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The Scottish Government has the powers to bring in a minimum income guarantee
The Scottish Government has the powers to bring in a minimum income guarantee

Daily Record

time9 hours ago

  • Business
  • Daily Record

The Scottish Government has the powers to bring in a minimum income guarantee

The Covid pandemic, the cost-of-living crisis, and years of austerity have demonstrated how important it is to provide greater financial security for people throughout Scotland. Society needs a strong safety net, because anyone can fall on hard times. But, right now, there are gaping holes in that net – low-paid and insecure work, services that are inaccessible or have disappeared, and a social security system with so many limits, caps, freezes and sanctions that it's failing to provide the very basics. It's no wonder we have widening inequalities and deepening poverty for many people and communities. Addressing these challenges will not be easy, but we can't afford to do nothing. Today, there are hundreds of thousands of children growing up in our communities, without access to the essentials that help us all to reach our full potential. Poverty is not only bad for society; it is bad for our economy too. That's why, in 2021, the Scottish Government brought together representatives from academics, think tanks, trade unions, and anti-poverty charities across Scotland to examine one big idea to tackle thi s: a minimum income guarantee. We don't have to wait – our Scottish Parliament already has the powers to start us on this vital journey. A minimum income guarantee is a simple yet transformative proposal. It means that we set an income floor that nobody can fall below, providing a guarantee of dignity and security for everyone. As well as lifting hundreds of thousands out of poverty, it would reduce demands on public services which deal with the social and health problems caused by inequality. We believe Scotland should take swift action. We should move quickly to scrap the two-child cap and end the five-week wait for help through social security. We should also introduce a pilot of a full minimum income guarantee to test and learn from, and double the Scottish Child Payment by 2031. The UK Government can support by working with Scottish agencies to test the ending of punitive sanctions in the welfare system in Scotland. It could also look at taking action across the UK, meaning the Scottish Government could focus on making faster progress on our other recommendations. Everything we have proposed in the next term of the Scottish Parliament is doable and affordable. Will it work? Yes. Can we afford it? Yes. Will it happen? That is up to our politicians, and up to us. Our work is an invitation to imagine a different future, with a fairer deal at its heart – security for all, opportunities for all, and dignity for all. That's a future worth working for.

I have ‘sense of relief' after announcing plans to step down
I have ‘sense of relief' after announcing plans to step down

The Independent

time12-03-2025

  • Politics
  • The Independent

I have ‘sense of relief' after announcing plans to step down

Former Scottish first minister Nicola Sturgeon has spoken of her 'sense of relief' after announcing she plans to step down next year. The former SNP leader, who led the Scottish government between 2014 and 2023, announced the news in an Instagram post on Wednesday. Speaking to journalists in Edinburgh, Ms Sturgeon said she had known 'for some time' what her plans were. 'Once you say it out loud, there's a sense of relief,' she said. 'I feel sad, because we are talking here about me turning the page on my life, so far. 'I've dedicated my life to trying to make Scotland a better place, I've dedicated my life to public service.' There was not a 'single moment' where she decided it was time to step away from Holyrood, she said, 'but over the last wee while, I've known that this moment would come'. In the months after her resignation, her husband – and former SNP chief executive – Peter Murrell was arrested in relation to a police probe into the SNP's finances. He was later re-arrested and charged in connection with the alleged embezzlement of party funds. Ms Sturgeon was arrested months later in relation to the same probe, as was former party treasurer Colin Beattie. They were both released without charge pending further inquiries. Earlier this year, Ms Sturgeon announced she and Mr Murrell had 'decided to end' their marriage. Asked if Operation Branchform – the name of the police investigation – had an impact on her decision, Ms Sturgeon told the PA news agency: 'Not at all.' The former first minister entered the Scottish Parliament in 1999, becoming SNP deputy leader and the head of the party's Holyrood group while Alex Salmond was still at Westminster. She would serve as deputy first minister and health secretary under her mentor, before taking over the top job when he stood down after losing the independence referendum. It was that loss, Ms Sturgeon said on Wednesday, which represented her biggest regret in politics. 'I really regret that we came so close, but not close enough to winning independence in the referendum,' she said. 'I really regret that.' The Yes campaign lost by 45% to 55% in the 2014 vote, but the following year the SNP swept all but three of the seats in Scotland at Westminster. During her time in Bute House, Ms Sturgeon said education would be her number one priority, specifically targeting the gap in attainment between the richest and poorest pupils – a gap which she and her successors have struggled to deal with. 'Of course, I regret that I didn't do more under my time in leadership to close the education attainment gap,' she said. 'But I'm also proud that there are more young people from backgrounds like mine going to university than ever before, that we doubled early years education and we're lifting children out of poverty.' The former first minister also touted her achievements in office, including abolishing prescription charges as health secretary, being the first female first minister and introducing the Scottish Child Payment through Scotland's devolved benefits system. Ms Sturgeon's first book about her life and time in politics is due to be published in August, and she is set to appear alongside her friend, the crime writer Val McDermid, in a show at the Glasgow International Comedy Festival this month. On what comes next after leaving Holyrood, she said: 'I've got a number of ideas for the future, but I'll set them out in due course.' But her Glasgow Southside constituency, she said, is 'in my heart and soul' and she pledged to 'continue to do my very best for it, for every day that I'm in the Scottish Parliament.'

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