Summary

  • Nicola Sturgeon takes questions from Scottish Conservative leader Douglas Ross and Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar during First Minister's Questions

  • Ross focuses on the delayed ferry contract and asks what bonuses of £87,000 given to "highly paid chiefs" were for

  • Sturgeon accepts the criticism in an Auditor General's report of those payments and she says new processes are now in place to make sure that does not happen again

  • Sarwar raises NHS dentistry and the inability of the public to get free care. Sturgeon lists statistics pointing to improvements, including 95% of the population being registered with a dentist

  • This is the penultimate FMQs for Sturgeon who will step down on 27 March when her successor is chosen

  • Two of the three contenders - MSPs Kate Forbes and Ash Regan - want an independent auditor brought in to oversee the leadership vote

  • Third hopeful Humza Yousaf said reassurances were important but questioning the vote process was very upsetting for party members

  1. 'Downright scandalous'published at 12:10 Greenwich Mean Time 16 March 2023

    Dougls Ross says "It is not acceptable for the first minister to say tune in in a couple of hours time."

    The Scottish Tory leader asks again what these bonuses were for.

    They are "downright scandalous", he adds.

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  2. 'We deeply regret the delays to the completion of the ferries and the cost overruns'published at 12:08 Greenwich Mean Time 16 March 2023

    The first minister says John Swinney will make a statement on the issues around ferries this afternoon.

    Nicola Sturgeon welcomes the Audit Scotland report published on Tuesday and acknowledges the legitimate issues raised in it.

    She points out that the report is critical about the payment of these bonuses and the government accepts that criticism.

    The FM tells the chamber: "We deeply regret the delays to the completion of the ferries and the cost overruns."

  3. BACKGROUND: £87,000 bonus for Ferguson bosses branded 'unacceptable'published at 12:05 Greenwich Mean Time 16 March 2023

    The Glen Sannox ferryImage source, PA Media

    Scotland's public spending watchdog has raised concerns over £87,000 paid in bonuses to six senior managers at Ferguson shipyard in Inverclyde.

    The auditor general said it was "unacceptable" the money had not been cleared by the Scottish government.

    The BBC understands the money was paid under former turnaround director Tim Hair, who was brought in in 2019.

    Current chief executive David Tydeman said the firm had introduced greater transparency over incentives.

    Read more on this story here.

  4. Ross asks what ferry bonuses of £87,000 were forpublished at 12:04 Greenwich Mean Time 16 March 2023

    The Scottish Conservative leader says the "SNP ferry scandal" has left islanders without vital links they need.

    Audit Scotland say the cost to date is £338m and bonuses are being paid to the tune of £87,000 to management at Ferguson Marine.

    Mr Ross asks: "What were these bonuses for?"

  5. FMQs gets under way...published at 12:01 Greenwich Mean Time 16 March 2023

    Nicola Sturgeon is sitting poised with anticipation as Douglas Ross gets to his feet to begin this week's FMQs.

  6. What can we expect from today's FMQs?published at 11:50 Greenwich Mean Time 16 March 2023

    Philip Sim
    BBC Scotland political correspondent

    Nicola Sturgeon’s penultimate session of questions to the first minister looks likely to be dominated, once again, by the race to succeed her.

    Last week the SNP leadership contest was dragged to her door by the conduct of the candidates; this week the storm is over that of the party itself.

    Ash Regan and Kate Forbes had already raised an eyebrow about heavyweight names in the SNP hierarchy swinging in behind Humza Yousaf.

    And following on from their complaints about the misuse of member email lists by a Yousaf backer, external and “serial hustings attendees” turning up at multiple party events, external, they are now demanding an independent audit of the whole process.

    Mr Yousaf says questioning the ballot is “very upsetting” for members, while one MP, Gavin Newlands, went so far as to call the row “Trumpian nonsense” and “fake news”.

    But SNP HQ has run face-first into a series of preventable rows, from initially barring the media from hustings to refusing to reveal membership figures to even the candidates themselves.

    These unforced errors – which inevitably resulted in U-turns – are particularly glaring given the professional manner in which the party has utterly dominated Scottish politics for the best part of two decades.

    This comes home for Ms Sturgeon, literally, because the party machine is still run by the First Husband, Peter Murrell.

    So once again she will be forced to spend her final days as first minister not on a victory lap or cementing her legacy, but accounting for a party threatening to slide into chaos.

  7. Welcomepublished at 10:36 Greenwich Mean Time 16 March 2023

    Nicola Sturgeon during FMQsImage source, Jane Barlow/PA

    Welcome to our live coverage of First Minister's Questions on Thursday 16 March 2023.

    We'll bring you live updates, backgrounds to stories and analysis.

    To watch FMQs just click on the play icon at the top of the page.