Scottish Daily Mail

Greta Thunberg of Govanhill? FM should practise what she preaches

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SHE made a dig at his ruddy complexion. ‘At least I’ve still got a full head of my own, uncoloured hair,’ he shot back. Not, dear reader, a provincial watering hole after one too many sherries have been taken but the hallowed chamber of the Scottish parliament. Peggy Mitchell used to bar folk for less.

When Nicola Sturgeon and Jackson Carlaw step up to debate, you don’t expect Cleon versus Diodotus in the ecclesia but at least they bring a bit of colour to Holyrood’s dull proceeding­s. Less Athenian discourse, more fishwives brawling.

The First Minister was on her pins hawking her latest programme for government, an annual digest of all the things she’ll be virtue signalling about on Twitter in the coming 12 months.

Precious few of these announceme­nts ever make it to the statute books but the exercise gives Sturgeon something to do between booking flights to the dwindling itinerary of nations yet to be bestowed the honour of a first ministeria­l visit.

This was the subject of another daggerclaw­ed remark from Carlaw, given the SNP leader spent most of her time touting the Scottish Government’s efforts to tackle climate change.

‘She burned the equivalent of half a ton of carbon flying to the US to promote independen­ce,’ the interim Tory leader snorted, suggesting Sturgeon might want to try practising the emissions reduction she preaches. ‘Between book festivals, are you going to give it a go this time?’

‘Ooooooh,’ went the blue benches. ‘Raaaaahr,’ fumed the yellow benches.

Triumphant­ly, Sturgeon read from a press release Carlaw’s office had sent that morning demanding ministers hurry up and cut air passenger duty. Carlaw’s visage turned a shade of Vesuvius.

The climate emergency loomed large in Sturgeon’s statement, and no wonder: global warming has become a major issue since she discovered it back in April.

The Greta Thunberg of Govanhill pledged a ‘Scottish Green New Deal’, the latest thing the SNP is pretending to believe in, after losing interest in social justice, improving the NHS and closing the attainment gap.

More than £500million to spruce up

infrastruc­ture since ‘the vast majority of public transport journeys are by bus’. Some aren’t even ScotRail replacemen­ts. There would be a Circular Economy Bill, she said, as though their entire economic strategy hadn’t gone in circles for years.

‘While the Westminste­r Government shuts down,’ Sturgeon boasted, ‘the Scottish Government is stepping up.’ Well, ministers did board a lot of planes for Shetland last month, though to no avail. Opponents have demanded that Sturgeon call an immediate halt to North Sea oil and gas production, which seems a bit extreme. Still, the First Minister says slashing emissions is ‘a moral obligation’, so we must all do our bit, whether that’s switching off the TV or giving up the personalis­ed helicopter.

It went on in this vein for some time: all the ambitions in the world, no clue how to deliver them.

THE government benches perked up when the boss got back onto her favourite subject. She would seek legal powers to hold another referendum because ‘mitigating bad Westminste­r decisions should not be what this parliament is about’. Quite right. This parliament has more than enough bad decisions by the SNP to be mitigating.

Commenting on the Brexit chaos, the First Minister added: ‘SNP MPs will do everything possible to stop the UK crashing out of the EU without a deal.’

‘Everything except vote for a deal,’ Adam Tomkins sniped from up back.

Nonetheles­s, Scotland should have ‘the opportunit­y to choose that better, more hopeful future as an independen­t country.’ Scexit, not Brexit. Our mistakes, not theirs. Chaos, but wir ain chaos.

 ??  ?? On the attack: Jackson Carlaw
On the attack: Jackson Carlaw
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