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A campaign of substance

jackson-carlaw

With the first formal Hustings of the Scottish Conservative & Unionist Party leadership contest being held in Inverness this Saturday, Jackson Carlaw MSP has highlighted his campaign of substance:

 

So far in this campaign, in addition to visiting party members across Scotland, Jackson has made several substantial contributions to the debate on the future of Scotland, and the future of the Scottish Conservative Party.

In the past two weeks, Jackson has announced:

 

  • The reiteration of his support for an early referendum on Scottish independence.
  • His support for an amendment to be tabled to the Scotland Bill in the House of Lords to make provision for the UK Government to schedule an independence referendum if the First Minister continues to prevaricate.
  • His support for a new Act of Constitutional Settlement- establishing a constitutional basis for relations between the UK and Scottish Parliaments and preventing the need for periodic reviews of devolution.
  • The reiteration of his support for the reform of the way that the Scottish Parliament works, further to the paper he published last October on the need for the reform of the Scottish Parliament, and a forthcoming updated submission to the Parliamentary committee which is looking at different ways of reforming the current work practices.
  • His support for term limits for Conservative MSPs elected through the regional list system.
  • His commitment, that if elected leader, Conservative MSPs would not be able to simultaneously be MSPs and stand for election to the UK Parliament.
  • His support for minimum unit pricing of alcohol, provided that the legislation has a sunset clause to mandate its review and assessment as an effective means of recalibrating Scotland’s relationship with alcohol.

 

Commenting Jackson Carlaw MSP said:

 

“I am looking forward to this next phase of the contest – meeting members, telling them about my vision for the future of the Party and more importantly, listening to and answering their questions. When I entered the contest to succeed Annabel Goldie MSP, I was determined that my campaign would be one that was focused on substance and not obsessed with style.”

 “In the past two weeks I have given a clear indication as to where I stand on a range of issues, covering both internal party matters and the future of the Union, and in the coming weeks I will outline still more policy ideas. This leadership debate must be about the policies of the candidates to lead our Party. Phony debates about branding are simply a distraction. What matters to members are key questions such as how we provide economic stability; improve Scottish health and education and more generally how we can ensure a strong Scotland in a great Britain”

 

Jackson has certainly been forthcoming with concrete ideas and proposals. Just yesterday, he announced that should he win the leadership election, there will be a full scale overhaul of policy and the formation thereof. Of interest was the fact that he stated the only “sacred cow” will be a staunch defence of the union – all other policy areas will be up for negotiation. These sorts of proposals are aimed directly at the electorate in this leadership election. A widely held negative view of the party in Scotland is that ordinary members do not have a say on policy, indeed Carlaw stated recently in a Newsnight Scotland interview that the publication of the Holyrood manifesto this year was the first time he had heard of some of the policies. It will be interesting to see how the other two candidates respond to Carlaw’s announcements.

Murdo Fraser’s Campaign Receives Multiple Councillor Endorsement Boost

murdo-fraser

Murdo Fraser’s campaign has today released the names of 46 Scottish Conservative Councillors who have, this week, pledged support for his plan to build a new party for Scotland.

The list includes the Leaders of the Conservative Groups on Dumfries & Galloway, Edinburgh, Perth & Kinross, Fife and Aberdeenshire Councils. Murdo already has the support of 6 MSPs in Holyrood and a number of significant party figures including Sir Malcolm Rifkind and Struan Stevenson MEP.

Murdo said:

“I am delighted that, this early in the campaign, I have secured the support of so many councillors with many others indicating they will also be supporting me.

“These are the men and women who are on the ground, fighting for their local communities and promoting our values.  They know more than anyone how difficult it is to expand our party’s appeal in the face of the identity problem we have.

“Polling before the last election showed us that only 6% of people think we put Scottish issues first, and brand new polling has told us that a new party with a Scottish identity would have a very positive effect.

“Our new party will be focussed on rejuvenation from the grass roots up.  That means practising what we preach in terms of devolving power to communities and families. We will invest in our local organisations, give them greater freedom in candidate selection and enhance the role of our councillors.

“Localism will be at the heart of the new party’s agenda.  Councillors will be the rock on which the revival of our party is built, and I’m honoured to have such a large number of them on my side.”

 

The following Councillors have declared their support for Murdo Fraser:

Councillor      Council Cllr Alan Donnelly     Aberdeen City

Cllr Marcus Humphrey (Group Leader)  Aberdeenshire
Cllr Jim Gifford
Cllr Ron McKail
Cllr George Carr

Cllr Jim Millar      Angus  Cllr John Whyte

Cllr Donald Kelly     Argyll & Bute

Cllr Jeremy Balfour (Group Leader)  City of Edinburgh
Cllr Cameron Rose
Cllr Jason Rust
Cllr Alistair Paisley
Cllr Joanna Mowat
Cllr Iain Whyte
Cllr Kate Mackenzie

Cllr David Meikle      City of Glasgow

Cllr Alistair Campbell    Clackmannanshire

Cllr Ivor Hyslop (Group Leader)   Dumfries and Galloway
Cllr Peter Duncan
Cllr John Dougan
Cllr Denis Male
Cllr Jack Groom
Cllr John Charteris
Cllr Gillian Dykes
Cllr John Bell
Cllr Roberta Tuckfield
Cllr Patsy Gilroy

Cllr Anne Jarvis     East Dunbartonshire

Cllr Dave Dempsey (Group Leader)  Fife
Cllr Dorothea Morrison
Cllr Ron Caird

Cllr Elizabeth Marshall     North Ayrshire

Cllr Alexander Stewart (Group Leader)  Perth & Kinross
Cllr Mac Roberts
Cllr Kathleen Baird
Cllr Caroline Shiers
Cllr Heather Stewart
Cllr Murray Lyle
Cllr Dennis Melloy
Cllr Ian Campbell
Cllr Ann Cowan

Cllr Callum Campbell    Stirling Cllr Neil Benny

Cllr Hywel Davies     South Ayrshire

Cllr Len Wyse      Scottish Borders

Cllr Graeme Campbell    South Lanarkshire

Brown: SNP not matching rhetoric with economic reality

The SNP’s spending review demonstrates that they are not matching rhetoric with reality.

Gavin Brown MSP Scottish Conservative Economy Spokesperson, said:

“This is a smoke and mirrors budget from the SNP. As the UK Government pointed out, spending on frontline public services will be reduced by less than in England, Wales or Northern Ireland. The SNP is double dealing – when they talk about money from Westminster they use real terms but when it’s their budget they talk about cash terms.

“More worrying is the amount of information the SNP has hidden with spin. Their own document calculates a £1bn reduction in real terms for local government. They have completely backtracked on their pledge of four years ago to increase teacher numbers. They are making cuts to enterprise, innovation, the third sector, Skills Development Scotland, higher and further education and housing and regeneration.

“John Swinney has piled huge pressure on himself and local authorities by refusing to identify where real savings can be made. Our fully costed spending plans at the recent election would have saved money through cutting absenteeism, reforming Scottish Water and ending free prescriptions for the wealthy, to name but a few.

“It is worth noting there will be an increase in cash terms to the Total Scottish Government Budget every year up to £35.2bn, which is the highest ever figure. We will judge the SNP by what is in their budget document, not their crafty spin. The SNP’s reality does not live up to their rhetoric and they are being found out.”

 

SNP failing young people on mental health target

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Mary Scanlon MSP, Scottish Conservative Health Spokesperson, had discovered that in 2011 the SNP Scottish Government was still not meeting a recommendation – set in 2005 – to have 60 psychiatric inpatient places for young people in Scotland.

Speaking on the issue Mary stated:

“Six years ago a working group recommended that there should be 60 psychiatric inpatient places across Scotland but in 2011, after an entire term of SNP government and at the start of their second session, there are only 42 places with a business case being developed for an additional six beds in Dundee to cover the North of Scotland.

“While the extra places for the North are welcome it raises serious questions about the SNP’s commitment to young people with mental health problems if they have ignored the recommendation of the Inpatient Working Group.  This group clearly felt in 2005 that the number of places needed in Scotland was 60 and am I sure they will be disappointed that six years on we are only two thirds of the way towards this target.

“Young people suffering with mental health problems need the right treatment at the right location and quite simply the SNP are not providing this.”

 

Grassroots look at Swinney’s Plan MacB Spending Review

Allan Smith

Allan Smith completed his Law Degree in 1998.  He then qualified as an Independent Financial Adviser and set up his own Life Insurance Brokerage in 2008 which is based in Fife.  Allan stood as the Scottish Conservative candidate in the 2011 Scottish Parliament election in his home constituency of Mid Fife & Glenrothes and finished third behind the now Presiding Officer Patricia Marwick, the first occasion a Scottish Conservative has done so since the Holyrood Parliament’s inception.

 

I did wonder whether Mr Swinney’s first budget with and SNP majority would turn out to be a watered down damp squib.

The same tired old nationalist rhetoric of Westminster bad, Holyrood good (so long as the SNP are in power) was prevalent throughout Swinney’s statement this afternoon though. (No surprises there!)

I have to admit that I expected many of the controversial promises made during the SNP’s minority government to have disappeared now that they knew they couldn’t rely on the opposition parties preventing the more attention grabbing, unworkable policies from making it through.

It would appear that to a degree I was wrong. Many of the more far reaching and indeed largely discredited ideas from the last budget are again there; in bold print this time round.

The most controversial of the proposals announced to in my opinion seems to be the levy on alcohol and tobacco retailers announced this afternoon.

As far as I can determine this is simply a watered down version of the previous minority administration’s discredited “Tesco tax.”  Quite what the reasoning is behind this move, given the extremely difficult climate our retailer’s in Scotland are operating in remains a mystery.

Unsurprisingly, many of those representing the business community have been quick to criticise. The Scottish Retail Consortium has described the move as “illogical and discriminatory”

If the SNP see this move as a stepping stone towards the “Tesco Tax” in future budgets then they really do need to come clean. It ultimately amounted to a tax on jobs in the retail sector and its introduction would have a devastating effect on several town centre regeneration projects largely financed by the retail giants.

One of the key SNP manifesto pledges this year was a significant investment in affordable housing. Why then, in this budget, a mere 4 months since the SNP won an unprecedented majority in Holyrood has Swinney announced a 50% reduction in affordable housing investment?

The SNP have questions to answer here. Their manifesto clearly stated that there was a commitment to build 30,000 new socially-rented homes. What has happened during these 4 months?

Shelter Scotland this evening claimed this manifesto pledge was “doomed to failure” With a 50% cut in funding I tend to agree with them. It’s just a pity that the SNP were not honest with the Scottish electorate when making this “Flagship manifesto commitment”

Other commitments made by the Finance Minister include a five-year council tax freeze, no tuition fees and minimum income guarantees for Scottish students, free medical prescriptions, a social wage for low-paid workers in public services, maintenance of health board budgets in real terms, and increased numbers of frontline police and modern apprenticeships.

How these commitments are going to be paid for however is another question altogether.

The blanket free prescriptions policy was cynically designed to coincide with the last Holyrood elections. Is it affordable? Perhaps;  for now.

Is it a good use of public money?

Absolutely not.

It’s long been the view of the Scottish Conservatives that free prescriptions should be available to the most vulnerable.

Handing out free prescriptions to millionaires in times of economic crisis though, simply does not make sense. I’d go so far as to say it’s immoral.

The tuition fees debate will rumble on but I’ve yet to hear anyone from within the SNP explain with any clarity how this is going to be funded.

Their policy of charging English, Welsh and Northern Irish students who choose to study in Scotland fees, yet charging Scottish students nothing seems utterly bizarre and wrong.

Can you imagine what those within the SNP would say if it was announced in Westminster that university education in England would remain free for English students but Scottish students would pay course fees?

I dread to think what the reaction would be!

Swinney also confirmed that the Scottish Government was likely to impose increased pension contributions on local authority employees in line with those for civil servants.

Reactions to the Finance Minister’s budget have so far focused on how he is going to afford his spending promises, with many opponents both sceptical over the scale of efficiency savings he envisages and about his expectation that local authorities can be persuaded to use their borrowing powers to bring forward the capital projects and thereby boost economic growth.

I fear there is more to come from this SNP government in the shape of the un-tried, untested and unworkable alcohol minimum pricing legislation and other more controversial SNP policies rejected by the opposition parties in the last parliament.

It’s really about time that the SNP stopped playing the blame game here though and appreciate that they and they alone will be held to account for the decisions they make in the Scottish parliament.

As Scotland Office Minister David Mundell said this afternoon.

“Scottish ministers have known for a year exactly how much money they have to spend. Being in government means you need to get on with making the tough decisions and it gets pretty boring if you just keep trying to blame everyone else.”

My point exactly.

Jim Murphy turns his back on Scotland again for own political future!

 

In recent months the whisperings surrounding who would be the best candidate for the Scottish Labour Leader role, has always started with one name…Jim Murphy MP. As the weeks went on it became clear that Mr Murphy seen being Scottish Labour Leader as a backward step in his career choice, he has his eyes set on bigger roles down within the Labour party at Westminster.

 

Today, Jim Murphy may have given us a glimpse of his plans, when he went against the Labour Leader and said: “I’m not going to share a platform with him on the referendum.” The ‘him’ in this quote is David Cameron (the Prime Minister).

It appears Murphy is not willing to play ball in the National interest even though his party leader (Red Ed) suggested he would put aside political rivalries and do “the right thing”.

Why has Mr Murphy decided not to follow? Does he think he is bigger than the campaign to save Scotland being part of the UK? Or is he not that bothered about the campaign at all?

One thing is for sure he is no team player, as the only way we can win the vote is by putting our political differences aside and campaign together against the separatist agenda, El Presidente Salmond has for Scotland.

 

Our favourite Tory MP in Scotland (David Mundell) summarised today’s antics by stating:

“In the face of the threat from the SNP, everybody has got to pull together and put narrow political concerns behind them.

“I welcome the fact Ed Miliband is prepared to do that and I’m disappointed Jim has not. I’m sure on reflection he will realise that his remarks can only help Alex Salmond and not the Union.

“This is not about endorsing the Government or Government policies. It’s about Scotland in Britain and that has to take precedence over everything else.”

Jackson Carlaw Announces his Leadership will bring a “Radical overhaul of policy”

If Jackson Carlaw wins the Scottish Conservatives leadership election, there will be a radical overhaul of Scottish Conservative policy and the process by which policy is developed. He has announced a commitment to the proposals for policy formulation overhaul outlined by the Sanderson Commission in addition to evidence sessions being open to the wider public. It would appear that this change will indeed be radical with no ‘sacred cows’ beyond that of a “staunch defence of the Union”.

Explaining the thinking behind the changes, Jackson said, “I am standing in this leadership election because I believe I can make the difference. This is an election to be Leader of the whole Scottish Party and not just of the MSPs at Holyrood. Arguably, the MSP group has proved to be part of the problem. In the wake of the 1997 rout it is easy to understand how the new MSP group filled a void. However, an unfortunate perception has grown ever since, that MSPs see themselves as the centre of the Scottish Conservative universe.”

“Our policy making has been bizarrely haphazard. There has been no permanent structure or process whatsoever. We react to others. From time to time an MSP has had a good idea and makes something of it. Others are rarely involved. Our links with business are pathetic and those with expertise in their respective fields are lacklustre. Is it any wonder that we have made little electoral progress?

“The experience I have gained, the working knowledge of the Party and the people in it, will allow me as Leader to deliver a complete package of radical change in the way we approach our business. In some ways that’s not terribly flashy but achieving that change will be truly radical. A party which functions effectively and speaks meaningfully to voters is surely the basis of our recovery.”

 

The Policy Commissions will consist of one MSP, three elected Conservative Councillors, two approved Parliamentary candidates and three others who may be activist members with an interest in or individuals experienced in the policy area. Two further co-options will be allowed as appropriate. Recommendations on the membership of the Policy Commissions will be made by the new Party Management Board and approved by the new Scottish Conservative Convention in early 2012. The Policy Commissions will issue a call for evidence in much the same way as a Parliamentary Committee and seek to include, on a non party political basis, the advice of those informed by experience in the widest sense.

The first recommendations will not be made until September 2012 to allow next May’s council elections to take place. Party members will be consulted widely with the policy review not concluding until a policy conference in May 2013.

James Corbett – Why I’m Supporting Ruth Davidson

James Corbett is a 24 year old Scottish Conservative Party member and Secretary of the Troon Branch. In this article he explains why he is supporting Ruth Davidson in her leadership bid.

It’s no secret that the Scottish Conservative Party is at a crossroads. The current leadership contest is a huge opportunity to draw a line under our past losses and decide where we go from here. I believe in the Scottish Conservative party and its values but I also believe that to survive it must undergo a major overhaul.

The belief that the Conservative party is a “toxic brand” in Scotland has more and more become an excuse for our failures rather than the real problem. Times have changed and the party has not changed with them. The political landscape has changed and the Scottish Conservatives have not changed with it. We have failed to generate new membership and we failed to cultivate the seeds of potential in our current members. The back office infrastructure both at Central Office and constituency level is nowhere near where it needs to be for running any kind of national campaign.

Murdo Fraser advocates giving up on the Scottish Conservatives and forming a new party. He couldn’t be more wrong. He talks about not needing a new “captain” but a whole new “ship” and then suggests a strategy from 1965 and presenting a more Scottish image. By adopting a 46 year old policy and wrapping ourselves in tartan we will become a great political force in Scotland, is a concept that makes no sense to me. I can’t believe that the only thing preventing great numbers of the population from voting for us is just that they really, really don’t like our name.

My argument might benefit from an example:

Q.  Why do Skoda’s have heated rear windscreens?

  1. A.  To keep your hands warm while you push it.

That joke and many others like it were once what defined Skoda cars. Today however, they  are a highly credible brand with a reputation for reliability and a massively improved share of the market. I use Skoda as an example because they didn’t change their name, they made their product better.

People don’t cast their vote on the strength of a name, they vote for what they see as the best policies communicated to them in the best way possible. From the world of politics the SNP are actually proof of this. In less time than I’ve been alive they have gone from a small and widely derided fringe party with very few election victories to the party of majority government in Scotland. They have created new and different policies and worked hard at communicating them to the electorate. They have also put a great deal of effort into creating a modern and dynamic party machine using every possible modern campaign tool. I may not be a fan of their policies but I have to respect their campaigning ability.

 

I am wholeheartedly supporting Ruth Davidson’s bid to become the next Scottish Conservative Party leader. We need to inject a new energy and passion into the heart of the party. We need to embrace being Scottish, Conservative and Unionist and become the party our members and all the people of Scotland deserve. It’s time for new blood and new ideas. It’s time for the Scottish Conservatives to become a 21st Century political party. It’s time for Ruth Davidson.

Andy Hume “On Unionism” and why the Scottish Conservatives should stop banging on about it.

 

Andy Hume graduated from Glasgow University, for whom he was a world champion debater and worked in both the public and voluntary sectors before taking a deep breath and finally entering the productive part of the economy. He was formerly the author of a well-known blog on Scottish politics, “Mr Eugenides”.

 

There are a few things about their party that all Scottish Conservatives know. They (or  we – I am a supporter, but not a member) know that once upon a time, the Conservatives won over 50% of the vote north of the border. We know that after this there was a slow decline in our fortunes until the coming of Mrs Thatcher, our devotion to whom our fellow Scots failed, unaccountably, to share; after that, things began to unravel for us electorally and we have yet to recover. We take it as an article of faith that if those fellow citizens could be weaned off the socialist teat that we have urged them for so long to renounce, Scotland’s prospects would be a lot brighter. This much we know; and this much I agree with, wholeheartedly.

But, perhaps above all, we remember 1992. Our valiant rear-guard campaign in that election has gone down as our finest hour; a latter-day Battle of Britain where we fought against all odds to save Conservatism in Scotland and succeeded stirringly (though in view of our later abandonment of the field, Dunkirk might be a better analogy). And if you ask Tories anywhere in Scotland, of whatever age, how this splendid achievement came about, you’ll get a near-unanimous answer. In the face of Labour talk of devolution, and the SNP’s ludicrous promise to make us “Free by ‘93”, it was John Major’s stout defence of the Union that saved the day. We stood up and declared, loudly, what we stood for, and the Scottish people, or at least a healthy proportion of them, responded. On this account, the sine qua non of the Conservative appeal to the electorate has to be a stalwart defence of the Union; it’s the first and strongest foundation on which any successful campaign has to be built.

I think this is a myth.

It is now accepted as fact that John Major’s focus on the constitutional issue saved our bacon in that 1992 campaign, but there is scant evidence for this. The unexpected Tory ‘success’ in that election was a nationwide phenomenon, not just a Scottish anomaly; polls pointed towards a Labour victory and the BBC were predicting a hung parliament as late as 10pm on the night. We defied expectations everywhere, not just in the corner of the kingdom where we made the Union a priority in our campaigning. And, of course, repeated trumpeting of our Unionist credentials did us no good in 1997 – or, indeed, in any election since then, including this year’s.

This is probably anathema to many readers of this website, but I submit that people in Scotland just aren’t that bothered about the Union. They don’t really care. In as far as it impacts on their thinking, they broadly agree with us, yes; Scotland has benefited greatly from its membership of the United Kingdom, and this is a constitutional arrangement that should remain in place. But then again most people largely agree with UKIP that we should disentangle ourselves from the European Union, yet they remain marooned in fringe-party status.

I can see through the monitor that you are shaking your head, so here’s a question for you. When was the last time you had a conversation about the Union with someone?  I don’t mean a fellow member of your local association, or another political blogger, or your candidate for the Holyrood elections: I mean a real person. Seriously, when was it? I hate to break it to you, but ordinary people talk about jobs, they talk about house prices (or waiting lists), they talk about gas bills, they talk about football. They do not talk about the constitution. They don’t look at Ruth Davidson on the TV screen in the pub and say, “I’ll give the Tories one thing; they’re sound on the Union”. In all my years, the only people outside the Conservative Party that I have ever heard talking with any passion about Britishness are fans of Rangers FC, a fine institution that is dear to my heart but not perhaps the optimal model for reaching out to the undecided neutral.

Indeed, I’d argue that the fact the electorate is in sympathy with us on the issue actually makes a constant focus on the Union less important, not more. Time and again, the Scottish people have told us, “Yes, we get it. You’re in favour of the Union. So are we. What else have you got?”. And answer there has usually come none. Just as with that issue in the 1990s, we risk becoming, as Michael Portillo once put it, “the pub bore” on this subject. David Cameron’s most effective put-down of the appalling Gordon Brown was that he was an analogue politician in a digital age; I’d argue that wearing our Unionism so brightly on our sleeves lays us open to the same charge. We sound anachronistic and faintly weird, like those red-faced Ulstermen who used to be on our TVs all the time, always upset about something.

For the avoidance of doubt, I am not arguing that Scottish Conservatives should be relaxed about the prospect of Scottish separatism, let alone support it. The day will come when the leader has to man the barricades in defence of the Union, sure enough and it may even come within this Parliament. But the brand of Unionism which says that we can make no concessions which allow Scotland to diverge at all from the rest of the country – a paleo-Unionism, if you like – didn’t work in 1997, it didn’t work in the subsequent devolution referendum, and it’s not working now. It makes it look like Tories are against progress and change, which any self-respecting Malcolm Tucker will tell you is electoral death. There is no point in drawing lines in the sand when the tide is against you.

Whoever the new leader turns out to be, I would argue that they need to put everyday issues at the heart of their appeal, not the defence of a Union which people don’t really believe is threatened anyway. They need to set out a coherent vision of a right-of-centre alternative in which the solution to our social ills is not incessant rises in spending, micro-meddling in people’s lives and the continuation of the failed leftist policies that have let down so many parts of this country. And this needs to be a real alternative to the left-wing consensus that utterly dominates political debate in Scotland, not the social democracy-lite that we seem to have sometimes espoused in recent years.

But they should also be reaching out to the kind of young professionals who in England would be natural Conservative voters – successful, suspicious of big government, unhappy at ever-higher taxes – but up here tend to gravitate elsewhere, usually to the SNP. To do this, they need, crucially, to be open to change – whether it’s coalition with other parties at Holyrood, or fiscal autonomy, a genuinely liberal stance on social issues, even the wholesale rebranding exercise that is now on the table in this leadership election – no matter how much that might upset some of the old dears who will be voting in it.

Above all, twenty years after our electoral fortunes were supposedly saved by putting the Union front and centre in our campaign, the first step to rebuilding those prospects should be for the new leader, whoever she or he is, to put their Unionism in a case marked “break glass in case of emergency” and leave it there until it is needed, and not before. In politics, it is not enough to be right; one must also be relevant.

Scottish Government Budget Published

Finance Secretary John Swinney release the Scottish Government Budget today. The full budget is available here:

http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Resource/Doc/358356/0121130.pdf

John Swinney spent a great deal of time telling us how it would all be different under an independent Scotland. Some early highlights:

- £750m transferred from revenue to capital to cover commitments on the new forth crossing, children's hospital, school building programme and road construction.

- Funding for a new prison in Aberdeenshire and the V&A museum in Dundee.

- £200m to be spent on renewable energy

- 18% efficiency cuts from the Scottish Government centre

- More asset sales from public sector organisations

- Another year long pay freeze for public sector workers

- Scottish Government "Living Wage" to be set at £7.20 per hour

- Protection of health budgets

- Continued council tax freeze with protection for police numbers, teacher places and social care and early years change funds.

- Closer integration of social care and health budgets