilding, science and salmon to scotch, culture and services, we’re the best in the world, and by selling Scotland to the world we can unlock jobs and all of that investment.

    Gordon Brown once spoke of prudence with a purpose.

    And all that work to grow our economy, to go green, and promote our brand, has a purpose too – to tackle the scourge of poverty.

    To raise wages, protect and invest in public services and ensure everyone in life has the security of good work and the opportunity to succeed.

    Conference, lifting people out of poverty is what Labour Governments do. It’s in our DNA. We’ve done it before and we’ll do it again.

    The financial inheritance we knew about will be challenging, compounded by the £22 billion black hole we didn’t know about – another act of astonishing economic vandalism from the Tories that they’ve just walked away from with no responsibility.

    But the economic inheritance we face isn’t just fiscal. It is also structural. It is also industrial. The foundations of Scotland’s industrial economy are incredibly fragile. We have seen that in the last month.

    None of this is a coincidence. It is a consequence of more than a decade without an industrial strategy for Scotland.

    Scotland has a strongly industrial past – and it will have a bright industrial future which guarantees jobs and wealth for families for generations and generations to come if we get the transition to net zero right.

    Our plan is a good one. Rooted in Labour values and with a clear purpose.

    It is a plan which will begin to deliver the change Scotland, remember that phrase – and set the conditions for success in 592 days’ time – when the people of Scotland will have the chance to vote for change.

    To elect a Labour government in Scotland which works hand in glove with Keir Starmer’s government; and make my friend Anas Sarwar our next First Minister.

    Conference, change in Scotland began on the 4th of July. The opportunity to deliver lasting change is in all our hands. Let’s take that opportunity and let’s deliver it.

  • Anas Sarwar – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    Anas Sarwar – 2024 Speech at Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Anas Sarwar, the Leader of the Scottish Labour Party, on 23 September 2024.

    Conference, thank you for that wonderful introduction, and what a year it has been!

    In the twelve months since we last met, we no longer have a Tory government.

    We now have the fewest Tory MPs in modern political history.

    We have seen the SNP beaten in Scotland.

    And we now have a UK Labour government that has started the journey for change.

    And we have crucially – for the first time in 14 years – a Labour Prime Minister.

    A Prime Minister that understands Scotland, cares about Scotland and is determined to deliver for Scotland.

    And for the first time ever we have a female Chancellor in Rachel Reeves, who made a fantastic speech earlier today and made it clear: there will be no return to austerity with a Labour government.

    And in Scotland, we delivered a political earthquake.

    With a record swing to Scottish Labour.

    Our share of the vote went up 16 per cent.

    Meaning we now have not one Scottish Labour MP – we now have 37 Scottish Labour MPs – putting Scotland at the heart of a Labour government.

    Thirty seven. Let’s see them. Stand up and take a bow.

    Thirty seven fantastic champions for Scotland.

    And, friends, we have Ian Murray – who for so long was the sole Scottish Labour voice at Westminster – who is now the voice for Scotland around the cabinet table.

    Scotland led the way in delivering a Labour government and delivering a Labour Prime Minister.

    And Scotland led the way in delivering the change the UK needs.

    Because friends, the importance of the election victory cannot be overstated.

    Just think about how the last couple of months would have panned out differently had the Tories stayed in power.

    When far-right thugs took to the streets of the UK, Keir Starmer and his government faced them down and made it clear that the politics of hate has no place in our country.

    When a £22 billion Tory black hole was discovered, Rachel Reeves acted quickly to protect the public finances and to protect working people’s pockets.

    And just think what would have happened if the Tories were still in power.

    Thank goodness we now have a serious Labour government with competence, compassion, and decency at its heart.

    After 14 years of Tory chaos, we have a Labour government standing up for our values. Labour’s values.

    So no more will the politics of division and prejudice rule in our country.

    The time has come for the politics of decency, of compassion and above all, hope.

    This is the change that we have begun together.

    And this is the brighter, better United Kingdom that we are building together too.

    In Scotland we led the way in making this change happen.

    Scotland is part of Labour’s history but we are also part of Labour’s present and, most importantly, Labour’s future.

    As Keir has said during the election – there is no change without Scotland.

    And there is no Labour without Scotland.

    But the truth is that the story of Labour’s revival is only half-written.

    You see Conference – for lots of you, there was only one incompetent government to get rid of.

    But in Scotland we were stuck with two.

    So at the General Election, we got rid of one incompetent government.

    And in 2026 we finish the job and get rid of the other one.

    That’s the next stage of change for Scotland.

    Because as we speak, nearly one in six Scots are on an NHS waiting list.

    Thousands have been driven into private healthcare.

    Drugs and alcohol deaths remain stubbornly high.

    Rough sleeping persists and homelessness is at record levels.

    The education attainment gap remains.

    And the economic flatlining has damaged businesses.

    How does the SNP government react?

    It hikes taxes on working people and doubles down on the politics of blame and division.

    Working Scots left to pay the price of nearly two decades of SNP failure.

    Working Scots left to struggle to get medical care because of two decades of SNP failure.

    And working Scots having to watch public services crumble before their eyes because of two decades of SNP failure.

    Because when Scotland most needs change, when it needs fresh leadership and new ideas, all the SNP offer is internal division and outward incompetence.

    The same tired people in power peddling the same old excuses.

    But frankly, the time is up for the SNP.

    Because they are a party that has lost their vision and lost their way.

    And above all, they have lost their ambition for Scotland.

    Because, Conference, Scotland is a country of enormous potential and is brimming with talent.

    But we are still held back by an SNP government that is failing Scots on a daily basis and has nothing but decline and division to offer to the people.

    But for me, and for Scottish Labour, Scotland is the best country in the world.

    Our potential is limitless – just like the ambition and vision of our people.

    We have the expertise, we have the skills, we have the natural resources, we have the work force and we have the entrepreneurs that we need to deliver a decade of renewal.

    But this requires a government at Holyrood that is ready and willing to work with others to make this happen.

    That’s why the new UK Labour government is already acting now to deliver the change Scotland needs.

    A UK Labour government with Scotland at its heart has got straight to work.

    Delivering the energy transition with GB Energy.

    A publicly owned energy generation company headquartered in Scotland.

    And from looking at Michael Shanks’ face, he can’t wait to get on with the job of delivering GB Energy and transforming people’s lives.

    Creating thousands of jobs and making sure Scotland leads the world in clean energy.

    We have started action to transform the world of work with Angela Rayner’s game-changing New Deal for Working People.

    And we have made the Scotland Office Scotland’s window to the world, not selling Scotland to the Scots, but selling Brand Scotland to the world.

    Delivering investment for our country, boosting exports and creating more jobs.

    Because Scotland is tired of being held back.

    It’s time to turn the page on division and decline.

    And this – Conference – is the change Scotland needs.

    At the general election, as I say, we did half the job.

    But in 2026, it is our chance to finish the job by electing a Scottish Labour government that works for everyone in Scotland.

    And as we look towards the 2026 Scottish Parliament election I want to be clear.

    Others might want to talk Scotland down, but I and all of Scottish Labour are relentlessly positive for the future of our country.

    Because Scotland’s best days lie ahead of us.

    Things can and they will get better.

    We will make Scotland the best country in the world to live, to learn, to work and to do business in.

    We will unlock the potential of our workers and natural resources by making Scotland a world-leader in green technology.

    We will save our NHS by transferring power away from the managers and the bureaucrats and towards doctors and nurses.

    And we will get our economy back on track by supporting businesses and workers to thrive.

    This is what is on offer – a fairer and healthier future with Scottish Labour.

    I believe a different future is possible.

    A future that I am determined to see delivered for the people of Scotland.

    A brighter and more prosperous Scotland.

    And a Scotland where everyone is helped to thrive.

    This is what we offer.

    That is the change we need and that is the change we will deliver.

    Scottish Labour – the party of change and hope.

    Conference – that is the future we will deliver together.

    Thank you.

  • Kirsty McNeill – 2024 Speech on the Adequacy of the Scotland Act 1998

    Kirsty McNeill – 2024 Speech on the Adequacy of the Scotland Act 1998

    The speech made by Kirsty McNeill, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Scotland, in the House of Commons on 18 July 2024.

    I thank the right hon. Member for warmly welcoming me to the Chamber and, indeed, for the work that we have done together in the past on promoting the values of humanitarianism. He will know not only that this is my first day speaking at the Dispatch Box but that my maiden speech, just a short while ago, was my very first contribution of any kind in this House. I hope that with nearly four decades of dedicated service in this place, he may still recall the trepidation of standing here to speak for the first time.

    Turning to the subject matter of the debate, I begin with a celebration of the Scotland Act 1998. It is 25 years since Her late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II opened the Scottish Parliament and the late, and much-missed, Donald Dewar was sworn in as First Minister. Donald Dewar, the father of devolution, described the Scottish Parliament as “not an end” but a “means to greater ends”—namely, greater social justice in Scotland. That is the driving imperative that still guides Labour, which is why ensuring support for both the Union and the devolved institutions should be seen as a precondition for, and not the sum total of, this Government’s ambitions.

    In the quarter century since the establishment of the Scottish Parliament, we have seen a deepening of devolution through the 2012 and 2016 Scotland Acts. Crucially, those reforms were based on cross-party consensus in Scotland. I am immensely proud that I will now have a role in the ongoing success of those Acts as they continue to deliver for people in Scotland.

    It is right that we continue to hear views from all sides on how constitutional frameworks should evolve. However, I believe that it is through relationships and collaboration that we will drive progress together and deliver for the people we were sent here to serve. As my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Scotland has made clear, we all need to work on resetting relationships. Indeed, the Prime Minister has already made this a priority, with his first official engagement being with the First Minister in Scotland. That has been mirrored by early engagement by Ministers throughout the UK Government, and I assure the House that it will continue.

    For my part, I am clear that improved and ongoing co-operation will depend on three main things. The first is the sincerity of our collective commitment to a deep and durable resetting of relationships. Like the 1998 Act itself, collaborative working must endure beyond specific Administrations and Ministers, and be about more than formal structures and machinery. That does not always mean that we will agree, but we must be more mature about those disagreements, and depolarise and detoxify the tone of debate in Scotland. That should be the nature of grown-up politics and it is what the people of Scotland, and of all four nations of the UK, rightly expect from us as their elected representatives.

    Secondly, we need a dynamic understanding of devolution as an ongoing process of redistributing power, which is already evidenced in our commitment to metro mayors in England and to further devolution within England, as set out in the King’s Speech, and in the establishment of the Council of the Nations and Regions. Thirdly, we must commit to a genuine era of people power, with communities, co-operatives, civil society and local government working with the Government at all levels to deliver the change Scotland needs. As I hope my maiden speech made clear, we all need to have an open-hearted approach to working together in the best interests of the people we serve.

    I turn now to the substance of today’s debate. I appreciate the deeply held concern of the right hon. Member. The Government are focused on rebuilding trust in politics across the whole of the UK. In our manifesto, we have been clear that it is not only here in Westminster where more must be done to uphold the standards we expect to see in public life. Scrutiny of the Scottish Government is a matter for the Scottish Parliament, and it could be raised there by the right hon. Member’s colleagues. Nevertheless, we have committed in our manifesto to ensuring that Members of devolved legislatures will have the same free speech protections enjoyed by MPs here at Westminster, to better ensure that elected representatives can hold those in power to account. I hope that the right hon. Member will welcome that commitment. It is important to emphasise that legal proceedings between Mr Salmond and the Scottish Government are ongoing.

    I appreciate that there will be many views on how the Scotland Act 1998 might be improved. That is only right, and I am sure that we will continue to hear those views both here and in the Scottish Parliament, but as I have said, the settlement has been remade over the course of 25 years on the basis of broad consensus. Delivery must now be our focus. As the King’s Speech set out yesterday, this Government are committed to delivering change for Scotland. From making Scotland the home of Great British Energy, which is central to our mission to make the UK a clean energy superpower, to the new national wealth fund and the new deal for working people, we will deliver a better outcome for people in Scotland, particularly those at the sharp end of inequality, which holds back too many people.

    While it is true that co-operation between Governments at a political level has not always been straightforward, nevertheless the Scotland Act has endured. I have often said that while Scots do not have to agree about everything, we do have to find ways to agree about more. Labour is the party of devolution and we will be a Government of collaboration, but above all we are going to deliver for the people of Scotland. There is so much to do. It is time to get started.

  • David Davis – 2024 Speech on the Adequacy of the Scotland Act 1998

    David Davis – 2024 Speech on the Adequacy of the Scotland Act 1998

    The speech made by David Davis, the Conservative MP for Goole and Pocklington, in the House of Commons on 18 July 2024.

    Thank you for calling me, Mr Deputy Speaker. I will hesitate for just a second as the Chamber clears—my normal popularity.

    Three years ago, on 16 March 2021, I presented to the House the implications of the unlawful Scottish Government investigation and contrived criminal charges against Alex Salmond. I recommended empowering the Scottish Parliament to investigate as a Scottish court found that the Government acted illegally and engaged in a process tainted by bias against Mr Salmond. Regrettably, the investigative committee appointed by Holyrood was limited in its powers of investigation, operated without the protection of privilege and was thwarted at every turn by the delay, obfuscation and even threats from the Scottish Government and institutions of state. Three years on, that failure in democratic accountability has not been addressed.

    The investigatory powers of the Scottish Parliament could have been strengthened. Decisions about whether and who to prosecute could have been made entirely independently of Ministers in the Scottish Government. Neither of those things has happened, forcing me to raise the matter again.

    Mr Salmond has been found innocent. He previously succeeded in Scotland’s highest civil court in establishing the illegality of Scottish Government actions. He is currently suing the Scottish Government in a civil action. That has been assisted as some of those involved in constructing the case against Mr Salmond are now themselves under police investigation. I will therefore focus today on the wider failings in this sorry case and what they raise for the state of the rule of law in Scotland.

    In 2017, senior Scottish Government figures set up a procedure for dealing with sexual harassment allegations that effectively targeted Alex Salmond. I believe that, at an early stage, that was done with the knowledge of Nicola Sturgeon’s team, and potentially with their encouragement. The procedure applied retrospectively to former Ministers—Mr Salmond no longer being a Minister—but excluded civil servants. Sue Gray, then head of propriety and ethics at the Cabinet Office, expressed discomfort with the procedure. Despite that, the Scottish Government proceeded. An investigating officer was appointed. They were to have had no prior contact with complainants, yet the officer appointed, Judith Mackinnon, had in fact had extensive prior contact with the complainants.

    It has now also emerged the person deciding the case—former permanent secretary Leslie Evans—also met with complainants during the process. That information was withheld from the Court of Session in one of the many breaches of the Scottish governmental duty of candour in this case.

    Mr Salmond was informed of the complaints against him in March 2018. All were denied, and in April 2018 his legal team immediately raised concerns about the fairness and legality of the new procedure as well as concerns over Mr Salmond’s access to witnesses and documents. He offered mediation and arbitration to bring the illegality of the process into focus; it was repeatedly rejected. Messages between two civil servants in early February 2018 show how Liz Lloyd, Sturgeon’s chief of staff, was directly interfering in discussions with complainers ahead of their complaints being made. Her role—acting, we must assume, with the knowledge of her boss—was central to these events.

    Furthermore, evidence to the Holyrood inquiry from Mr Salmond’s former chief of staff, Geoff Aberdein, stated that Liz Lloyd in early March 2018 informed him that

    “there were two individual complainers”.

    Three other witnesses support that assertion. That directly contradicts her claim that she first became aware of the allegations in April 2018, yet it is a claim she doubtless felt compelled to make in order not to contradict Nicola Sturgeon’s position already given to the Scottish Parliament. Sturgeon misleading the Scottish Parliament would, of course, have led to her resignation. The same untruth was repeated on behalf of the Scottish Government during the judicial review. It is the position of Mr Salmond’s legal team that neither Lloyd nor Sturgeon was telling the truth.

    Very quickly after my previous debate on these matters, the Scottish police visited me, asking where I had got all this information. They got a nice cup of tea and a biscuit. Strangely, they had no interest whatsoever in what appears to be prima facie evidence of perjury by those holding high office. Let me say clearly today that these matters obviously require to be properly investigated by the police.

    In August 2018, ignoring the evident impropriety of the process, the permanent secretary Leslie Evans decided that some complaints against Salmond were well-founded. Salmond was told of Evans’ decision, and that a press release was to be issued at 5 pm. Salmond’s legal team was about to lodge a judicial review of the whole procedure, so it urgently sought—and received—written assurances that no press release would be issued. Despite those assurances, only hours later, the Daily Record published news of the allegations—part of the decision report had been unlawfully leaked. Other than Mr Salmond, only the Scottish Government had that report. However, I have met a witness who has made a statement that he was told by the then political editor of the Daily Record that the story was leaked by Liz Lloyd. The House should know that the prosecutor from the Information Commissioner’s Office investigating the leak concluded:

    “I have sympathy with the hypothesis that the leak came from an employee of the Scottish Government.”

    The Scottish Government fought the judicial review, at huge cost, despite their own legal advisers telling them in no uncertain terms that they would fail. They were warned:

    “it makes little sense to continue to defend the indefensible”

    and that the least worst option was to concede the case. Eventually, both the Scottish Government’s external counsel told the Government that they were in an untenable position and were suffering extreme professional embarrassment because of Government failings. They were also warned—this is important—that civil servants were deliberately misleading both them and the court. Despite these repeated warnings, the Government only conceded the judicial review after their external counsel threatened resignation.

    In January 2019, the Court of Session found that the Scottish Government had acted unlawfully, and that their actions and processes were procedurally unfair and tainted by apparent bias. Commentators often describe the investigation as “botched”. It was that, and more: it was illegal, pure and simple. Yet no one has been held accountable, and millions of pounds of taxpayer money was wasted. That is perhaps unsurprising when looking at the attitude of those at the top of the Scottish civil service.

    The same day that Salmond won his case, the permanent secretary Leslie Evans sent a message to a colleague saying that the battle was lost but not “the war”. That is hardly the language of an impartial civil servant. Senior figures at the top of the Scottish Government appear to have colluded to ensure that Salmond was reported to Police Scotland. There is evidence of contact between figures in the Scottish Government and officers of the Scottish National party. WhatsApp messages reveal that Liz Lloyd was convening a “council of war” WhatsApp group.

    A whistleblower revealed communications from Sue Ruddick, the SNP’s chief operating officer that in their words point to

    “to collusion, perjury, up to criminal conspiracy.”

    In the communications, she and the then chief executive of the SNP Peter Murrell, encouraged and coached complainants into reporting Salmond to the police. Appearing at the Holyrood inquiry in December 2020, Murrell was asked whether he was part of the so-called “council of war” WhatsApp group. Murrell denied even using WhatsApp, yet it emerged that he did have WhatsApp and had used it within weeks of the evidence session. Yet another clear lie.

    The House may wonder what the Scottish Government investigation had to do with the Scottish National party in the first place. The answer is provided by Anne Harvey, a qualified lawyer who was then a senior official for the SNP in this House, who wisely refused to have anything to do with what she characterised as a witch hunt.

    I recommend colleagues read again my debate on 16 March 2021. In that debate, I outlined the actions of senior officers of the SNP Peter Murrell and Sue Ruddick, and their compliance officer Ian McCann, whose interference in an ongoing police inquiry represented nothing less than an attempt to pervert the course of justice. The Police Scotland investigation was triggered by Leslie Evans, who sent the results of this internal inquiry to the Crown Agent, Mr David Harvie. The Crown Agent is responsible for overseeing all prosecutions in Scotland. Despite the subsequent police inquiry and court case, Salmond was acquitted on all charges by a majority female jury in front of a female judge.

    As a result of the Scottish Government’s unlawful handling of the allegations, the Scottish Parliament established a committee to examine how the First Minister, Scottish Government officials and special advisers dealt with complaints against Salmond. Even before the committee’s report was published, the convener said the committee was being undermined by “delay, prevarication and obfuscation” on the part of the SNP Government. When published, the report was damning. It reads:

    “Many documents were, in our view, insufficient to provide a complete picture of the events being considered by the committee and again that has hampered the committee’s work”.

    There would be uproar if a Committee of this House was impeded in such a manner, but the Scottish Government’s attempts to thwart the parliamentary inquiry did not stop there. It ignored two votes in the Scottish Parliament and waited until the very last minute to release legal advice it had received on the judicial review. That advice was only released the day before Sturgeon would give evidence, after the Opposition threatened a no confidence motion against the current First Minister, John Swinney. Even then, when released, it was not the full advice. Crucial parts were only made available after Sturgeon had appeared. Additionally, the Crown Office was threatening MSPs with prosecution due to the proceedings of the committee. Such threats would be treated in Westminster as a contempt of Parliament.

    At the instigation of the Crown Office, Police Scotland opened an investigation after WhatsApp messages given to the inquiry were made public. The messages showed Peter Murrell calling for pressure to be put on the police to investigate Salmond. Throughout this sorry business, the Crown Office has been enthusiastic in its pursuit of those who have published evidence in this case. A journalist has been jailed. Another journalist was prosecuted in a case completely dismissed by the sheriff court. The Crown Office engaged in a legal battle with The Spectator to stop the publication of evidence to the parliamentary committee. What is most troubling is that at the time, the line manager of David Harvie, the Crown Agent who oversees prosecutions in Scotland, was Leslie Evans, the Scottish Government permanent secretary. And Mr Harvie’s legal boss was the former Lord Advocate James Wolffe, who himself was advising the Scottish Government not to concede the judicial review against that same Scottish Government! That set-up is fundamentally wrong. I will outline just one example of why.

    On 2 March 2021, Mr Harvie, the Crown Agent, was at pains to tell the parliamentary committee, under oath, that he had never discussed the case with his line manager, Leslie Evans. Now, that may be true. However, what I can now tell the House is that documents show Mr Harvie had, in fact, discussed the matter with Leslie Evan’s private secretary—her representative on earth, if you like—in the days before he became involved in the case. It is fundamentally unsatisfactory that the then Crown Agent, the senior official in the administration of justice in Scotland, cannot be relied upon to tell a parliamentary committee the whole truth. I find it even more unsatisfactory when the Crown Office shows no interest in investigating these grave matters.

    In giving evidence to the inquiry, Nicola Sturgeon repeatedly failed to answer questions because she “could not recall”. In the end, the committee found, by a vote of five to four, that Nicola Sturgeon had given an “inaccurate” account of her knowledge of the allegations. In one of its clearest findings, the parliamentary committee found, unanimously, that Leslie Evans was personally as well as corporately responsible for failings that cost the Scottish taxpayer millions of pounds and led to the humiliation of the Scottish Government in the highest civil court in Scotland, due to their unlawful behaviour. Has there been any penalty for those failings? Of course not. Instead, Ms Evans’ contract was extended, along with her pension. The damage she has caused, both by her action and inaction, has been left totally unaccounted for. Something must be done to prevent these failures of accountability in public service in future, and I hope that the “duty of candour” legislation in the King’s Speech means that something finally will be done.

    Alongside the Holyrood inquiry, the lawyer James Hamilton was asked to consider whether Nicola Sturgeon had breached the ministerial code during this affair. While Mr Hamilton concluded that Sturgeon did not breach the code, his report was so heavily redacted by the Scottish Government that he, in a highly unusual move, insisted on the publication of a rather stark note along with it. Hamilton said that such redaction

    “presents an incomplete and even at times misleading version of what happened.”

    I have heard evidence that special advisers—not lawyers—appointed by Nicola Sturgeon had been directly involved in the redactions of Mr Hamilton’s report. I have pursued this point with the current permanent secretary, but I have not received a satisfactory or clear reply.

    To obtain further information on the Hamilton report, a freedom of information request was made to the Scottish Government. The Scottish Government refused to publish the requested information, claiming that they did not hold it—despite its being their report. The Information Commissioner rubbished their claim, and ordered that it be published. The Scottish Government attempted to appeal against that decision. I attended the appeal last year in Edinburgh, and noted that the Government case was not just summarily dismissed, but dismissed in a completely humiliating manner. I have brought a number of cases against Governments, and I have never seen quite such an outright humiliating dismissal. Despite these losses, the Scottish Government have still failed to publish the information requested, and now oppose the publication on other grounds.

    When I first brought these matters to the attention of the House, Nicola Sturgeon was still First Minister in all her unchallengeable pomp. She is not any more. We all know what has happened to her and the top management of the SNP since. I cannot and will not go into all that now, but that is the important backdrop to this sorry saga. My purpose today has been to concentrate on matters of fundamental principle, so we can ensure that such unlawful and shameful events cannot be repeated.

    These events have occurred under the devolution settlement secured under the Scotland Act 1998. The Holyrood parliamentary committee suffered because it did not have adequate power to hold the Scottish Government to account, which allowed it to be frustrated by the Government and threatened by the Crown Office. It is simply not appropriate for the Lord Advocate to be both the public prosecutor and the Government’s legal adviser. I put forward that position three years ago, in my Adjournment debate of 16 March 2021, and was supported by the former Member for Edinburgh South West, Joanna Cherry. Ms Cherry presented a private Member’s Bill that had cross-party support. However, despite the case being conceded in principle by the Scottish Government, no legislative action has followed.

    There is also concern about how the SNP’s leadership exerted influence over the rule of law in Scotland, in the Scottish Parliament, the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service, the courts, the police and the media. Nicola Sturgeon is no longer First Minister, but her successors have continued to suppress the truth about their party’s disgraceful attempts to destroy Alex Salmond, and in so doing they have continued to deny him proper redress. However, this is about more than Alex Salmond. To ensure that it never happens again, we must review the consequences for civil servants found to have acted improperly by parliamentary committees, we must strengthen the investigative powers and legal protections offered to Members of the Scottish Parliament, and we must immediately separate the powers of Scottish Law Officers from their roles in administering criminal justice and providing advice to the Scottish Government. It is time to invoke a famous phrase, often invoked in England but just as pertinent in Scotland: fiat justitia—let justice be done.

    Before I sit down, may I—in what is otherwise an incredibly serious debate—apologise to the Minister for the fact that my action today forced her to make her maiden speech at such short notice? If I may say so, she carried that off brilliantly, and deserves double points for it.

  • Ian Murray – 2024 Statement on Being Appointed Scottish Secretary

    Ian Murray – 2024 Statement on Being Appointed Scottish Secretary

    The statement made by Ian Murray on 5 July 2024 after he became the Scottish Secretary.

    It is a real privilege to have been asked to serve in Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s first Cabinet as Secretary of State for Scotland.  My absolute priority in the role will be to deliver the change and renewal that Scotland needs – to drive economic growth, create jobs and reduce poverty.

    As we rebuild our country, I look forward to Scotland standing foursquare with the other UK nations. I will make sure that the Scotland Office is a strong voice for Scotland within the UK Government.

    New funding will help tackle poverty in Scotland by creating jobs and unlocking opportunities across the country, especially in our most deprived communities.

    The Scotland Office will lead on promoting ‘Brand Scotland’ around the globe. Selling our world class produce, products and services to the world.

    I am also determined to reset the relationship between the UK and Scottish Governments. Focusing on co-operation and joint working will mean we can deliver better results for people in Scotland.

  • John Swinney – 2024 First Speech as First Minister

    John Swinney – 2024 First Speech as First Minister

    The speech made by John Swinney, the Scottish First Minister, on 7 May 2024.

    Presiding Officer

    When I stood down as Deputy First Minister in March last year, I believed that would be the last senior office I would hold in politics. Having served then as a senior Minister for 16 years, I felt I had – to coin a phrase – done my bit. To find myself accepting office as First Minister of Scotland today is therefore – to utter a classic understatement – something of a surprise. It is however an extraordinary privilege and it is my honour to accept the office of First Minister, committing myself to do the best I can for Scotland.

    As I navigated my way through the media pack in the corridors of this Parliament last week, prior to announcing my candidacy for the SNP Leadership, I tried to explain that I was taking my time to decide whether to stand because I had to be certain it was a decision that was right for my family. For me, that was not a stalling tactic or an evasive answer from an experienced politician. For me, it was the truth.

    Members will know that my wife Elizabeth has multiple sclerosis. She is indefatigable in trying to make sure that MS does not get in the way of her living life to the full. But much to her frustration, she does often have to rely on her husband for support and assistance. I could not just commit myself to become First Minister without properly working out how we will be able to manage as a family. We have talked that through and we will manage. But I cannot let this moment pass without making clear to Elizabeth my profound gratitude for the sacrifices she is prepared to make to enable her husband to serve our Country as First Minister.

    I am so pleased that my Father, my wife and children, members of my family and our dearest friends, are able to be here today to see this moment. My only regret is that my beloved Mother did not live long enough to see this day. As her Parish Minister wrote to me yesterday “Your Mum would have been (quietly) proud”. My Mother’s love of literature and poetry – which rubbed off on her two sons – would have prompted her to find some words that would sum up this moment.

    Yesterday, I was asked what would be the single most important policy objective for my Government. I made clear it would be the eradication of child poverty.

    So, in searching for some words to sum up this occasion, perhaps my Mother would have chosen these words from one of Scotland’s greatest poets, Hamish Henderson, who was born in Blairgowrie, in the very heart of my Perthshire North constituency. In his epic anthem, Freedom Come All Ye, which I heard Henderson sing from an open top bus in the Meadows of our great Capital City during a rally that demanded the establishment of a Scottish Parliament in the early 1990s, the poet wrote :

    “So come all ye at hame wi Freedom,

    Never heed whit the hoodies croak for doom.

    In your hoose a’ the bairns o’ Adam,

    Can find breid, barley-bree and painted room.”

    If there was ever an anthem that railed against child poverty, those words from Hamish Henderson echo through the straths and streets of our diverse country as a call for us to act.

    So I will be unapologetic about bringing to this Parliament the measures we can take to eradicate child poverty and I look forward to seeking the support of others to achieve that aim.

    Because I recognise, that is how it is going to have to work. I am leading a minority Government. I will need to reach out to others to make things happen. To pass legislation. To agree a Budget.

    To pass legislation. To agree a Budget. These sound like dry technical parliamentary terms. But what they mean in reality is if we want to fund our schools and our hospitals, if we want to give our businesses a competitive edge, if we want to take climate action, if we want to eradicate child poverty, if we want to change people’s lives for the better, we have to work together to do so.

    This Parliament is intensely polarised at this time. I accept my part in creating that environment – whether that is by shouted put downs from the front bench or heckling from a sedentary position. I do promise Presiding Officer that will all stop – I have changed.

    This is not the collaborative place it has been in the past, a collaborative place that has done much good to improve the lives of people in Scotland. As the Parliament marks its 25 year anniversary, and as one of the now relatively small group who have been here from the start, I reflect on the major developments that have taken place by collaborative work and agreement over that time. Major developments taken forward by the Labour and Liberal Executive such as the ban on smoking in public places, or Minimum Unit Pricing by the SNP Government, or the introduction of free bus travel for under 22s by the SNP-Green partnership.

    I commit my Government to working to create that agreement across the Chamber. I hope there is the space and the willingness for that to happen in the interests of the people who sent us here.

    It is hardly a surprise to anyone in this Chamber that I believe that this country could do more if we had the powers of a normal independent nation. Others in this Chamber take the opposite view. That is the essence of democracy – people free to hold and express and pursue different opinions. The question we face in this Parliament today however is a more practical one.

    Does our disagreement on the Constitution prevent us from working collaboratively to eradicate child poverty, build the economy, support jobs, address the cost of living crisis, improve the health service and tackle the climate crisis?

    I will give all of my energy, and my willingness to engage and listen, to ensure that is not the case. I invite others to do the same.

    When I pitched up at Forrester High School in this City in 1979, at the age of 15 wearing my SNP badge, and my friends and teachers wondered why I had become involved in this fringe party, I could scarcely have imagined that my journey would involve becoming the First Minister of Scotland. It is an extraordinary privilege to hold this office and I thank Parliament warmly for the honour that has been given to me.

    To the people of Scotland I would simply say this.

    I offer myself to be the First Minister for everyone in Scotland. I am here to serve you. I will give everything I have to build the best future for our Country.

  • Alister Jack – 2024 New Year’s Message

    Alister Jack – 2024 New Year’s Message

    The message issued by Alister Jack, the Secretary of State for Scotland, on 30 December 2023.

    Scottish Secretary Alister Jack looks back on 2023 and ahead to 2024.

    As another New Year dawns, I’d like to pass on my best wishes for 2024 to my fellow Scots at home and abroad.

    As we get ready to make our resolutions for the year to come, it is also time to take stock of the departing 12 months.

    Looking back, we have worked hard on our mission to level up communities across Scotland.

    Creating equality of opportunity for all – regardless of background – has been our ambition. Our levelling up initiatives are doing this by helping people and their neighbourhoods flourish.

    Listening to local communities – and working closely with the Scottish Government and councils – is bearing fruit on our investments.

    In 2023 we broke through the £2.9 billion barrier when it comes to UK Government levelling-up investment in Scotland.

    Among the highlights of the last 12 months have been the creation of two Freeports with a UK Government investment of £26 million each, one on the Firth of Forth and the other on the Cromarty Firth.

    These were followed by the establishment of two Investment Zones in Glasgow and the North East, both of which are benefitting from up to £160 million each from the UK Treasury.

    Businesses in these areas will get special tax breaks and other support to help them flourish and create jobs.

    Seven Scottish towns are receiving £20 million each as part of our Towns Fund. Levelling Up Partnerships have also been set up which will result in Dundee, the Western Isles, Argyll and Bute and Dumfries and Galloway receiving £20 million each. This funding will help transform these communities, boosting investment and jobs.

    And 2023 saw the announcement of two further rounds of the Levelling Up Fund, which will pay for multi-million-pound community investment right across Scotland.

    Along with my ministerial colleagues in the Scotland Office, Malcolm Offord and John Lamont, it has been great to visit many of these projects and see for ourselves the difference they are making.

    Reflecting on 2023, it would be remiss of me not to mention the Scottish Government’s Gender Recognition Reform legislation. The decision to issue a Section 35 Order for the first time in the history of devolution was not one which I took lightly. But when faced with proposals that would have an adverse impact on reserved equalities legislation I felt there was little option other than to act. I strongly believe the comprehensive judgement issued by Lady Haldane in the UK Government’s favour entirely justifies this stance.

    Scotland is famous across the world for our culture and sport. We were delighted to contribute to the arts scene by contributing almost £9 million to the world-famous Edinburgh festivals.

    I was thrilled that Scotland’s men’s team qualified for next year’s European Championships. It was a pleasure to welcome Steve Clarke to Dover House when we hosted a reception marking the 150th anniversary of the Scottish Football Association. Like all Scotland fans I’m tremendously excited by the thought of our team going to Germany in 2024.

    A highlight of 2023 for so many was the Coronation of King Charles III. As Scottish Secretary I was greatly honoured to play a small part in an uplifting and moving ceremony which marked the beginning of a new era in the history of the United Kingdom.

    I know that for many people the last few years have been extremely difficult. We are still feeling the impact of the Covid pandemic and Vladimir Putin’s illegal war in Ukraine has put pressure on our economy. Under the leadership of Rishi Sunak, the UK Government has made great strides in bringing inflation down. And just as the broad shoulders of the UK Treasury provided unprecedented support during Covid, we have provided unprecedented financial help to tackle the cost of living crisis. Our £105 billion funding package is providing each household with an average of £3,700 in support.

    By working together as one United Kingdom we can withstand the challenges the coming months and years throw at us.

    And, looking ahead to 2024, my resolution is to keep working to bring more prosperity and jobs to Scotland. With that in mind, I’m looking forward to the opening of the Perth Museum, backed by £10 million from the UK Government and which will be a splendid new home for the Stone of Scone.

    We will also see the signing of the full growth deals for Falkirk and Argyll and Bute, partnerships in which we will invest £40 million and £25 million respectively. And yet more money for community projects as we continue our levelling up mission.

    Happy New Year.

    Alister Jack, Secretary of State for Scotland

  • Alister Jack – 2023 Speech at Conservative Party Conference

    Alister Jack – 2023 Speech at Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Alister Jack, the Secretary of State for Scotland, in Manchester on 1 October 2023.

    Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.

    I’d like to thank a few people.

    Firstly, obviously, Douglas who gave a very kind introduction, for his support at Westminster and most important of all for his strong leadership of the Scottish Conservatives in Holyrood.

    Secondly, I’d like to thank my Scotland Office Ministers, Malcolm Offord and John Lamont, my ministerial team, they’re sitting here at the front of the auditorium, and they do excellent work for Scotland. I want to thank them for everything they do, thank you gentlemen.

    Conference, I am here with a very clear message today.

    The United Kingdom has never been stronger.

    And that is not by accident.

    Yes, it’s true the Nationalists are doing everything they can to strengthen the Union for us.

    They have shredded whatever credibility they once had.

    But I’m not going to comment on a live police investigation, however, I think we can all agree that the people of Scotland have been shocked by the investigation into the SNP’s finances; The arrests of leading SNP figures. The searches. The blue and white evidence tent in the garden. The campervan.

    So, it is no surprise that people in Scotland have quite rightly become very angry at the abject failure of the Scottish Government to deliver on the things that matter most to them.

    They are sick and tired of record NHS waiting times.

    Of poor standards in our schools.

    And then, of course, there’s the ferries, or lack of them.

    The SNP and their Green coalition masters, are dragging Scotland down more and more every day and people have come to the obvious conclusion: if the Nationalists can’t even organise a Bottle Deposit Return Scheme properly, all their talk of removing Scotland from the United Kingdom is pure fantasy.

    Ladies and gentlemen, the SNP are increasingly looking like a busted flush.

    But that’s not the only reason why the United Kingdom is stronger than ever.

    The Union is stronger than ever thanks to this Government – the most active and effective UK Government in Scotland in the devolution era.

    And I am very proud of that.

    And I’m very proud of that because we have a great story to tell.

    We have delivered record funding for the Scottish Government, so they really have no excuses for their poor performance in areas such as health and education.

    We have supported families across Scotland facing cost of living pressures.

    We have pledged to halve inflation, to get the economy growing – creating better jobs – and to bring down the national debt.

    We are reaching out across the world to maximise the benefits of Brexit, striking trade deals worth billions of pounds to our distillers, our salmon producers, and our defence industry.

    And we’re not just seeing the benefits of Brexit for the UK with trade deals, either.

    The Chancellor has introduced new financial services regulations.

    We’re backing our fishing industry now it is out of the hated Common Fisheries Policy; and we’ve passed legislation allowing farmers to use cutting edge gene editing technology.

    Cutting edge technology that has been pioneered in Scotland, but which is sadly banned in Scotland by the SNP-Green government of Holyrood, despite the wishes of our farmers and the NFU Scotland.

    As Secretary of State, I’ve also been clear that we will use our post-Brexit internal market legislation to protect Scotland’s free flowing trade across the whole of the United Kingdom.

    Because sixty per cent of our trade is with the rest of the UK and I will not allow the Nationalists to create unnecessary obstacles.

    Ladies and Gentlemen, I am pleased to say we are also supporting our globally successful oil and gas industry.

    This government is clear: we should continue to use our own North Sea resources as we move to Net Zero, our own resources as we bring down prices and improve our energy security.

    Both Labour and the SNP are threatening to shut down our oil and gas industry prematurely and I believe that is sheer madness. It cannot be in Scotland or the United Kingdom’s best interests.

    We must support oil and gas industry, just as we support renewables, as we transition to a much better future.

    At a time of war in Europe and wider global uncertainty we’ve also backed our amazing Armed Forces to the hilt – so much of which is based in Scotland.

    So perhaps now is a very good moment to pay tribute to my friend and fellow Scot, Ben Wallace, an outstanding Defence Secretary who has served this Party, this Government, and our country with the greatest distinction.

    Ladies and gentlemen, there is more.

    This Government is going further than any previous Government of the devolution era in delivering for Scotland.

    As Secretary of State for Scotland it has been my privilege and passion to drive forward direct UK Government investment in Scotland.

    It is now worth £2.5 billion, and that is over and above the Scottish Government’s record funding settlement.

    I was absolutely delighted with the announcement today that seven towns in Scotland will receive around £20 million each as part of our Long-Term Plan for Towns.

    It is the latest in a long line of Levelling Up initiatives reaching every corner of the country.

    It is creating jobs, transforming communities, and delivering high profile projects that people really care about.

    We are backing small-scale, grassroots initiatives; high profile arts projects; cutting edge research in our universities; and more.

    We’ve also led the way creating Freeports based around the Firth of Forth and the Cromarty Firth.

    The Prime Minister and I visited the Cromarty Firth when the news was announced and I know that he, as a long-time champion of Freeports, is as excited as I am about the impact this will have on the Highland economy.

    We’re following up that by creating Investment Zones in Aberdeen and Glasgow.

    Ladies and Gentlemen, we recognised some time ago we had to change the damaging old philosophy of ‘devolve and forget’ – leaving too much in the hands of the devolved administration in Holyrood and allowing the role of the UK Government to fade into the background.

    Well, today, I can announce the era of ‘devolve and forget’ is well and truly over.

    It is dead. It is Finished. And I promise you, it is not coming back under my watch.

    On scores of projects, we are now working directly with local councils and other responsible delivery partners, and I call that real devolution.

    No longer can the failing SNP-Green administration hoard decision-making powers and resources in Holyrood, using it for their own political purposes, rather than the priorities of most people in Scotland.

    My view of devolution is straightforward.

    It is about Scotland’s two governments at Westminster and Holyrood respecting each other’s roles and working together where we can.

    We know that is how devolution works best and we know it is what the vast majority of Scots want and what they expect.

    But unfortunately, my view is not shared by the Nationalists.

    Time and time again they have sought to undermine the devolution settlement in order to provoke unnecessary disagreement between the two governments.

    When they took Nicola Sturgeon’s Referendum Bill to the Supreme Court, they wasted taxpayers’ money confirming what everyone already knew:
    the constitution and the Union are matters reserved to Westminster.

    When they tried to introduce a new system of self-ID for trans people – their Gender Recognition Reform Bill – they ignored the harmful impact on safeguards for women and girls in existing reserved legislation.

    And when they tried to bring a Bottle Deposit Return Scheme, they failed to consider the impact of cross-border trade.

    In each case, I felt it was my duty as Secretary of State for Scotland, to step in.

    I will not stand by, and I will not allow Nationalist ministers to undermine, or abuse, the devolution settlement for their own political purposes.

    Not now, not ever.

    Sadly, I am not surprised by the Nationalists’ approach.

    They do not support devolution so why would they respect it?

    But what concerns me are the consequences.

    The waste of time, money and resources that should be focused on people’s real priorities in Scotland.

    Struggling businesses left out of pocket by the collapse of that shambolic Bottle Deposit Return Scheme.

    The anxiety felt by so many women at the potential erosion of safeguards afforded by the Equality Act.

    The Scottish Government need to understand their political game-playing causes real damage and as Douglas Ross said so forcefully earlier this afternoon, they need to drop their narrow obsession with breaking up Britain and do the job they were elected to do.

    They need to respect devolution; they need to take that record budget they receive from the Treasury, and they must use it to deliver public services that Scots can rely on.

    So, ladies and gentlemen, in conclusion:

    We know this Union – this great, enduring partnership between Scotland, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland – creates opportunity and drives success for us all.

    Quite simply, we achieve more together.

    And that is why I’m so proud to play my part in a UK Government that has done more than any other to strengthen the United Kingdom.

    And we are doing it daily, right across Scotland, investing directly in projects that create jobs and level up communities.

    We are doing it by supporting our key industries, by protecting cross-Border trade and boosting the economy.

    And we are doing it by defending devolution robustly against the Nationalists’ attempts to bend and twist it for their own, narrow political purposes.

    There could not be a clearer contrast between a Nationalist, SNP Scottish Government that is in chaos, that is failing, and that is letting people down by putting their obsession with leaving the UK above everything it does. And this United Kingdom Government, under the outstanding leadership of Rishi Sunak, that is 100 per cent focused on the issues that really matter most to the people in Scotland and across the whole of the United Kingdom.

    More and more, people in Scotland are seeing the benefits of having a United Kingdom that is energetically and visibly on their side because that is what people want.

    It is what’s best for Scotland.

    And it is what we will continue to deliver.

    Thank you very much.