SCOTTISH EXECUTIVE
Cabinet (Meetings)
To ask the First Minister what issues will be discussed at the next meeting of the Scottish Executive's Cabinet. (S1F-01110)
The Cabinet will next meet on 5 June, when it will discuss issues of importance to the Scottish people.
I am sure that the First Minister agrees that it is important that politicians deliver on their promises to the public. I am holding a Labour party document that says that the Government is committed to bringing
It would be useful if John Swinney could distinguish a party document from a manifesto commitment. However, I am delighted that we are talking about waiting lists, because the whole Parliament and the whole of Scotland will want to celebrate the fact that waiting lists reduced by 3,293 in the period from 31 December 2000.
I am just reading out what the Labour party puts through the doors of people in Scotland. The document says that waiting lists will be
This is the fourth question time in a row that John Swinney has failed to deliver anything in a discussion about health. When we look at the meagre contribution that his party is making to the debate on the NHS during this election campaign, the nationalists will have to acknowledge that we are on target to meet the pledges and promises that we made. We have seen a significant reduction of nearly 4 per cent in the three months to 31 March. That figure is significant.
The First Minister says that we are making progress. For him to deliver on his election promise, 1,000 people will have to be taken off the waiting lists every day for the next seven days. Making progress does not sound to me like the reality, when in-patient waiting times are up, out-patient waiting times are up, inequalities are up and the only thing that is down are operations, which are down by 30,000.
That was as pathetic as it was predictable. The great thing about the SNP asking questions about health is that it is selective about what it wants to throw in. The SNP's economic policies would be ruinous for Scotland. We would see public investment slump absolutely.
The First Minister has said that already.
I hear a member say that I have said that already, but facts are important in an election campaign.
Prime Minister (Meetings)
To ask the First Minister when he will next meet the Prime Minister and, depending on the timing, what issues he plans to raise with Mr Hague or Mr Blair? (S1F-01107)
It is always useful to distinguish between optimism and sheer fantasy. There is a part of my mind that can indulge itself in fantasies at times, but it does not remotely include the prospect of the leader of the Conservative party of the United Kingdom going to Downing Street.
I am sure that, when the First Minister meets the Prime Minister, he will fill him in—metaphorically, of course—on his plans to host the European football championships in 2008 in Scotland. As someone who shares the First Minister's interest in football, I think that all of us in the Parliament would love to see the championship come to Scotland, but I have some concerns about the cost to the public purse of going it alone.
David McLetchie is often inclined to start off by soaring to the mountain tops but then to end, pretty quickly, on the foothills.
I thank the First Minister for that answer. I was a little baffled by his reference to mountain tops and foothills. His Executive's record on issues such as Sutherland and fishing compensation exemplifies why when it comes to the grand old duke of York—marching people up to the top of the hill and marching them down again—the First Minister is the past master.
No option has been ruled out. At the press briefing yesterday, it was highlighted that the Welsh and the Irish had expressed interest in a joint bid. The SFA has had some very tentative discussions with the Irish football authorities, but at this stage no decision has been made. I take on board the fact that we are talking about significant sums of public investment. We are also talking about the possibility of ensuring that we can get support for a particular application if we put in a bid.
The First Minister acknowledged that there would be a role for the Education, Culture and Sport Committee in taking forward the 2008 bid, particularly given our experience in the Hampden inquiry. Will he put on record his commitment to involve the committee in any subsequent discussions, particularly in ensuring that any new stadiums that are built involve private finance initiatives, and that they include substantial community development facilities and enhance grass-roots sport development at the same time?
The comments yesterday were designed to ensure that we had an inclusive approach to the tournament in 2008. When I talk about involving the Parliament, I include the Education, Culture and Sport Committee, which Karen Gillon convenes, because clearly it has an interest in the subject.
National Health Service
To ask the First Minister what progress is being made towards improving the service delivered by the NHS to patients. (S1F-01113)
I referred earlier to the improvements that are being made. The figures that were published today show further sustained improvement in waiting in the NHS. Waiting lists on 31 March 2001 are 3,293 lower than at December 2000, and no patient waited longer than 12 months for treatment. The Executive continues to work with the NHS to deliver sustained improvement for patients through a wide-reaching programme of investment and reform.
I thank the First Minister for that answer and welcome the figures that he quoted.
I endorse Mike Watson's points on the on-going debate. Obviously, the review is throwing up some difficult issues in Glasgow; we agree with Mike Watson that those issues must be examined thoroughly and that all the relevant factors must be considered. It is important that Greater Glasgow Health Board considers and consults on a full range of options. The genuine involvement of the public and interested organisations is vital.
I do not expect the First Minister to have an excuse to hand for every hospital in Scotland that is underperforming according to the standards that were promised at the start of the Parliament. However, I draw to his attention the current seven weeks' waiting time for women who are referred to the Western general in Edinburgh for breast examination. I invite him to agree that there is no way that we will ever make up the shortages in the specialities working in the oncology unit involved unless we have control of all Scotland's taxation and spending and call it full fiscal autonomy for the Parliament.
I was just about to say how elegant Margo MacDonald looked in her colours today, but after the last part of her question, I decided I might not want to. [Interruption.] Oh well, I will stick by the compliment that I had planned to give her.
With relation to the First Minister's commitments to NHS service, perhaps he would like to comment on his manifesto 1997 pledges on health. We still have no NHS Direct, we have no public health minister, we have rising waiting lists, not shorter, we have longer cancer care waiting lists, not shorter and we have mixed-sex wards. The First Minister comments on the figures from March 31. [Members: "Get on with it."] I am coming to it—members might not like the truth, but it is coming. On March 31, the waiting list figures were dropping. Perhaps the First Minister might like to comment from today's figure of the actual waiting list, which is a rise on March 31 on the upward spiral. Perhaps he would like to admit that he has failed on all his commitments to the NHS. Rather than trying to blame the Tory hospital building plans, he should admit that he has failed.
I think that Dorothy-Grace Elder may have found in Ben Wallace a target for the Plain English Campaign. I am not sure what the point of his question was, but let me make a stab at answering what I think it was.
Elderly People (Care)
To ask the First Minister what it will cost annually to make personal care free for all elderly people. (S1F-01115)
The care development group, chaired by Malcolm Chisholm, will bring forward proposals for the implementation of free personal care along with an analysis of the costs by the end of August.
I am glad that the First Minister said that, because that is what I thought was the case: that the care development group had been set up not as a delaying tactic, but to analyse the cost. However, lo and behold, a press release issued by the Scottish Labour party on 18 May tells us that the cost of free personal care is actually £80 million a year. If the Scottish Labour party can put a cost on free personal care, would it not be a good idea to share that information with the Scottish Executive, so that it can stop prevaricating on the issue and get on with the job of delivering free personal care for all elderly people now?
Once again, the SNP is playing politics with an important issue for older people in Scotland. [Members: "That is not true."] It is absolutely true.
Nonsense!
John Swinney may say that it is nonsense, but let me put on record the fact that the Executive is committed to the delivery of free personal care for the elderly in Scotland. Nicola Sturgeon is raising every red herring that she can find to try to disguise the fact that we have a commitment and the SNP has not. Let us also make it quite clear that the personal care development group is considering how we can take forward free personal care and the costs involved. The best commitment that I can make today is to say that, by April 2002, we will start to implement free personal care in Scotland. It could not be clearer, so let us clear up any doubts. The SNP smokescreen has evaporated. We are committed to free personal care for our older people. [Applause.]
I call Margaret Smith.
Is it me now?
Yes.
I am sorry, Presiding Officer. There was such a racket going on.
As has been said, the development group will report to the Executive by the end of August. We will then want to move to an implementation of the policy in the spring of 2002. Again, it is a question of sound public investment. We believe that older people are important enough to have that public investment. The nationalists would leave it to the lottery of some oil projection in the future to provide that help. We are not having that. We will stick by our older population in Scotland.
We are well past the time for question time. We will move to the next item of business.
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