Engagements
To ask the First Minister what engagements he has planned for the rest of the day. (S3F-615)
Later today, I will have meetings to take forward the Government's programme for Scotland.
We know that the First Minister knows everything that there is to know about his popularity, but how much does he know about his flagship policy? Last week, he failed to tell the Parliament how much that policy would raise, but yesterday, the information was sneaked out in answer to a parliamentary question. [Interruption.]
Order.
Was a deliberate decision taken to withhold all those numbers from the official consultation document?
Answering parliamentary questions is usually an open and above-board way to proceed. As has been explained, the detailed figures were issued in the answer to a parliamentary question and are available in the Scottish Parliament information centre. I suggest that Wendy Alexander starts to read and examine the figures. If she does, she will find out why a tax that is based on the ability to pay is fundamentally better than Labour's unfair council tax.
There was no answer on whether a deliberate decision was taken to withhold all the numbers from the official consultation document. Of course, we all know that the First Minister wants the detailed scrutiny of his flagship policy to go away. The Scottish National Party's plans would replace one collection system with three new ones: a new system for collecting local income tax; a separate system for taxing second homes; and another new system to collect water and sewerage charges.
I am trying to work out who the bank manager and the economist are. However, according to Labour voters and just about everybody else in Scotland, they seem to be doing a better job and to generate more confidence than Wendy Alexander's team would. Running Scotland involves managing a budget of £30,000 million. I remind Wendy Alexander that she had difficulty in managing a budget of £16,000.
The First Minister is rather like Tommy Sheridan in one respect: if he were Scottish chocolate, he would eat himself. People out there are not really interested in the spite and the sarcasm; they just want to know how much his nat tax will cost them. This is a case not of can't say, but of won't say, which deliberately leaves every Scottish employer and worker in the dark.
The estimates for collection are in the figures that have been published in the parliamentary answer to which Wendy Alexander referred. I suggest that she reads parliamentary answers before asking more questions. I understand well why she would wish to insult me but, for the life of me, I do not see the point of her insulting Tommy Sheridan—that seems to be a counsel of despair. The detailed figures have been published—I suggest that she reads them.
Tell us where they are.
Just a second. If Wendy Alexander reads the figures, she will recognise and learn that taxation based on the ability to pay is fundamentally fairer than taxation such as the council tax, which the Labour Party managed to increase by 62 per cent from March 1997 to last year. That is why there is such overwhelming support for a fair system of local taxation.
A little more dignity and a little more accuracy would serve the First Minister's office well. His proposals require three new tax collection systems. The official document that he has produced contains not a single estimate for any of them. The parliamentary answer that was published yesterday contains a guesstimate for one of them. That guesstimate was made without anyone even speaking to HM Revenue and Customs, the organisation that the First Minister wants to collect the tax.
The message to America will be "Come to Scotland for skills and innovation". We will probably spend some time drawing attention to the dramatic taxation cut for small business in Scotland that will be so widely welcomed.
Secretary of State for Scotland (Meetings)
To ask the First Minister when he will next meet the Secretary of State for Scotland. (S3F-616)
I have no plans to meet the Secretary of State for Scotland in the near future, but I spoke to him briefly the other day.
This week the Robert Foye review laid bare the gaping inadequacies of a system that, appallingly, resulted in the rape of a schoolgirl. Yesterday the Scottish Prison Service admitted that high-risk prisoners such as Mr Foye could still be considered for transfer to an open jail; unbelievably, it could all happen again.
As Annabel Goldie knows, the Scottish Prison Service has published its assessment and review of the Robert Foye case. It recognised in its statement, as does every party in the chamber, the unacceptable nature of Robert Foye's vicious attack on a young woman. The seven recommendations in that statement will be implemented either immediately or within the next few weeks. In addition, the Cabinet Secretary for Justice has asked for a presumption against returning to the open estate anybody who has absconded from it. The underlying matters about the control of our open estate system will be put to the McLeish commission for further study. That is a comprehensive response to a dreadful occurrence.
The public want prisoners in prison; the SNP Government wants convicts in the community. Who would have thought that when the SNP cried "Freedom!" it had in mind the prison population?
Home detention curfew can play a valuable role in the Scottish Prison Service. The Scottish Government—like, I hope, every political party—has the protection of the public uppermost in its mind.
Cabinet (Meetings)
To ask the First Minister what issues will be discussed at the next meeting of the Cabinet. (S3F-617)
The next meeting of the Cabinet will discuss issues of importance to the people of Scotland.
Five years ago today, British armed forces started the invasion of Iraq. That was opposed by the Liberal Democrats, by many others in the chamber and by tens of millions of people in protests on an unprecedented scale throughout the world.
The Scottish National Party gives comprehensive support to an independent and complete public inquiry into the causes of the war in Iraq. To be fair, the Liberal Democrats in the House of Commons supported just such a resolution and debate when I introduced that two years ago. I am certain that the proposal has cross-party support, including from Labour members of the United Kingdom Parliament and the Scottish Parliament, who believe that an inquiry is necessary and would be timeous.
There is one area in which the First Minister can make a direct difference and an issue on which he needs to take urgent action now: he can change the law to allow Scottish fatal accident inquiries to report on the deaths in action of Scottish soldiers. He can get rid of the current system of inquests in Oxfordshire, with all the trauma and upheaval that it causes relatives and families.
No, it is not. The Government supports measures to ensure that FAIs or other procedures can be a Scottish answer to the huge delays that have caused many service families distress. As Nicol Stephen knows, Lord Cullen is reviewing FAIs. We recently wrote again to the UK Government, asking to accelerate matters. I was disturbed to read this week about suggestions from the MOD that commentary on why individual soldiers met their deaths—which I think no coroner south of the border and certainly no sheriff north of the border would make unless it was absolutely necessary—might be censored in some way. That would be totally undesirable, because just as it is important that service families hear about such matters quickly, it is also important that they have confidence that the person on the bench, whoever they are, can speak the entire truth without fear or favour.
I am sure that, given the issue's importance, the First Minister will have read the report into the absconding from Castle Huntly of Robert Foye. Was the victim's family contacted before the publication of the report? Is allowing out on licence prisoners who have tested positively for drugs protecting communities? Who has taken responsibility for the absolutely disgraceful and unacceptable management of the affair?
I hope that contact was made with the victim's family, but I shall inquire about that to make sure that it was done and then write to the member.
Local Government Elections
To ask the First Minister whether the Scottish Government has any plans to alter the date of the local government elections in Scotland. (S3F-619)
The Scottish Government is taking steps to implement the decoupling of Scottish Parliament and local government elections. Yesterday the Scottish Government published a consultation paper on decoupling, which stated that our preferred method would be to move the local government elections to a position midway through the parliamentary session. That would be facilitated by extending the present council term and the next council term by one year. Thus, elections would be held in 2012 and 2017. Although that is our preferred option, we are open to alternative views and we encourage everyone who has an opinion on the matter to voice it through the consultation process.
As the First Minister knows, the Gould report recommended, and—on 10 January—the Parliament approved, the decoupling of the elections. The Parliament agreed with the Gould report's recommendation that executive and legislative powers over electoral law, including that relating to local government, should be transferred from Westminster to the Parliament. What progress has been made on electoral law in respect of local government elections?
The Gould report made such a recommendation. Its first recommendation was that it was sensible that one authority—this Parliament—should have full executive and legislative responsibility for Scottish Parliament and local government elections. Labour members apparently no longer agree with that position, but we cannot rewrite the Gould report at this stage. The Gould report most certainly contains that recommendation. The Labour Party tends to regard with suspicion any move to enhance significantly the Parliament's powers, but I am not sure how that squares with the working party that Wendy Alexander wants to be developed.
I wonder whether it is in order for the First Minister to misrepresent the Parliament's decision, which was that responsibility for the administration of the elections should indeed be a matter for this Parliament but that legislative responsibility is an entirely different matter, which should be considered by the proposed Scottish constitutional commission? Does the First Minister recall that that was the majority view of the Parliament when we debated the issue?
I know that Jackie Baillie will have prepared her question, but I point out to her that I was talking about what was in the Gould report. I know that Labour members wish that the recommendation in question was not in the Gould report, but it is.
The First Minister will be aware that the turnout at recent council by-elections has hovered at around 25 to 30 per cent—
Cambuslang!
—and that, before 1999, when council elections were held separately, the turnout was consistently much lower than in joint elections.
I think that Liberal Democrats are alone in the Parliament in not supporting decoupling. The argument is that if the election campaign takes place on local government issues, under a fair voting system, there is a chance of generating the interest that will produce a satisfactory turnout. There is a substantial complaint from local councillors across the parties that having council and parliamentary elections on the same day—regardless of the additional administrative problems that such a system causes—shields and prevents local government issues from being properly examined during the election campaign. Robert Brown should have more faith that we can generate the interest that is required to increase turnout in local government elections.
Order.
If we applied that swing to the Parliament, only five Labour constituency members would be left. Lord George is not worried about that, because he is a list member.
I gently point out to the First Minister that the Parliament resolved that:
We are going forward on the consultation document. There is an argument that decoupling is sui generis—it stands on its own as an idea that is worth pursuing.
Charities and Voluntary Organisations <br />(New Futures Fund)
To ask the First Minister what steps the Scottish Government will take to ensure that charities and voluntary organisations currently funded by the new futures fund will not be adversely affected by the ending of that funding. (S3F-637)
The Scottish Government strongly supports the work of the third sector. We are making £93 million available over three years—a 37 per cent increase on the previous spending review. That will include the £30 million Scottish investment fund.
The First Minister's response provided no answers for bodies such as the Aberlour Child Care Trust and the Salvation Army, which tackle addiction and support vulnerable families, particularly in Glasgow. The replacement funding to which he referred will not be available to such bodies until September, by which time projects will have folded. Will he order emergency transitional funding, to save jobs and preserve vital work?
I gently point out that the new futures fund was programmed to end in March this year by the previous Administration, and that it is worth £3 million per year, whereas the fairer Scotland fund is worth £435 million over three years.
I have been working closely with the Realise Community Project, which is an employability project in Maryhill in Glasgow that was formerly funded by the new futures fund. I met the Glasgow community planning partnership, which has moneys under the fairer Scotland fund from the new futures fund. Does the First Minister agree that community planning partnerships must be independent of Government and that working with voluntary sector organisations, as I am doing, is far more constructive than engaging in the cheap scaremongering and politicking that we hear from Opposition members?
I willingly accept that the member is infinitely more effective than Iain Gray is, although I would not dream of describing him in the terms in which he has been described.
Class Size Reductions (Placing Requests)
To ask the First Minister how class size reductions will impact on pupil placing requests. (S3F-620)
Every member in the chamber supports the statutory right of parents to make placing requests while acknowledging the fact that the great majority of parents are happy with their local school and choose not to do so.
I thank the First Minister for that piece of propaganda. Does he agree that forcing class size changes on hard-pressed councils will further restrict parental choice? How will he support parents in choosing a school for their children?
I do not agree. I would never accuse Hugh O'Donnell of asking parliamentary questions or making political statements for propaganda purposes. Clearly and obviously, that is the preserve of the people of whom he is asking the questions.
Meeting suspended until 14:15.
On resuming—
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