This search includes all content on the Scottish Parliament website, except for Votes and Motions. All Official Reports (what has been said in Parliament) and Questions and Answers are available from 1999. You can refine your search by adding and removing filters.
I want to compare the language used in question 7 with that used in question 18. Question 7 asks: "Do you have any of the following conditions lasting 12 months or more?"
If a working dog had had its tail legally docked in England—or, indeed, if a boxer, Rottweiler or any other traditionally docked breed had had its tail docked in Ireland—it would not be an offence to buy that dog and bring it into Scotland.
The most useful commodity that ordinary people can give in the immediate aftermath is money to buy relevant supplies and expertise—locally if possible, as Stewart Stevenson said.
The Parliament could nationalise the company—we could buy it cheaply from the administrators, who would be glad to get it off their backs, and then reinstate the jobs for people in Falkirk.
Would those softer angles relate to existing general policies, such as the right to buy and its impact in reducing the amount of housing stock that is available to black and minority ethnic communities?