Daily Mail

For once they can’t blame the English. This was a political farce made in Scotland

- By Eddie Barnes

FOR the past few years, Scotland has been sold a story about itself by our nationalis­t governing leaders. There, down south, was nasty mean-spirited ‘Westminste­r’, stuffed to the gunwales with Tories and other small-minded types.

up north, by contrast, was ‘progressiv­e’ Scotland. Independen­ce was needed, we were told, so our liberal Scandinavi­an souls could be freed from the grip of Anglo-spitefulne­ss.

This woke ideal reached its peak three years ago, when Scotland’s then rockstar politician Nicola Sturgeon brought into government two achingly right-on Green MSPs, Patrick Harvie and Lorna Slater. Together – so the story went – this new enlightene­d SNP-Green coalition would march Scotland out of the uK (as both parties favoured independen­ce), leaving behind the reactionar­y boors of Downing Street.

Well, yesterday, this bogus and sanctimoni­ous story finally collapsed.

The SNP kicked out its progressiv­e pals, leaving Ms Sturgeon’s successor Humza Yousaf in charge of a minority government. During First Minister’s Questions, the derision in Holyrood was overflowin­g, with the Lib Dems’ Alex Cole-Hamilton likening the government to a ‘circus’ despite the ‘ two clowns’ having left, while Douglas Ross of the Tories announced he was lodging a vote of no confidence in Yousaf, ‘a failed First Minister’. Given that Labour and the Lib Dems will likely back the motion, the SNP will not survive the vote without the support of... the Greens.

But this marriage of nationalis­t convenienc­e is no more. And for once, the SNP can’t blame the English. This was a political farce made in Scotland.

The core reason behind yesterday’s events was cold political maths. In their short time in office, the Scottish Greens repelled many middle- of-theroad voters in Scotland, concerned that hobbling the country’s oil and gas industry would be ruinous for the economy.

And with a general election in the offing, the SNP’s panicking men in grey kilts began to wake up to the damage the deal was causing. The pressure has been building for months. Finally yesterday, it forced the hapless First Minister to pull the plug.

THE severing of the deal is, let it be said, a complete humiliatio­n for Mr Yousaf, a man who billed himself as the ‘continuity’ candidate to Ms Sturgeon when he took over last year. Only weeks ago, he described Ms Sturgeon’s Green Alliance as ‘ worth its weight in gold’. Even on Tuesday, he was still declaring adamantly that it wouldn’t be dumped. ‘I hope that the cooperatio­n agreement will continue,’ he said. Yesterday, less than 48 hours later, he declared that he had, in fact, been thinking of binning the Green Alliance for ‘quite some time’.

Truly, butter would not melt in his mouth.

The truth is he was forced into the decision and not just by his restive party. Green activists had been threatenin­g to walk out over the SNP’s embarrassi­ng announceme­nt that it will ditch a key target of net zero last week.

The once happy love-in between the SNP and the Greens was in flames. ‘This is an act of political cowardice by the SNP who are selling out future generation­s to appease the most reactionar­y forces in the country,’ declared the Green co-leader Ms Slater.

She can complain all she wants, but the Greens had it coming. It hasn’t been their environmen­tal agenda that’s riled up Scots so much as their ultra- liberal extremism and their extraordin­ary incompeten­ce at governing.

Ms Slater, for example, will be remembered principall­y for the car crash she made of a bottle deposit scheme designed to boost recycling rates but which has now been dumped, burdening businesses with millions in pointless set-up costs. Characteri­stically, she has shown little or no awareness of what she is responsibl­e for.

Mr Harvie’s legacy will be his shameful response to the findings of Hilary Cass’s review into transgende­r services. Despite the report pointing out the lack of evidence around the use of puberty blockers for children, Mr Harvie refused to say whether he accepted its findings or not. His zealotry over the transgende­r issue appears to have been the straw that broke many SNP backs.

Aside from the 2 per cent of people in Scotland who say they will vote for the Greens in the election later this year, few will mourn the departure of this pair.

But perhaps, between them, they have done Scotland a favour. The Sturgeonit­e experiment over the past few years has shown that Scotland is not, it turns out, a bastion of right- on wokeism. Never forget that, after Ms Sturgeon quit last year, 48 per cent of its members voted for Kate Forbes to be leader, a member of the strict Wee Free Church of Scotland who opposed her party’s radical gender recognitio­n bill.

Instead, it’s shown that Scotland and the SNP are far more socially conservati­ve and (whisper it) far more like England than the nationalis­ts have tried to claim.

Forced by the mood of the electorate, the SNP can now be expected to tack back to the political centre-ground.

Its strong representa­tion in the north- east of the country will demand that the party adopts a more sympatheti­c position on North Sea energy. The SNP will also likely shift its position on trans issues too. That will be more popular – but, for the SNP, the damage is already done.

LuRKING behind everything in Scotland is the continuing investigat­ion into the party’s finances, which last week witnessed the re-arrest of Ms Sturgeon’s husband, former party chief executive Peter Murrell.

He has been charged with embezzling party funds. Ms Sturgeon is still awaiting her fate.

Mr Yousaf’s abrupt u-turn yesterday has exposed him as a man without a plan. The smart money is on his swift removal from office the moment the general election is over. The SNP’s grip on Scotland is far from dead – it remains a ruthless, power-driven political organisati­on. But the days when it could preach pompously about Boris Johnson and Tory ministers in Westminste­r from a position of moral righteousn­ess north of the border have long gone.

This is a party mired in scandal and, as of yesterday, led by a man with little credibilit­y in the tank.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom