Pay rise for MSPs to be rejected

A 5.1% Pay rise in 2021 for MSPs is "wholly inappropriate", according to Holyrood's Presiding Officer.

Holyrood
Published 4th Dec 2020
Last updated 4th Dec 2020

MSPs will reject a "wholly inappropriate" pay rise next year, Holyrood's Presiding Officer has announced.

Salary increases for MSPs are linked to public sector pay and they would have been in line for a 5.1% rise in 2021.

But Presiding Officer Ken Macintosh announced the Scottish Parliament's cross-party corporate body has rejected a pay rise for MSPs next year and has called for salaries to be frozen.

An MSP's salary is currently £64,470 following a 1.4% pay rise last year, with additional financial entitlements for ministers and officers of the Parliament.

Any pay rises are linked to public sector rises in Scotland using the annual survey of hours and earnings (ASHE) published by the Office for National Statistics.

By that measure, MSPs would have been able to request a 5.1% pay rise in 2021.

In a letter to MSPs, Mr Macintosh wrote: "In the midst of a public health crisis with such devastating economic consequences and hardship for so many households, the Scottish Parliament Corporate Body (SPCB) unanimously agreed yesterday that it would be wholly inappropriate for the ASHE index to be applied to MSP and ministerial salaries next year."

The SPCB, chaired by the Presiding Officer, instead unanimously agreed to ask for salaries to be frozen in their budget bid to the Finance and Constitution Committee.

Mr Macintosh added: "These are exceptional circumstances and no other decision would have been appropriate or welcome at this time - either inside or out-with Parliament.

"Now, more than ever, is a time for political leadership where our own salaries are concerned."

Deputy First Minister John Swinney welcomed the plan, and said: "I think it's absolutely the right decision to have taken and I think it's correct in these circumstances.

"The pay of ministers has been frozen at 2008-09 levels, so that's been frozen for some considerable time, but I unreservedly welcome the decision that Parliament's taken today."

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