Special Scottish cabinet meeting to discuss £1 billion budget black hole

Our sporrans are empty and devolved Scotland is skint …

Humza Yousaf

 

 First Minister Humza Yousaf, left, will chair the special cabinet meeting.

By Bill Heaney

A special meeting of the Scottish Cabinet has been called as ministers face a budget black hole of at least £1 billion.

BBC Scotland understands the Scottish government is struggling to make its £60bn tax and spending plans work, which makes the £50,000 West Dunbartonshire Council’s Labour administration has to find to keep Balloch Library open pale into insignificance.

That was a cut earmarked by the SNP which has now been approved by Labour, much toi the dismay of the people of Haldane, Balloch, Jamestown and Old Bonhill.

The budget is said to be “a collective issue” and not a problem of agreeing a deal with Green ministers – who are in a power-sharing agreement with the SNP.

The Scottish Budget is due to be unveiled on 19 December and the SNP have been sending out Maydays by the hour alerting the country to the fact that the good ship Scotia is sinking fast.

Instead of independence as planned and fought over – even amongst themselves – by the SNP, it now appears that Scotland’s been scuppered by Nationalist/Green misrule.

And seriously undermined in the public eye by one scandal after another including the resignation of First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and the police inquiry that has accompanied it.

It was already confirmed that the proposals would include a council tax freeze.

Finance Secretary Shona Robison also warned that the public sector workforce would need to be cut because of funding pressures.

The Scottish government blamed Westminster’s Autumn Statement, saying the Chancellor’s spending said to “deliver nothing” for public services in Scotland.

There was speculation that ministers were considering a new tax band for higher earners to raise cash – but BBC Scotland has been told that such reports were “premature, but given the propensity of politicians for being economical with the truth a tax rise seems very likely if not certain..

‘Can’t square the circle’

Thursday evening’s meeting will focus solely on the budget and discussions could continue at a further cabinet meeting in Haddington on Monday.

Cabinet ministers previously met on Tuesday. It is rare for more than one such meeting in a week.

The Scottish Conservatives said it was no surprise that ministers “can’t square the circle” after they promised the last-minute council tax freeze.

The party said that the SNP should be tackling their own financial irresponsibility.

Social Security Secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville told BBC Scotland News that the government needed time to look at its options in detail after a “worst possible scenario” Autumn Statement.

Shona Robison
Finance Secretary Shona Robison says the cabinet is facing “very difficult” decisions

Ms Robison, the finance secretary and deputy first minister, said it was one of the most difficult budgets to draw up in the history of the Scottish Parliament.

She told BBC Scotland News the only money provided for public services in the Autumn Statement was £10.8m for the NHS, which she said would only buy about five hours of capacity for the health service.

In truth she looks like a rabbit caught in the headlights without the assistance of experienced colleagues such as Sturgeon and John Swinney, who had lots of answers but no solutions.

The minister said the cabinet would have to make “very difficult” decisions due to the “Tory austerity budget at the expense of public services”.

The Treasury said the Scottish government would receive £545m in additional funding through the Barnett formula as a result of the Autumn Statement.

Scottish Tory finance spokesperson Liz Smith said she was not surprised by the unscheduled cabinet meeting, claiming “SNP sums are all over the place”.

She was scathing about the SNP and said that the party was yet to explain how it intended to pay for the Council Tax freeze.

“There is absolutely no answer as to where that money is coming from,” the MSP told BBC Scotland News.

One comment

  1. The UK is sinking fast.

    Economic activity is declining, wages are declining, standards of living are going down, London as a financial centre is declining.

    The UK economy is tanking and the world knows it.

    Were it not for Scottish gas, oil, hydro, wind power and the exporting surplus due to Scottish exports like whisky, fish and other such produce, the UK would be a basket case.

    Anyway, Scotland tethered to the UK is being bled dry.

    And as the artic conditions continue to bite, ask yourself how in a country blessed with energy over a million households are struggling to heat their homes.

    Like the million Irish who died during the famine years as food produce was exported to England, today over a million Scots homes go cold as our energy is exported.

    And the death rates for the old, their health compromised with heart and lung problems, are already beginning to rise. For them cold housing is a killer.

    The Irish eventually got rid of their colonial masters.

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