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.
Scotland is a nation wealthy in culture, history, natural beauty, creativity, forward thinkers and leaders in academia, science, research and politics. It has produced Prime Ministers and so on. Let us not become a nation poor in morals.
The work of the hospice itself is renowned, as it has a terrific record and every inspection produces impeccable results. Sister Rita recognises that, through good hard work on the part of different people, the gap has closed over the past year, and the hospice appreciates the work that has been done.
—Official Report, 28 February 2013; c 17161.Much as I welcome the accolade that the Scottish Government is so efficient that we can produce such a serious and detailed analysis over the course of a weekend, I have to say that the statement that I made two weeks ago should have given people a clue—if they had been listening—that the oil and gas bulletin was ...
That will remain a highly significant sticking point until it is resolved.There are a few other points to touch on. A think tank in Brussels has produced a report that is extremely interesting in light of our engagement with languages.
The Clyde yards exist because of the excellence of their workforce and the efficiency of the products that they produce. It would be quite interesting if, given its lowly position in Scottish politics, the Conservative Party realised that talking down Scotland in such a manner is not the way to obtain votes from the Scottish people.
Those transfers have raised questions about how youth football and youth development in Scotland can produce players to ply their trade in Scotland.The convener mentioned that the SFA and FIFA had suggested that we should not pay too much attention to the issue because, in essence, it is their domain.
It must be led by this Parliament and produced in dialogue with civic Scotland, and the process must go forward to give us a debate and, I hope, a conclusion of which the nation can be proud.
Scotland is standing together on the issue, because we all want the country to be able to produce its own milk. The way things are going, that may not be the case unless we can give more profitability and power to the primary producers in the supply chain.