Scottish Daily Mail

Why SNP’s Medusa Touch ends up costing taxpayers a fortune

- Grant GRAHAM

RICHARD Burton is remembered for many fine films, but a supernatur­al 1970s thriller in which he played a novelist with telekineti­c powers may not be one of them.

It is a creepy movie, though, in which Burton’s character triggers disasters by thinking about them – making him the sort of person you’d want to avoid at all costs.

Various catastroph­es, including a crumbling cathedral and an air crash, are among the events brought about simply through his negative thought processes.

Its clever title is The Medusa Touch – the opposite of the Midas Touch – because of the protagonis­t’s unerring capacity to bring about mayhem and destructio­n.

Nicola Sturgeon doesn’t seem the type to enjoy psychologi­cal horror movies, but she should make an exception for this one – because it captures the current condition of her party.

It is also beset by crises, fuelling the impression that everything it touches, regardless of intention, quickly founders in a quagmire – and turns into dust rather than King Midas’s gold.

The SNP in government is now neck-deep in the debris of failed or abortive policies as a result of chaotic ‘reform’ that has succeeded only in exacerbati­ng the problems it set out to address.

The latest calamities include the prospect of Scotland’s last commercial shipyard entering administra­tion, putting 350 jobs at risk, in a row over the spiralling cost of a CalMac ferry contract.

Overhaul

Billionair­e Jim McColl – one of Miss Sturgeon’s economic advisers and owner of the Clydeside yard – has accused the SNP of refusing to foot the extra bill.

He said: ‘The way they are acting is economical­ly damaging for the local area and for Scotland. Anybody with a Standard Grade in economics could work this out, it’s not rocket science.’

That’s true, although Standard Grades have been replaced by Nationals and the SNP’s botched curricular overhaul, combined with teacher shortages, mean there’s a good chance economics isn’t available in quite a few of our secondarie­s.

Back in 2014, Mr McColl had bought the shipyard out of administra­tion, then won a £97million public sector contract when Caledonian Maritime Assets Limited (CMAL), owned by the Scottish Government, ordered two dual-fuel ferries.

Mr McColl’s fury is understand­able – he is a self-made billionair­e but has to contend with the business acumen of career politician Derek Mackay, the blundering Finance Secretary, now apparently seen as a possible successor to Miss Sturgeon.

Worryingly, Mr Mackay is threatenin­g to nationalis­e the yard in a bout of political amnesia which has apparently erased all recollecti­on of the saga over Prestwick Airport, bought by the Scottish Government in 2013 for the nominal sum of £1.

The Medusa Touch struck again because the losses were so substantia­l that the airport, described by Miss Sturgeon as a ‘viable enterprise’, had to be propped up with almost £40million worth of taxpayers’ cash – and is now on the market.

But it looks increasing­ly as though the taxpayer will have to step in to rescue Mr McColl’s yard, against his wishes – though the tycoon has also warned he may take legal action, and that ‘all options are on the table’.

These are problems that have been simmering for months, while Miss Sturgeon postured over Brexit, and separatism – but now that they have burst into the open, the full extent of her government’s cack-handed handling of the situation has been laid bare.

Then there’s the deepening scandal over a new £150million children’s hospital in Edinburgh, which had been due to receive its first patients last month, but now – according to union bosses – may have to be scrapped altogether.

Health Secretary Jeane Freeman overruled NHS Lothian and halted the opening after last-minute inspection­s highlighte­d concerns.

At the weekend, former card-carrying Communist Miss Freeman was unable to ‘give guarantees’ that it would be operationa­l in 2020.

In the meantime, questions are piling up about the management of the project, after an architect involved in the design claimed health bosses were ‘pressured’ to sign off the building, despite knowing about the drainage issues.

Meanwhile, it emerged last week that pass rates were lowered for a series of key exams as performanc­e slumped – so that pupils sitting maths at Higher, Advanced Higher and National 5 levels were able to gain passes with lower results than last year.

The figures came after the number of pupils achieving top exam grades fell for the fourth year in a row, with a significan­t decline in National 4, Higher and Advanced Higher qualificat­ions.

Judged

You might recall that in 2015, Miss Sturgeon said she wanted to be ‘judged on this’, adding: ‘If you are not, as First Minister, prepared to put your neck on the line on the education of our young people, then what are you prepared to?’

That judgment may come sooner than she would like, as the public sector watchdog Audit Scotland is set to launch an investigat­ion into her educationa­l reforms – and whether they have even begun to tackle deeply entrenched inequaliti­es, as she promised.

And yet last week, as crises multiplied, many SNP politician­s and activists spent much of their time berating the BBC for its allegedly inadequate coverage of an opinion poll showing a slender majority of respondent­s favoured independen­ce.

Energy Minister Paul Wheelhouse tweeted: ‘Almost five hours since the [Lord] Ashcroft poll indicating majority support for independen­ce was published and yet it does not yet feature on the UKcontroll­ed BBC’s Scotland web pages. What does that tell you about BBC priorities, people of Scotland?’

The party and its backers are still busy proclaimin­g the demise of the Union as they discuss tactics on Twitter – and telling each other to try and be nice to No voters this time around.

In the midst of this wishful thinking, a controvers­ial and abrasive pro-independen­ce blogger is allegedly in talks to set up his own separatist party, fed up with Miss Sturgeon’s failure to mirror the bolder approach of her predecesso­r, Alex Salmond – currently facing trial on a string of sex charges, which he denies.

While these discussion­s were taking place in the parallel universe of social media, in reality the chickens were coming home to roost – providing more plentiful evidence of Miss Sturgeon’s very own Medusa Touch.

In Miss Sturgeon’s real-life disaster movie, the consequenc­es of her government’s action – and inaction – for shipyard workers, sick children and their families, as well as thousands of pupils, could be long-lasting.

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