Scottish Daily Mail

Sturgeon cited stats. Ruth cried ‘It was murder!’

- by Stephen Daisley

Nicola Sturgeon reminded me of someone, and it took me a while to put my finger on it. The First Minister was taking questions from Ruth Davidson on something that was rather more sombre than the usual petty point-scoring.

The Tory leader was demanding justice for craig Mcclelland, a father of three stabbed to death in a Paisley street one year ago. His killer, James Wright, has been sent to jail – the very place where he was supposed to be on the day he took Mr Mcclelland’s life.

Miss Davidson wanted to know why Wright was still roaming the streets six months after he had breached a home detention curfew. She wondered how many other criminals had committed more offences while on home detention.

Miss Sturgeon did not know. as she revealed, the Scottish Government does not bother to collate or disseminat­e the figures. The Scottish Tory leader, a genuine flash of anger in her voice, said: ‘i think that is unacceptab­le. if criminals are being released from jail, tagged and then going on to commit violent crimes, does the public not have a right to know how many do so?’

These questions are never easy for Miss Sturgeon, a former solicitor of broadly liberal instincts for whom offender rehabilita­tion is a secular sacrament. So she paid condolence­s to the Mcclelland family and reminded MSPs a review was under way, before pivoting to the more comfortabl­e territory of reforming prisoners’ characters. She stressed: ‘Systems such as home detention curfew are an important part of preparing individual­s for release. They are about reintegrat­ing prisoners into society.’

The First Minister was not carrying the chamber with her. Rehabilita­tion is all well and good, but now was hardly the time to talk about it. Wright had been so thoroughly reintegrat­ed into society that police could not find him during six months on the run.

Under further scrutiny from Miss Davidson, the First Minister began to cite research showing lower recidivism rates for non-custodial sentences. She was right – but the tone was all wrong.

Eventually, Miss Davidson snapped and shouted: ‘it was murder.’ and that’s when i realised who Miss Sturgeon reminded me of. Michael Dukakis, Democrat nominee in the 1988 US presidenti­al election.

Dukakis had everything, a smart, charming, self-made son of Greek immigrants and up against the hoity-toity George Bush Snr. But Dukakis was passionate­ly opposed to the death penalty and, during a TV debate, he was asked if he would still oppose execution were his wife Kitty to be raped and murdered.

instead of showing emotion, telling the audience he’d want to rip the guy’s throat out, he roboticall­y cited studies showing capital punishment was ineffectiv­e. in a dozen garbled words, he ended his presidenti­al career. in the eyes of the american people, he became a wimp who could never understand how they felt about crime. He lost in a landslide.

Justice Secretary Michael Matheson sat two doors down from the boss, keeping his head down. Mr Matheson’s saving grace is that while he may be incompeten­t, he’s incompeten­t within reason. No minister who sits round the cabinet table with angela constance can justifiabl­y be dispensed with before her. compared to the communitie­s Secretary, he is doing a bang-up job. it’s the keeping them banged-up bit he has a problem with.

KEZia Dugdale wanted to know about abortion in Northern ireland. Ulster has no government at the moment after Unionists and Nationalis­ts failed to reconcile their difference­s, meaning there cannot be a vote at Stormont on loosening the law on terminatio­ns.

at present Nor’n irn has a joint premiershi­p between the DUP’s arlene Foster and Sinn Fein’s Michelle o’Neill, and Downing Street is keen to see them working together again.

We are familiar with that set-up in Scotland, where we also have two First Ministers, although no one elected the second one – and they’re both so hapless, most of us would prefer direct rule from the empty Stormont assembly than from Mr and Mrs Murrell’s breakfast table.

 ??  ?? Dukakis syndrome: Nicola Sturgeon
Dukakis syndrome: Nicola Sturgeon
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