Scottish Daily Mail

Paralysed by her one tired answer to EVERY single political question

-

THE sound you heard yesterday when Nicola Sturgeon spoke about Brexit was the scraping of a barrel. Most of the really good scare stories have been used up, short of fire raining from the skies, war, famine, pestilence…

So the First Minister had to dust off a script from over a year ago, homing in (again) on the prospect of financial disaster.

A new ‘economic impact analysis’ has predicted that without the shelter of the EU single market, Scotland’s GDP will take a hit of nearly £13billion by 2030.

It was all a bit familiar to those of us who recall the SNP’s Brexit ‘strategy’ back in December 2016 – one that was shot down within days by one of Miss Sturgeon’s own advisers.

Psychiatri­sts might diagnose an extreme case of ‘Brexit denial’, but there is also a sense that senior Nationalis­ts aren’t keeping up with the news anymore.

Yesterday Miss Sturgeon was railing against the Tories’ ‘hard Brexit red-lines’, as if hard Brexit, after Theresa May’s numerous concession­s to the EU last year, was still a serious possibilit­y.

Like a jaded stand-up comedian in the twilight of their career, clinging to old material, and oblivious to the stony silence of the audience, the First Minister is reduced to trotting out the same old lines.

The reason she isn’t trading in her act is very simple: the central mission of the SNP remains smashing apart the UK at all costs.

True, after the electoral backlash the party suffered last June, Miss Sturgeon hit the ‘snooze’ button on independen­ce.

But the terminatio­n of the Union remains the SNP’s only answer to every question it faces. Indeed, ask the First Minister: ‘What’s two plus two?’ and her reply would be: ‘Independen­ce.’

This intellectu­al paralysis goes down well with the support base, itching for Indyref 2, and becoming increasing­ly disillusio­ned as the party’s great constituti­onal project apparently plummets down the list of priorities.

It’s also, frankly, a bore having to govern the country, particular­ly when the ‘Yoon’ media are constantly underminin­g your myriad achievemen­ts (baby boxes and, er, baby boxes…)

Sober economic analyses of the kind the SNP purported to produce yesterday are all very well, but where were they in the run-up to the 2014 independen­ce referendum?

Well, there was the White Paper, allegedly a blueprint for the break-up of the United Kingdom, but it was quickly exposed as a shoddy compendium of half-baked miscalcula­tions and fantastica­l assumption­s.

Even now, the Nationalis­ts have no firm idea of what an independen­t Scotland’s currency would be.

Nightmaris­h

This and some other – fairly pivotal – matters are still under considerat­ion by the SNP’s ‘growth commission’, led by former Nationalis­t MSP Andrew Wilson, expected to be published later this year.

Continuing to use sterling in an independen­t Scotland is off the table, leaving a new Scottish unit of currency the only realistic option.

The idea that this nightmaris­h economic uncertaint­y is more palatable than Brexit to the bulk of the electorate is almost as baffling as the notion that it makes sense to destroy one single market (that of the UK), while remaining in the European one.

The SNP’s Brexit Minister Mike Russell warned yesterday that the ‘decisions taken in the next few months will be crucial for jobs, wages and opportunit­ies for generation­s’ (remember though that the SNP has a unique definition of ‘generation’). But where was the concern for jobs on Sunday when Miss Sturgeon told the BBC’s Andrew Marr that later this year she would decide whether to hold another referendum?

She knows that every such statement has an economic impact (though don’t expect a Scottish Government analysis of it anytime soon).

More constituti­onal turmoil is the last thing that businesses need at a time of looming tax rises.

Yet Miss Sturgeon assures us she will make a ‘judgment about the next steps for Scotland’ in the autumn, convenient­ly forgetting that she would need the consent of the UK Government for Indyref 2.

Mrs May rejected that idea following the last big push for another referendum last year – and is unlikely to be any more receptive to it in the autumn.

Like a Roman emperor giving a thumbs up or thumbs down in the gladiatori­al arena, Miss Sturgeon believes she has supreme power – but in reality this is a matter ultimately beyond her control.

Indeed the Marr interview may prove to be the moment the SNP lost the next Holyrood election.

It sends an unmistakab­le signal to the electorate that the hierarchy of the Nationalis­t administra­tion remains obsessed with the independen­ce mission, and refuses to learn from its mistakes.

Voters also know they are being treated with naked contempt, and that agitating for Indyref 2 provides a helpful smoke-screen for the SNP’s disaster-ridden track record.

From the NHS to policing, this is a government that has run out of ideas, and is fast running out of public services to ruin (though that may be wishful thinking).

Historical­ly, many voted for the SNP not because they believed in independen­ce but because they believed the party would stand up for Scottish interests.

But this is a task now being performed far more effectivel­y by Scottish Tory MPs, who secured a VAT exemption for crisis-stricken Police Scotland, and are now fighting to ensure Holyrood gets new powers as a result of Brexit.

Last week, Livingston Nationalis­t MP Hannah Bardell gave us an example of the calibre of the party’s contributi­on to the Europe debate, when she embarked on a Brexit-related rap in the Commons chamber.

The grammatica­lly shaky lyric appeared to channel William McGonagall: ‘LGBT rights, workers’ rights, equal pay, all important things the EU has paved the way.’

Lamentable

This episode, which seems like a bad dream but for which video evidence (sadly) exists, became even more dispiritin­g once I’d seen the new movie about Winston Churchill – Darkest Hour – last Friday.

The wartime Prime Minister promised never to surrender, and offered his ‘blood, toil, tears and sweat’ in the battle against Nazism.

These days, we have Glasgow East Nationalis­t MP David Linden attempting to ‘beat box’ to his colleague’s lamentable rap.

Then there was Pete Wishart, who boasted last week that he had outfoxed the Prime Minister by asking her to grade her Brexit performanc­e from one to ten.

He held up a Eurovision-style ‘nul points’ card during an ill-advised Commons stunt, oblivious to the fact that ‘nul’ isn’t a number between one and ten (surely all committed Europhiles should know such a basic fact).

Vaudevilli­an nonsense of this kind suggests that the SNP believes no one is watching its woeful parliament­arians make fools of themselves – or perhaps it no longer cares.

After a wasted decade in government, the SNP is facing its own darkest hour – and filling it with the same old grandstand­ing, scaremonge­ring and empty threats.

 ?? Grant GRAHAM ??
Grant GRAHAM

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom