
MSP ‘overwhelmed' to become MBE
An MSP has told how she felt 'overwhelmed' when she learned she will become a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE).
Pam Duncan-Glancy is recognised in the King's Birthday Honours for years of public and political service.
Speaking to the PA news agency, the Labour Glasgow MSP – the first permanent wheelchair user to be elected to the Scottish Parliament and a tireless disability campaigner – said she had learned about the honour in a text from her husband after she had received an email about it.
'I was overwhelmed, to be honest, and could hardly believe what I was reading,' she said.
'I'm really, really proud to have been given this honour for the work that I've done in the community and for disability rights.
'It's a real honour to do this.
'When I got elected as an MSP, I said I was a wee working class woman in a wheelchair. To think that I could be a wee working class woman in a wheelchair who's also got an MBE, I just thought that was pretty special.'
While receiving such an honour from the Palace requires discretion, Ms Duncan-Glancy admitted she struggled keeping it all a secret.
'I told my sister, obviously my husband knows and I told my team and a couple of friends, but it was really difficult to keep it quiet,' she said.
With just 11 months until the next Holyrood election, the MSP said there is 'loads more' the Scottish Parliament and politics more widely has to do for more disabled people to seek election.
'We need to support people to be active in their communities in the first place,' she said.
'For disabled people, it can often be about giving them help to get out of bed in the morning.
'There's quite a mountain to climb for us to support disabled people to get into politics and it's a mountain we absolutely have to climb, because there should be no space about us, without us.
'We need to do everything we possibly can to get more representation of disabled people, not just in Parliament or councils, but everywhere.'
Elected in 2021, Ms Duncan-Glancy has impressed in her first term as an MSP, being given a spot on the Scottish Labour frontbench before even making it to Holyrood, when she was appointed social security spokeswoman by leader Anas Sarwar in the early weeks of his tenure.
Before entering politics, she worked in communications for the NHS and campaigned for the rights of disabled people.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
41 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Campaigners consider legal action against Scottish government after supreme court gender ruling
For Women Scotland, the group responsible for April's landmark supreme court ruling on biological sex, is considering further legal action against the Scottish government as they warned the key motivation for bringing the case was being lost amid debates about toilets policy. At a fringe event at the Scottish Conservative conference in Edinburgh, the gender critical campaign group's co-director Susan Smith said there had been 'extraordinary pushback' since five judges ruled unanimously that the legal definition of a woman in the Equality Act 2010 did not include transgender women who hold gender recognition certificates. Speaking to reporters afterwards, Smith said: 'We don't want to go back to court, we really, really don't, but if we don't see some action that may be something we will have to consider.' She said she was concerned about lack of action by the Scottish government on prisons and schools guidance. 'We have spoken to the Scottish government and asked them to withdraw some of this guidance, just to say that it's under review – they don't have to re-issue anything at this point – (but) because it's clearly unlawful, we really do need some action. They're telling us they have to wait for the EHRC revised guidance and we don't believe this is true.' Since April's ruling and subsequent interim advice issued soon after by the equalities watchdog, which amounted to a blanket ban on transgender individuals using toilets of their lived gender, much of the public discussion has focused on bathroom facilities, although the ruling has wide-ranging implications for service providers, public bodies and businesses. Smith said: 'I wish we could stop talking about toilets all the time, because that wasn't really the reason we went to court. We went to court about the prisons, about the rape crisis centres, about the hospitals, where people are uniquely vulnerable'. She also encouraged individuals to 'keep pressure on MSPs and MPs', and make use of the fighting fund announced by the writer and activist JK Rowling to launch their own actions. 'We really need people to start challenging where they feel that organisations, local councils are not implementing the law. We're very fortunate to have the fighting fund that JK Rowling set up and that will make a massive difference because when people start to realise that there's a cost maybe they will start to apply the law.' Many organisations are awaiting the EHRC's updated code of practice for public bodies, which is not expected to be ready until November, although others – including the Scottish parliament – have already changed policy to reflect the ruling. Leading charities including Refuge and Mind this week wrote to the watchdog saying the current consultation timetable is too rushed for proper engagement. The Scottish Prison Service guidance states that transgender women prisoners are not eligible to be housed in the female estate if they have been convicted of serious offences, although recent reports suggest a number continue to be housed there under segregation rules. A Scottish Prison Service spokesperson said: 'We have received the supreme court's judgment and are considering any potential impact it may have.' The Scottish government have been approached for comment.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Scottish Conservatives will 'wield claymore' on spending, says Russell Findlay
Scottish Conservative leader Russell Findlay has pledged to save £650m from the Scottish budget if elected at next year's Holyrood said he would achieve this by introducing a Taxpayer Saving Act to "cut red tape and get a grip on spending" alongside a Scottish Agency of Value and Efficiency (Save) to "wield a claymore" on told the party's conference in Edinburgh he would put "streamlining" the Scottish government at the heart of his plans if elected next urged voters to back the Scottish Conservatives over Reform UK, adding a vote for Nigel Farage's party would only result in "another five years of SNP government". In his keynote speech to members, Findlay accused John Swinney's government of "wasting untold sums of public money".He said the party would shut down government quangos, reduce the number of ministers and advisors and cut the size of the civil service to levels last seen 10 years ago in order to "deliver better value". Money regained from the Taxpayer Saving Act would be used to reduce taxes, he told the conference at Murrayfield which would be run by business leaders, would be tasked with cutting government "waste," while an Accountability and Transparency Index would be introduced as a way of "shining a light" on organisations which receive public also said a £20,000 pay rise for ministers would be told party members: "There will be no more jobs for the SNP boys."Putting a stop to wasteful spending is top of our agenda."We need to urgently streamline bloated government."He added: "Improving services means treating people's money with respect." Findlay also revealed plans to scrap the SNP's 2045 net zero target and replaced the Just Transition Fund with an Affordable Transition Fund aimed at supporting oil and gas Friday, the UK Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, used her speech at the conference to call for an end to the windfall tax in the North said residents would be given new powers to oppose "mega-pylons" and would end the current presumption against new nuclear energy in Conservative leader claimed pupils in schools were being "written off" and that "woke ideas" were being pushed on children "at the expense of vital knowledge". 'Reform vote increases SNP chances' Findlay said his party offered a "common sense vision" for he said those considering abandoning the party in favour of Reform would only help the SNP hang on to councillor Lauren Knight became the latest Conservative councillor to defect to Reform on Friday, stating she felt "let down" by the also finished ahead of the Conservatives in the recent Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election, which saw the Tory vote fall by 11.5%.Findlay described Farage's spending plans as "fantastical" and said only his party could "shake up Scottish politics".He said: "Reform pretend they can do it, but all they'll achieve is another five years of SNP government."As we saw at the General Election, and as every poll shows, Reform increases the chance of the SNP winning."He added: "Maybe it's because Nigel Farage says he's not worried about the SNP getting another five-year term."Well we are worried about the SNP, Nigel, because we live here."But we can't spend our time focusing on Reform because it's what we do that matters most."

Rhyl Journal
2 hours ago
- Rhyl Journal
‘We don't want to go back to court', says women's group over gender ruling delay
For Women Scotland (FWS) challenged the meaning of a woman in the Gender Representation on Public Boards (Scotland) Act, with the UK's highest court ruling the definition in the 2010 Equality Act referred to biological sex. The decision is likely to have far-reaching implications for transgender people in accessing services, but the Scottish Government has declined to make changes to guidance until the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) issues its own guidance, which is expected to take place in the coming months. But speaking at a fringe event at the Scottish Conservative conference in Edinburgh, FWS co-director Susan Smith said the group was considering a further legal challenge against the Government. Speaking to journalists after the event, she said: 'We have spoken to the Scottish Government and asked them to withdraw some of this guidance, just to say that it's under review – they don't have to re-issue anything at this point – because it's clearly unlawful, we really do need some action. 'They're telling us they have to wait for the EHRC revised guidance and we don't believe this is true.' Ms Smith added that, if a woman were to be assaulted in prison by a transgender prisoner, the Government could be taken to court by the victim. 'I think they need to step up and take a bit of responsibility because these things are under their remit,' she said. She added: 'We don't want to go back to court, we really, really don't, but if we don't see some action that may be something we will have to consider.' Ms Smith said the group is speaking with its lawyers but she would not say if there was a timeline for action to begin. The co-director stressed that if ministers were concerned about a challenge to their guidance from the pro-trans rights side of the argument, they should be worried about one from FWS and other such groups too. 'They seem worried about a legal challenge from the other side,' she said. 'But my message to them would be they should be more worried about a legal challenge from the people who have the law on their side.' Ms Smith was joined at the fringe meeting – which was hosted by Tory MSP Pam Gosal – by former foreign secretary James Cleverly. Mr Cleverly was part of the Conservative-led government which blocked the Scottish Government's controversial gender reforms. The Government proposed removing the need for a diagnosis of gender dysphoria as a requirement for obtaining a gender recognition certificate – a process known as self identification. The move was scuppered by then-Scottish secretary Alister Jack, who used Section 35 of the Scotland Act to block the legislation. Mr Cleverly told attendees the move showed the 'importance of the union'. 'This issue was clearly spiralling out of control, badly out of control,' he said.