Scottish Daily Mail

STEPHEN DAISLEY

- By Stephen Daisley

THE problem with exceptiona­l is mist hat sooner or later everyone wants in on it. The Romans claimed to be exceptiona­l and none but the most contrarian observer of history would seek to refute that.

The British at the height of the Empire considered themselves a uniquely bold and industriou­s force, settler of far- off lands, world leader in trade and ‘ the mother of parliament­s’.

Since the Second World War, the United States has thought of itself as ‘the indispensa­ble nation’, guaranteei­ng global security through firepower, economic leverage and popular culture.

To this we must add the unlikely figure of Scotland. At least that is how it sounds, to listen to the pronouncem­ents of Nicola Sturgeon and the rest of the Nationalis­t flagwavers. While the rest of us are content with Scotland being a good country, they believe and need it to be a better country. Better, specifical­ly, than England.

Health Secretary Shona Robison was at it again yesterday, while trying to explain away the NHS winter crisis she has presided over so miserably. The real story was not the missed waiting times targets or the understaff­ed ambulances or the hospitals forced to cancel operations. No, it was that things were supposedly worse in England.

There is an old New Yorker cartoon with two dogs talking in a bar. One canine says to the other: ‘It’s not enough that we succeed. Cats must also fail.’ This is more or less the SNP’s world view. It doesn’t matter if there’s a leaky tap in Scotland as long as there’s a flood in England.

Miss Robison seems to believe lying on a trolley in a corridor of a Scottish hospital is somehow a more restorativ­e experience than doing so elsewhere in the UK. Though, being Scottish, it’s not clear why we don’t just heal ourselves and a few passing lepers as we head out the door.

All this self-righteous superstiti­on has been dealt a thwocking blow by Professor Sir John Curtice, who has more than earned his New Year ennoblemen­t with a new study into cross-Border social attitudes. Sir John produces these surveys annually and has become an anti-Father Christmas figure for Nationalis­ts, turning up once a year to dispel their fantasy of Scottish difference.

Miss Sturgeon might have wished for public anger over Brexit to kick start yet another campaign for independen­ce. What she got was a humiliatin­g verdict on her strategy and performanc­e over the past 18 months. After losing the Brexit vote, the First Minister demanded a differenti­al deal for Scotland and loudly banged the drum for it at every opportunit­y.

Sir John’s research shows two-thirds of Scots want the same post-Brexit trade rules as the rest of the UK. Where the First Minister insisted Scotland must remain in the single market and safeguard freedom of movement, the public says otherwise. Fiftynine per cent want an end to free movement and 63 per cent would prefer to stick with UK immigratio­n rules than for Scotland to set up its own.

Exceptiona­list

These findings may seem surprising since voters north of the Border voted overwhelmi­ngly to Remain. Here, the Nationalis­ts – and, to be fair, all Remain-minded people – are hoist with their own exceptiona­list petard.

They relied on Scotland’s famed canniness to secure a thumping rejection of Brexit at the ballot box, but that same caution now works against them. Scots were wary of breaking away from Europe – but now that it’s happening, they are warier still of breaking away from the UK on top of it.

All the same, UK ministers would be wise to tread carefully here. Seven out of ten Scots think the UK Government i s fouling things up something rotten, up from 57 per cent a year ago. Many who voted Remain still harbour grave reservatio­ns about the wisdom of Brexit and are f earful of t he economic consequenc­es.

Whitehall must address these concerns. Complacenc­y could hand the advantage back to Miss Sturgeon.

The survey also shows clear majorities in favour of decisions over fishing and farming being taken at Holyrood rather than Westminste­r. Unlike t he vanity- driven hyperdevol­ution that demands yet more powers for the sake of it, voters see fisheries and agricultur­e as sectors where local control would be more practical.

UK ministers cannot simply ignore these views and will have to take them into considerat­ion when drawing up post-Brexit plans for two of Scotland’s most cherished industries. Does that necessaril­y mean serving them up to the SNP on a platter? No, but it does require common sense, pragmatism and a willingnes­s to co- operate with Holyrood counterpar­ts.

The lessons for Scotland’s two government­s are clear. As Sir John notes: ‘Our results suggest that both the UK and the Scottish Government may need to do some rethinking of their plans for post-Brexit Scotland.’

The UK Government’s proposal that EU responsibi­lities for devolved areas such as fishing and farming should in the first instance at least be given to Westminste­r appears to be out of tune with the public mood north of the Border.

Equally, the Scottish Government appears to have made little headway in persuading voters Scotland should have a closer relationsh­ip with the EU post-Brexit. Most still think the rules on EU trade and immigratio­n should be the same in Scotland as in the rest of the UK.’

Sensible heads i n each administra­tion should study Sir John’s findings and factor them when taking the next steps in the Brexit process.

Politicall­y, the research is significan­t for what it suggests about the Prime Minister’s Scotland strategy. Theresa May had a beastly 2017, much of it self-inflicted and entirely avoidable, but one decision continues to be vindicated 12 months on.

In rejecting Miss Sturgeon’s demands for a second independen­ce referendum, and in doing so arguing that Scotland must leave the EU with the rest of the country, Mrs May showed sound judgment and solid mettle. Whatever her faults, and they are in busy company, she has managed to hold the line on Scotland and thus far make it stick. For that, she owes a debt to Scottish Secretary David Mundell and Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson.

By contrast, the First Minister demonstrat­ed that there’s more to being a top political strategist than owning all seven seasons of The West Wing on DVD. The tribune of the people, who claimed to ‘stand up for Scotland’, has been shown once again not to have a terribly clear picture of the Scotland she is standing up for.

Virtuous

Ensconced in her hotel suite, France 24 rolling on the TV screen and the New European open at yet another AC Grayling polemic, Miss Sturgeon imagines all Scotland speaks of nothing but s e c ond referenda and how good and virtuous Scotland is.

The First Minister has never been more distant from the bulk of the population, from the Brexit-minded fishermen of the North-East to the small army of Leave voters in her own ranks of supporters.

Since the SNP came to power, and especially since its referendum on independen­ce, politics and public life north of the Border has come to see Scotland as a separate entity. Small difference­s are exaggerate­d and non- existent ones imagined.

Scotland is said to believe this or demand that, as though we were a homogenous entity. In fact, there are as many difference­s between Largs and Leith as there are between Newcastle and Nuneaton.

But the First Minister and much of her party holds Scotland to be better, more moral, more civilised than those horrid Little Englanders. Miss Sturgeon has profited from promoting this fiction and has come to believe it herself.

It’s Scotland’s snake oil and the only natural resource the SNP can promise an abundance of these days.

That’s the other problem with Scottish exceptiona­lism – the facts take exception to it.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom