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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 4 May 2021
  6. Current session: 13 May 2021 to 14 March 2026
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Displaying 1316 contributions

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Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee

Minister for Parliamentary Business

Meeting date: 21 June 2022

Paul Sweeney

It can be difficult to anticipate what people will not understand, particularly when you are used to dealing with the issues. Perhaps this committee could make an effort to feed back difficulties with interpretation more regularly.

Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee

Minister for Parliamentary Business

Meeting date: 21 June 2022

Paul Sweeney

I thank the minister and his colleagues for coming along today.

I want to ask about the quality of drafting. The errors that the committee highlights tend to be low in number and fairly minor in nature. However, the committee regularly identifies drafting issues. Minister, what are you doing to ensure that the quality of Scottish statutory instruments remains high?

Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee

Minister for Parliamentary Business

Meeting date: 21 June 2022

Paul Sweeney

I am sure that we are up for getting stuck into it. I have a supplementary question about that. So that we can keep an eye on progress, would it be possible to have a table of the outstanding bills and reports and the Government’s position on each one so that we have some indication of when bills might reach the Parliament? That would give us oversight. A lot of public money has gone into developing reports, so it seems to be inefficient to have them sitting gathering dust. It might be good to have that oversight so that we could see, for example, that something has taken two years and we could ask what is happening and could revisit it from time to time.

Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee

Minister for Parliamentary Business

Meeting date: 21 June 2022

Paul Sweeney

I will turn to historical commitments that have been pursued by predecessor committees. Our predecessor committee welcomed the Scottish Government’s work in meeting almost all of its historical commitments by the end of the previous parliamentary session. The longest-standing commitment is now on the Education (Listed Bodies) (Scotland) Order 2018?(SSI 2018/7). What is the Government doing to ensure that it meets that and other outstanding commitments?

Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee

Minister for Parliamentary Business

Meeting date: 21 June 2022

Paul Sweeney

Forgive me if I am wrong.

Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee

Minister for Parliamentary Business

Meeting date: 21 June 2022

Paul Sweeney

Thank you.

Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee

Minister for Parliamentary Business

Meeting date: 21 June 2022

Paul Sweeney

Thank you.

Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee

Participatory and Deliberative Democracy

Meeting date: 15 June 2022

Paul Sweeney

I want to ask more about the Government’s specific governance arrangements for the exercise, to ensure that you achieve the satisfactory outcomes that you envisage.

Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee

Continued Petitions

Meeting date: 15 June 2022

Paul Sweeney

I think that Mr Ewing covered the matter fairly comprehensively. I am intrigued to hear the minister’s response.

Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee

Continued Petitions

Meeting date: 15 June 2022

Paul Sweeney

I note an interesting interaction between this session and the previous evidence session with Mr Adam, the minister dealing with the Government’s participatory and deliberative democracy agenda. There is a big concern about the attachment of community benefits to big planning projects, whether they relate to energy or something else, and it is an issue that needs to be addressed much more rigorously in NPF4. For example, I know from planning decisions made in Glasgow that there is real concern about funding disappearing centrally in council budget lines and not being attached to material and tangible improvements in the community that is the locus of the development.

There are clear issues that need to be tightened up and considered. There is also a potential interface with the agenda in Mr Adam’s portfolio.