
The magnificent Queensferry Crossing road bridge – paid by Scots money alone
What is the Scottish Government doing for me? (Updated April 2022)
No government gets uncritical support especially one elected to govern a nation of hyper-judgmental, compulsive nit-pickers. We’re quicker to criticise than praise. Still, the SNP has a lot of accomplishments to choose from if you don’t like the policies they espouse.
Continually under attack by well-armed enemies of civil rights and democracy, I thought it fair to reproduce their achievements since they took office. We have an administration that has powers hobbled, deliberately so to keep control elsewhere, yet it has achieved a considerable amount never imagined by the rag-bag of opposition parties.
Scotiaphobes will dismiss the lot. But there’s one thing they cannot deny: the SNP altered Scottish political life and discourse in a profound way – for the first time in 300 years we have a political party prepared to fight every inch to protect Scotland’s interests. We are empowered as individuals. Our voice matters. We’re heard, not treated as the herd.
Please note, almost all progress listed here was attained under the stewardship of the Right Honorable Alex Salmond MP, now the elected leader of the ALBA Party
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In the beginning
- Leglisation passed to continue aligning with EU regulations after Brexit. Both a symbolic and practical gesture which will ensure that our laws are compatible for re-entry. This includes human rights, the environment, and food standards.
- Animals and Wildlife Bill passed. Increases maximum penalty for the most serious animal and wildlife crimes to 5 years imprisonment and an unlimited fine.
- Record funding for Scotland’s NHS, with the overall health budget at £13 billion in 2016 – over £3.3 billion more than when the SNP first took office.
- Free, high quality childcare is increased to 16 hours a week for all 3 and 4 year olds, up from 12.5 hours (2007) extended to 2 year olds from low income households too.
- Employment at its highest ever level. Latest figures, 2,636,000 people in work.
- Pupils are achieving more than ever with a reformed curriculum, record exam passes and 93% of school leavers now going on to work, training or education.
- Council Tax frozen saving the average Band D household £1,550 by April 2017.
- 1.3 million older and disabled people benefit from free public transport through the National Concessionary Bus Travel Scheme – extended to help disabled veterans.
- Target to build 30,000 affordable homes exceeded – investment of £1.7 billion.
- Free tuition maintained, saving students up to £27,000 compared to England.
- Jobs and businesses protected from recession by cutting business rates for almost 100,000 small and medium-sized businesses.
- 78,000 elderly benefit from access to a wide range of personal care without charge.
- Recorded crime in Scotland has reached its lowest level in 41 years.
- Free prescriptions protected, those with chronic conditions save over £100 a year.
- Road Equivalent Tariff rolled out to all ferry routes in the Clyde and Hebrides, cutting fares by around 40%.
- 178,000 low income households helped to buy essentials such as nappies, food and cookers through our Scottish Welfare Fund since it was established in 2013.
- By keeping Scottish Water in public hands customers pay less for a better service – charges for the average household bill are £39 lower than in England and Wales.
A healthier Scotland
- Free access to period products in schools, colleges and universities.
- Local authority care staff given a pay rise with an increase to £9.30 per hour.
- Free prescriptions for all. (In England you pay £8.40 per item.)
- The number of nurses, doctors and dentists working in Scotland’s NHS increased.
- NHS staffing is at record levels, up over 11,500 under the current government.
- Scotland’s A&E services are the best performing in the UK.
- 95% of hospital day case and inpatients seen within 12 weeks last year.
- Healthcare kept local. A&E units saved, children’s cancer services and neurosurgery units protected, and maternity units kept open.
- Over £5 billion invested in Scotland’s health infrastructure since 2007, including the South Glasgow Hospitals and Emergency Care Centre in Aberdeen.
- Pay rises for our NHS staff delivered.
- Nursing staff up to £714 a year better off than their counterparts in England.
- Hospitals cleaner and safer. Cases of C. Diff and MRSA fall to lowest levels recorded.
- Almost £40 million to raise public awareness of cancer, and catch it earlier.
- Risk of cervical cancer cut by providing HPV vaccine for girls in 2nd year of school.
- Scrapped parking charges at NHS-run hospital. Patients and staff save £25 million.
- Highest number of GPs per head of the population in the UK; more practices are now open in the evenings and at weekends.
- Scotland first country in the UK to have a mental health waiting times target.
- Over £150 million invested next five years to improve mental health services.
- 2.2 million more folk registered with an NHS dentist than when the SNP took office.
- 98% of primary and secondary schools providing two hours of physical education a week – up from 10 per cent in 2005.
- More funding provided to support carers and young carers; over 22,500 benefiting from the Short Breaks Fund.
- Carers allowance rise from £62.70 to £73.10 per week backdated to April 2018.
- Irresponsible alcohol discounts in supermarkets and off-licences banned.
- Legal age for buying tobacco raised to 18.
- Control of social care services budget through the Self-Directed Support Act.
- Extra funding for Scotland’s veteran charities, ex-service men and women receive priority treatment in the NHS and other services.
- Free childcare increased to 16 hours a week (from 12.5) for 3 and 4 year-olds. Also extended to 2 year-olds of low-income families.
- Patient satisfaction levels are second-to-none.
- £3.3 billion more given to our health system that when the SNP took office.
- We’ve banned smoking in any vehicle carrying anyone under 18.
- Everyone who uses social care services can now control their individual care budget through the Self-directed Support Act.
- We’ve provided extra funding for Scotland’s veteran charities, and ensured our ex-service men and women receive priority treatment in the NHS and other services.
- Invested heavily in emergency medical aircraft and critical care transport teams to mitigate access deprivation in Scotland. (Scottish Ambulance Service)
- The Domestic Abuse Bill – expands the legal definition of domestic abuse to include controlling, coercive and manipulative behaviour, a ground breaking Act.
- Minimum pricing on alcohol to reduce incidences of drink addiction and curb alcohol manufacturer’s campaigns to drink more booze.
- £275 million Dumfries and Galloway Royal Infirmary opened in December 2017.
- The £33.3 million Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service National Centre in Edinburgh completes construction.
- 9% pay rise for nurses spread over three years.
A smarter Scotland
- Public library services across Scotland given £200,000 improvement fund.
- All children in primaries 1 to 3 – around 135,000 pupils – benefiting from free school meals, saving families around £380 per child per year.
- The £160 million Attainment Scotland Fund improves literacy, numeracy and health and well-being for children in over 300 primary schools in deprived areas.
- Spending per pupil is significantly higher here than south of the border – 9% higher per pupil in primary at £4,899, 12% higher per pupil in secondary at £6,738.
- Investment of £1.8 billion and 607 school projects delivered.
- 4,020 school children able to learn in dedicated Gaelic medium language classes.
- The Disabled Students Allowance in Scotland protected and bursaries for students maintained, while the Tories abolished both elsewhere in the UK.
- Education Maintenance Allowance in Scotland expanded– scrapped in England – to support 57,000 school pupils and college students from low income families.
- Over 119,000 full-time equivalent college places provided – exceeding 2011 manifesto commitment to maintain 116,000 places.
- £530 million invested in college estates and state-of-the-art buildings in Glasgow, Kilmarnock and Inverness – plus £140 million for Fife and Forth Valley colleges.
- Full-time college students benefit from the highest bursary of anywhere in the UK.
- A record numbers of Scots supported into university. Young people from deprived areas more likely to study at university.
- The poorest university students living at home benefit from a minimum income guarantee of £7,625 per year – the highest in the UK.
- More women entering universities are choosing to study science, technology, engineering and maths subjects. They make up 48% of those gaining degrees.
- Free tuition protected saving students £27,750 compared to England.
- A 3-D printer given to every library in Scotland.
- Head teachers given greater control of their schools – a large diversion of power to people welcome by teachers and parents.
- Since 2007, number of female entrants in STEM subjects at Scottish universities increase by 26 per cent in first degree courses, 47 per cent in postgraduate courses.
- Invested over £550 million in college estates between 2007 and 2015, £250 million more than the previous Labour/Lib Dem administrations.
- Supporting £300 million of investment to deliver new campuses at City of Glasgow, Inverness and Ayrshire Colleges. Forth Valley and Fife Colleges will share £140 million for new campuses too.
- £1.1 million to Museum of Scotland to create galleries for Egyptian and Asian art.
- A government grant awarded to Scottish Youth Theatre to ensure its continuance.
- 41 school projects completed through the ‘Schools for the Future’ programme.
A wealthier Scotland
- The new £10 per week Scottish Child Payment now open for applications from low income families in 2020 autumn with first payments before Christmas this year.
- Scotland has the highest employment rate of the four nations in the UK, women and youth employment rates exceed those of the UK.
- Typical pay in Scotland is now, for the first time, higher than in England.
- Scottish economy has seen three years of growth up to the third quarter of 2015.
- 186,855 young people took the opportunity to undertake a modern apprenticeship since 2007, and by 2020 a further 30,000 opportunities will be available every year.
- Around 22,000 families supported to buy their own home through home ownership schemes – three quarters of them under the age of 35.
- Councils enabled to build new homes– 5,292 council houses built since 2011.
- 15,500 social houses for rent safeguarded by ending Right to Buy.
- £500 million invested to stimulate conomic growth in Glasgow and the Clyde Valley.
- £125 million allocated to Aberdeen to stimulate economic growth in the city, plus an additional £254 million for infrastructure projects in the North-east.
- £60 million put towards a Town Centre Regeneration Fund.
- £500 million spent on tackling fuel poverty, with one in three households helped to improve home energy efficiency.
- Tax burden reduced on the sale of homes, with 93% of house buyers paying less than under UK stamp duty land tax or paying no tax at all.
- The number of private sector businesses in Scotland at 361,345, the highest number recorded – productivity is up 4.4% compared to 0.2 per cent in the UK.
- International exports increased by 36%. (2007 to 2014) £20.3 billion to £27.5 billion.
- Tourism healthier with 15.5 million tourists visiting in the year to September 2015.
- Enterprise and development spending per head in Scotland is double that of the UK, and spending on research and development has increased by 44% since 2007.
- Won new powers over tax and social security; protected Scotland’s budget from a £7 billion cut by the Treasury over financial arrangements enabling new powers.
- VAT removed from single Police force and Fire service.
- Hundreds of jobs saved in engineering BiFab’s Fife and Isle of Lewis plants.
A fairer Scotland
- Electoral Franchise Bill – Election rights in Scotland extended to EU citizens, Non-EU citizens, refugees and prisoners on sentences of less than 12 months.
- Free NHS service for all EU nationals staying in Scotland after the UK leaves the EU.
- Social Security Bill: historic legislation installs dignity, fairness and respect in the allocation of citizen’s financial rights. Holyrood has responsibility for 11 benefits: about £3.3 billion for 1.4 million people. The payments will be administered by a new Scottish Social Security Agency, headquartered in Dundee and Glasgow, 1,500 jobs split across the two sites. The powers cover: Personal Independence Payments, Carer’s Allowance, Attendance Allowance, Disability Living Allowance, Winter Fuel Payments, Cold Weather Payments, Severe Disablement Allowance, Industrial Injuries Disability Benefits, Funeral Expenses (now Funeral Expense Assistance), Sure Start Maternity Grant (now Best Start Grant), Discretionary Housing Payments.
- The Vulnerable Witnesses (Criminal Evidence) (Scotland) Bill – legislation to ensure more child
- Removal of the a limit on how long a terminally-ill patient must have left to live before they are eligible for fast-tracking to the highest rate of disability benefits.
- More than 80% of Scots paid the Living Wage of £8.25 an hour. Scotland offers highest proportion of workers in UK at least a living wage.
- In 2011, the first government in the UK to pay the Living Wage to its staff.
- Poverty levels down. 260,000 fewer people in poverty in 2014 than in 2000.
- Invested £90 million to ensure that no-one in Scotland has to pay the Bedroom Tax, protecting up to 72,000 households from threat of eviction or becoming homeless.
- Over half a million vulnerable households – including over 200,000 pensioners and 86,000 single parents – protected from UK Government cuts to Council Tax support.
- Almost 3,000 disabled people supported through the Independent Living Fund Scotland, set up after the UK Government scrapped its support.
- Over 200 companies sign Scottish Business Pledge to boost productivity.
- 54,000 new affordable homes built, and counting.
- Number of days lost to industrial disputes down 84%, the lowest of any UK country.
- Encouraging public, third, private sector companies to boardroom gender equality.
- Appointment of first cabinet with an equal number of women and men.
- Scotland is leading light on LGBTI equality, with progressive equal marriage laws.
- Over £75 million spent since 2007 to help some of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people.
- A Lobbying Act that ensures big business interests are not given cover to sway decisions in their favour, but must have open, on-the-record meetings with MSPs.
- A£300,000 Sports Equality Fund to increase women’s participation in sport
- Fairer tenancy laws giving individuals longer notice periods and indefinite security of tenure, an end to “no-fault” evictions, as well as limiting rent increases to once every 12 months. Landlord and tenant disputes heard by specialist tribunal.
A safer Scotland
- A Bill banning physical assault of children – ‘smacking’, in line with European law.
- Violent crime down 55%, homicides 51%, weapons/knife crime two-thirds.
- £216 million invested in the creation of the new national police service.
- New Scottish Crime Campus provides a focal point for excellence in intelligence-sharing, evidence gathering and forensic science to tackle serious organised crime.
- Since 2007, 1,000 more police officers keeping our communities safe. By contrast, police numbers south of the border have fallen to their lowest level in 15 years.
- Automatic early release ended: long-term prisoners will serve their sentence in full.
- Reconviction rate reduced to its lowest level in 16 years.
- £75 million seized from criminals reinvested in community projects for the young.
- HMP Grampian opened in March 2014 and HMP Low Moss opened in March 2012, two major parts of the prison building programme.
- Access to air weapons tightened.
- A record £33 million invested to tackle domestic violence against women and girls.
- Access to justice for survivors of domestic abuse improved too.
- Tackling sectarianism backed up with record investment.
- The new Scottish Fire and Rescue Service created.
- Scotland has the UK’s first national action plan on human rights.
Investing for the future
- ScotRail taken into public ownership for the people of Scotland.
- Ayrshire’s Dalry Bypass, opened 7 months ahead of schedule.
- Nationalised Ferguson Marine shipyard temporarily saving 350 jobs and two ships.
- Over £32 million promised for Moray to create jobs over the next decade.
- Innovation and Investment offices opened in Paris and Berlin.
- £1 billion invested annually in public and sustainable transport to encourage folk out of cars. Spending for safer walking and cycling at a record high.
- Scottish Steel, Ferguson Shipyard, and the last remaining UK aluminium smelter in Lochabar – all saved.
- The £1.4 billion Queensferry Crossing built against Tory and Labour opposition.
- Tolls on the Forth and Tay bridges abolished, (and Erskine Bridge) commuters continue to save £184 a year crossing the Tay, £207 a year on crossing the Forth.
- £742 million Edinburgh-Glasgow rail improvements; widespread electrification of the network between the two cities, and to Stirling and Dunblane.
- £160m Scottish Government funded Shotts Line electrification complete, upgrading the line through North Lanarkshire and West Lothian.
- £3 billion to create 80 miles of dual carriageway on the A9 Perth-Inverness, £745 million to Aberdeen Western Peripheral Route, plus M8, M73 and M74 motorway.
- £170 million Aberdeen Inverness rail upgrade; new stations Dalcross and Kintore.
- Prestwick Airport saved from closure, safeguarding around 1,350 jobs.
- £500 million a year to deliver high water quality, better environmental protection, and better service for customers. Scottish Water now UK’s most trusted utility.
- £400 million to deliver superfast broadband to 95 per cent of properties across Scotland by the end of 2017.
- Negotiating the renaissance of the UK’s only aluminium smelter in Lochaber, Fort William, creating over 600 new jobs, half in the smelter, half in services.
- Baillieston to Newhouse motorway opened one week early and on budget.
- The Borders Railway, the longest new domestic railway to be built in Britain in over 100 years, has reopened and welcomed over 1 million passengers in its first year.
- A £5 billion investment programme in Scotland’s railways up to 2019 will deliver greener trains, new stations, new track upgrades, more seats, and more services.
- £3 billion to dual 80 miles of carriageway on the A9 Perth-Inverness, £745 million for the Aberdeen Western Peripheral Route, plus M8, M73 and M74 improvements.
- Contracts worth £97 million will protect the 150-strong workforce and create 100 new jobs at the last commercial shipyard on the Clyde.
- Exceeded the 2016 target to provide broadband access to 85 per cent of premises, and we’ll reach 100 per cent by 2021.
- First section of the A9 dualling programme opened between Kincraig and Dalraddy. By 2025 SNP aim to dual the A9 all the way from Perth to Inverness.
- Shieldhall Tunnel: The sewer tunnel provides the equivalent of 36 Olympic-sized swimming pools worth of extra storm water storage to help reduce flooding, and will also improve water quality in the River Clyde.
Empowering communities
- The independence referendum was the biggest democratic exercise in our history.
- The voting age for Scottish Parliament and local government elections permanently lowered to 16, starting from May 2016.
- Fighting for LGBTI rights, plus secured best equal marriage laws in the world.
- Local communities given a voice – backed up with £20 million funding – in the planning and delivery of local services through the Community Empowerment Act.
- £9 million Scottish Land Fund helped 52 communities across the country purchase land. Over 500,000 acres now in community ownership – benefiting 71,000 people.
- The ambitious Land Reform Bill introduced to transform rules around the ownership, accessibility and benefits of land in Scotland. More reforms to come.
- Open lobbying of MSPs by individuals, groups, or company minuted and public.
- Legislation passed to block any attempt by Westminster to rescind or withdraw powers already held by Scotland’s Parliament.
A greener Scotland
- Fund to help purchase an electric car or motorcycle. Transport Scotland (Scottish Gov. Agency) offers drivers loans of up to £35,000, motor cyclists up to £10,000.
- £16.7m of funding for 1,500 electric vehicle charging points and 100 electric buses.
- Sales of all new petrol and diesel engine vehicles banned from 2032.
- Renewable electricity output more than doubled since 2007, with renewables largest contributor to electricity generation in Scotland.
- Our target to reduce energy consumption by 12% by 2020 exceeded, a 13.3% reduction between 2006 and 2013.
- Scotland is on target to deliver world-leading climate reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 42% by 2020.
- Moratorium on underground coal gasification and fracking.
- Household recycling at its highest ever levels. 43% of household waste recycled.
- Carrier bag use reduced by 80%. Bag charge raised £7 million for good causes.
- Investment in flood defences and new measures in the Flooding Act.
- Scotland was one of the first countries in the world to sign up to the UN Sustainable Development Goals; established the world’s first Climate Justice Fund.
- Scotland became the world’s second Fair Trade Nation in 2013.
- Helped make our communities safer from flooding; investment in flood defences and new measures in the Flooding Act. Agreed a new 10 year funding strategy for flood protection, consisting of £42 million a year, aiming to protect 10,000 families across Scotland.
Supporting rural communities
- A record £1 billion invested in vessels, ports and ferry services since 2007 as part of a commitment to the islands and remote communities.
- Residents of Caithness and north-west Sutherland, Colonsay, Islay, Jura, Orkney, Shetland and the Western Isles are eligible for a 50% discount on air fares.
- Created a key role in reforming EU fisheries policy to bring an end to the wasteful discarding of fish at sea.
- With food and drink exports valued over £5 billion, and new jobs created in the sector by 2020, continued support to promote Scotland’s top quality produce.
- Fares on ferry services frozen until 2017 for passengers, cars, commercial vehicles.
- Opting out of cultivation of genetically modified crops in Scotland.
- Scotland’s National Marine Plan to achieve sustainable development of our seas.
- Forcing RBS to retain banks in remote villages.
Enabling creativity and sport
- £11.9 million film & TV studio under plans to transform part of the historic Kelvin Hall in Glasgow’s west end.
- Scotland’s first large-scale international movie studios sited in Leith, Edinburgh, part of the areas regeneration scheme.
- Free access maintained to museums and galleries, with 27 million visits to Scotland’s world class national collections since 2007.
- Government provided support for Scotland to welcome the world in 2014, with the staging of the Ryder Cup at Gleneagles and the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.
- £162 million pumped into Scotland’s screen sector since 2007.
- £130 million invested in our cultural infrastructure – including revamped National Museum of Scotland, National Portrait Gallery, the palace at Stirling Castle.
- £16 million direct investment in Edinburgh’s 12 major festivals since 2008.
- £25 million for the Victoria and Albert Museum of Design in Dundee.
- The new Bannockburn visitor centre opened in February 2014, and the creation of the Robert Burns Birthplace Museum in Ayrshire which opened in December 2010.
- 1.5 million opportunities created for youth to take part in youth arts in 2015.
And finally
- New powers over tax and welfare won, but vulnerable to Brexit fallout.
- Scotland’s budget protected from a £7 billion cut by the UK Treasury.
- Investing £33 million to help people back into work and alleviate some of the economic impact of coronavirus, part of the Scottish Government’s plans for gradually re-opening the economy.
As with infamous PFI contracted schools, no matter how good or bad you think life is in Scotland under whatsoever political party, we do not own our country. We rent it.
We pay direct and indirect taxes, and huge interest on debts to the UK Treasury we didn’t incur. Ownership comes when full independence is restored.
A brazen advert:
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Brilliant simple but brilliant
And there’s more where that came from. 🙂
This should be posted through every letter box in Scotland.
I don’t mind so long as someone else pays the postage! (Just joshing.)
Nicked!😁
That’s quite the list!
One was incoherent though:
2.2 million registered with an NHS dentist than when the SNP took office.
That’s a sentence fragment? Missing the word “more”? Not sure.
Yes, you’re right, NKT. My eyes going ‘skelly’ trying to keep each to a one line sentence! I’ll amend. Many thanks.
And some people wear blinkers. SNP bbaaadddd. Imagine what we, the Scottish people, could do if we were unfettered
Imagine … yes, yet we CAN make it a reality, only we need resident English, Polish, Italians, Spanish to join the cause.
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New Queensferry crossing is behind schedule and now over budget – May 2017 but at least its getting built. There may be other errors of omission or commision in the list. E.g. Curriculum for Excellence was change for change sake and Scottish education still slipping down the league table but still, we have a lot in the list of achievements to be proud of. Complacency can creep in if we are not careful though!
Just spotted your comments, Tom. I apologise for my tardiness – retuned Ferry crossing as you suggest, though a few week’s delay was a built-in contingency.
And I agree we should never be complacent, but it’s hard to adopt that inertia when attacked daily, even by one’s own kith and kin, for demanding a better constitution and social progress.
Quite a change from when Scotland had NO parliament,the Unionist MP’s in London were totally useless, (out voted at every turn, but their main concern seems to have been quality meals and a good bar in Wasteminster.
Representing Scotland???!
The unelected 820 in the House of Lords and the 500 in the House of Commons, the former paid £300 per day appearance money. Still not enough. English votes for English Laws, just to be on the over safe side!!
Vastly better served by a Scottish Government and Scottish Parliament, and even in Westminster far better representation, but as usual heavily out voted, better with Independence!!
Brilliant!!
Would love to print these achievements, a giant poster would not go amiss either.
A Unionist and a Traitor are one and the same! They sell Scotland and give away all its resources to another country, provide cannon fodder for the British army, destroy language and culture and call it progress.
SOLD by the very people Scots fought, for betrayed!?
They see Scotland as a colony and a meal ticket, yes.
You are going to have to get a bigger article as this one was written a year and a dod ago.
I’ve been up-dating it as information came in, but I will need to do more research. And I think I’ll put the new bridge in photo at the top. You know the one, we never paid for it, built it, and it isn’t really in Scotland.
and gets right up their hooters.
A World class engineering oeuvre; very French
You forgot also the Tolls on the Erskine which labour (Jackie Bailey) vowed to get rid off the tolls when in power but never did, in fact they increased the tolls on it even though the bridge paid for itself tenfold over 30 years, The only thing I would dispute would be nursing levels especially in mental health hospitals which I work in, ward levels have decreased and are becoming dangerously under staffed even by their own set safety levels
William – fixed. Many thanks.
Have you ever thought about adding a section on wht Labour / Lib dems achievemnets by way of comapison – I was looking today an the headliners are free personal car, fag ban and a hook up with Malawi. Wouldn’t take up much space….
A nice idea, Bob. I might not have the time to do it properly, but it’s worth the occasional research to see what they did do in Scotland. They have of late resorted to only publishing negative, fabricated attacks on the Scottish Government, so I might have to go back a good many years to find equivalents. Now and again, the opposition parties unite with the SNP on a shared subject but that is a rare thing these days.
Dizzy trying to find end.
Read original some years sgo.
HAPPY New Year
Of course, the List makes no mention of the radically new educational scheme, for example, implemented without enough money to see it work well, that sort of thing. And you’ll note I republish without rancour!
I think this year is going to be horrendous for thousands of people, but that doesn’t stop me wishing you well, Panda, and a safe bunker!
An invaluable reference, and something I tend to link to people who offer the ‘what have the SNP done’ (as just happened on The Guardian).
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/blog/live/2019/mar/26/brexit-government-may-ignore-result-of-indicative-votes-process-says-hancock-live-news#comment-127333412
I’ve used this many times…and will continue to do so…Funny how rarely i get an answer after I post it… 😉 Keep up the great work!
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Fantastic list of achievements… I knew they were good…Didn’t realise just how good thanks Prof Robertson for directing me to this particular piece xx
I’m happy that you pass it to others, and if you can, suggest people follow my work to restore Scotland’s rights rights.
“We do not own our country. We rent it.” That would make a great banner!
Thank you, Elizabeth. Always ready with a well polished phrase or epigram. 🙂
Maternity units kept open. Wrong. Caithness General maternity unit is closed and expecting mothers have to travel 100 miles to Inverness and in winter that is dangerous
There’s no helicopter service in emergency? You’re incorrect about closure; the facility was downgraded to a midwife unit, and on the recommendation of hospital authorities, their report accepted by the administration.
You missed out the new hospital that can’t open until the extraction and electrics are fixed and also the part about the highest level of drugs deaths in the UK.
You are not smart enough to avoid suggesting inadequate drains and some electrics in a new built hospital wipe out all that the SNP has achieved to date. As for drug deaths, it transpires the highest level of drug death is in the North East of England. The British state held back that gem of news until after the lie about Scotland did its worst. Incidentally, drug policy is the sole prerogative of Westminster, you know, the place lobbied by private health companies and rich drug conglomerates..
Brilliant. Thanks for doing all the legwork for the rest of us! Any chance of posting a printable version?
While I’m up to the eyes in administration work, Lord McJ, a quick way for you is to make a copy – hold your mouse key left click and run it down the list – and then paste it onto a blank page.
Brilliant. Shared on my page. Should shut the Yoon trolls up for a while.
Extremely well-done Grouse and to be applauded. It would be great to see a set of figures against all of this, set against what Scotland earns and sends down south and the reason I say this is that there is always the risk of people taking these achievements on their own and making the case that this shows how efficiently Scotland can be run whilst being part of the union.
There could then be another list of things Scotland could possibly do with the balance of what we earn and what we send south. That would be a vast undertaking of course.
If we could get a grant to pay folk’s time and research, pulling in help from a wise social economist might achieve that end – somebody such as Richard Murphy.
You won’t believe it, and I was going to mention just that in the answer but that is the very guy I was thinking off. He is excellent, That is what we need, hard and fast facts. Perhaps another name would be Gordon McIntire Kemp from Business for Scotland. He recently brought out a very good publication called Scotland the brief.
“Free tuition maintained, saving students up to £27,000 compared to England.”
We need to remember that there are trade offs with this. The numbers of Scots who can go to university in Scotland is capped. There are Scots going to university in England and paying through the nose because of this. This aspect of it is never explained or justified.
I know post Indy we can increase this but we need to remember not every young person in Scotland who wants to and qualifies gets to go to university here. No fees is great, for those who get to go.
Oh and the numbers of English residents who can come here to study? pretty much uncapped. Because they are funded, they pay just like the Chinese or anyone else non EU (subject to change).
The number of Scots attending universities is capped so that the universities can take in a greater number of foreign students – the one’s allowed to vote ‘No’ in the 2014 plebiscite – and those foreign students are charged very high fees for the privileged. But the institutions painted themselves into a corner; after the pandemic dies down to a reasonable level, Chinese and the like will not be welcome thus greatly reducing university income. Privately Glasgow University, for example, must regret its announcement to pay recompense for the funds it received from the slave trade.
I asked my wife who does recruitment and admissions if the lack of Chinese will impact their courses and she replied that they will be running all their courses even without the Chinese. But then their courses are over subscribed and they make efforts to limit the Chinese as they could fill two courses with just them but the students benefit from diverse classmates and it forces them to speak English.
Excellent. Saved for replying on line. Tedious having to type out incomplete rebutalls. Thank you.
You’re welcome, David. Knowing I shall not see my country exercise free will in my lifetime, I am greatly encouraged when I receive praise for my contributions to the cause of liberty.
I understand and empathise… But don’t give up hope just yet! The way things are going, Scottish Independence is rapidly becoming the default option, unless the SG make a total hash of things… And when it does come, know that you have made a considerable and remarkable contribution in your own right…much appreciated!
Bide hame, bide safe!
Oh, that’s too generous, a spur to more effort. Thank you. 🙂 Onward!