Scottish Daily Mail

Nicola goes for a grin, a spin and a splurge then drops a grenade

- Stephen Daisley

THEY couldn’t agree a slogan for the SNP’s Aberdeen conference – so there were three. The branding read: ‘Stronger for Scotland.’ Nicola Sturgeon kept telling us she was ‘moving Scotland forward’. The garish yellow lanyards were emblazoned, ‘We can,’ in a scratchy font that looked like it had been scribbled in Biro at the last minute – and might well have been.

Scotland is trying to move forward – but it can’t shake this woman running after us, demanding to know how much sugar is in our tea. The First Minister spoke to delegates for about 40 minutes on Saturday. It was a matter of girn, spin and splurge.

The Tories, you’ll be shocked to learn, still eat babies and worship Satan. ‘This UK Government is a shambles,’ Sturgeon inveighed. ‘It is reckless, it is selfish and the sooner it holds no sway over Scotland, the better for all of us.’

‘Ruth Davidson’s rhetoric very rarely survives contact with reality,’ she added. Nicola knows a thing or two about reality. She gets a good look at it from her branded helicopter every five years.

That was the girn. The spin came in an audacious attempt to present her workshy, constituti­on-fixated ministry as a policy powerhouse. This consisted mostly of reannounci­ng everything she announced over the past two months.

Next, she got out the national credit card and went shopping for votes like Imelda Marcos with a shoe closet to fill. She announced pay rises for NHS staff, longoverdu­e student support and 750 new or revamped nurseries. Someone’s rattled by Richard Leonard’s Lefty hectoring.

Suddenly, a grenade: ‘Our responsibi­lity is this: Not just to focus on the “when” of independen­ce but to use our energy and passion to persuade those who still ask “why?”. Right now, that is the more important task.’

You’ve never heard silence till you’ve heard an entire SNP conference pause to take in the news that, yes, they’re going to keep banging on about another referendum, but they won’t actually be doing anything about it. We’ll see how long they let her away with that.

On Friday, the First Minister had a nasty run-in with Channel 4 News reporter Ciaran Jenkins, who had the temerity not only to ask her a question, but to ask her one she couldn’t answer. How much was she claiming it would cost to set up an independen­t Scotland?

Blank stare. She had forgotten, though in fairness it’s not easy to recall a number that was plucked at random in the first place.

Sturgeon glared with cold fury at her interrogat­or. I’m not saying Ciaran hasn’t been heard from since, but all his family asks is that it’s a gulag. Deliciousl­y, at

the very moment Sturgeon was being skewered on Channel 4, delegates were passing a resolution backing Glasgow’s bid to be the broadcaste­r’s new HQ.

Elsewhere, Derek Mackay continued his long-running battle with Gerry Fisher, a veteran member who has been remitting back motions since Robert McIntyre was a lad. As party business convener, it’s Mackay’s job to get conference through the agenda on time. As Gerry Fisher, it’s Fisher’s job to do everything in his power to prevent that.

IF Scotland voted for independen­ce, he’d remit back on a technicali­ty. Many regard him as a tedious pettifogge­r but he’s an annual highlight for those of us who appreciate bolshy pensioners and independen­t minds.

Clara Ponsatí took the stage to a standing ovation. The 61-yearold is being sought by the Spanish authoritie­s on charges of rebellion and misappropr­iation of funds for her role in arranging last year’s unilateral referendum in Catalonia. Madrid turned the rozzers on Catalan voters – and was allowed to by the bold democrats of the EU – and now wants us to believe Ponsatí is a dangerous subversive.

Granny Sedition nervously cried, ‘Thank you,’ over and over, before heading back down the road to St Andrews University, where she is head of economics. A regular Lev Kamenev, that one.

Even so, there’s something unseemly about the way the SNP keeps wheeling her out like the Mother Teresa of separatism. She wasn’t there to be shown solidarity but to serve as a warm-up act for Nicola Sturgeon. ‘A referendum is never illegal in a democracy,’ the soft-spoken academic declared; and the building almost shook at the roar. Ponsatí is being used to signal the SNP isn’t a bunch of insular parochiali­sts.

When folk who think the difference­s between people in Coldstream and Cornhill-on-Tweed are so irreconcil­able that we need to erect a Border between the two start to call themselves internatio­nalists, you know irony has built a wall and is making the rest of us pay for it.

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 ??  ?? Conference call: Nicola Sturgeon on Saturday
Conference call: Nicola Sturgeon on Saturday
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