Scottish Daily Mail

Tears, fears... and cheers for Ruth’s revolution

Breaking down over his constituen­ts, bullish on Brexit and Boris and determined to keep the Davidson flame alight – a searingly honest encounter with the interim Scottish Tory leader Jackson Carlaw

- By Stephen Daisley

Jackson carlaw is struggling to regain his composure. I’ve had politician­s break down in front of me before but none have wept so openly or so helplessly for their constituen­ts. Last week, the Tory rebuked nicola sturgeon for declaring herself ‘open-minded’ about an emergency government led by Jeremy corbyn. carlaw, whose constituen­cy of Eastwood, Renfrewshi­re, is home to most of scotland’s Jewish population, called her remarks ‘a grave error of judgment’.

I raise the First Minister’s comments during a conversati­on in carlaw’s boxy office at Holyrood, and ask whether she has undermined her credibilit­y when talking about racism.

He reiterates his criticism, though is at pains to note that sturgeon has been ‘hugely supportive’ of Eastwood’s Jews.

There is, however, ‘a genuine fear of Jeremy corbyn’. He tells me about spending Rosh Hashanah (the Jewish new Year), marked at the start of this week, with a 97-year-old auschwitz survivor.

‘I try to reassure people,’ he begins. ‘I don’t want to believe this. I can’t... having lived and grown up...’ His voice spasms and his lips tremble. ‘I can get quite emotional.’

There is a long pause. He is crying now, and doing so with that ingrained shame that wells up in all West coast men when they let their emotions slip.

The next few sentences are choked out fitfully. ‘Excuse me... Having grown up with that community... with friends and neighbours... childhood friends... The fear is real... I can’t believe... that in my adult lifetime... we are debating this again. so, when the First Minister lightly talks about being open... I feel it very personally on behalf of those people.’

carlaw takes out a handkerchi­ef and buries his eyes in it. His despair is raw like grief; he appears haunted by it.

This is not the face of Jackson carlaw the public is used to seeing. The Tory leader is a raconteur, more at home wielding a G&T down Whitecraig­s Tennis club than a motion in the debating chamber.

of course, he is a fierce political animal – a purring panther whose bonhomie hides a ruthless streak – but he is not one of those MsPs who has no life outside politics. He boasts a wit and manner that has built friendship­s across partisan divides.

carlaw’s star may not have risen at a time of his choosing but he chimes with voters’ demands for more authentici­ty and fewer polldriven soundbites.

I sat down with the interim leader of the scottish conservati­ves this week to discuss his Tory conference pivot to no Deal Brexit and where his party goes now after the exit of Ruth Davidson.

HE is betting the house on Boris Johnson to deliver Brexit without dooming the scottish Tories to another wipeout. Does he trust his Prime Minister? ‘I said I would judge Boris Johnson by what he does as Prime Minister, not what he said before he became Prime Minister.’

Pausing, with a wicked gleam in his eye, he jabs: ‘I mean, he was part of that murky reputation of journalism back then, so...’

Touché. ‘Do I trust him with the Union?’ he continues. ‘Yes I do.’

There has not, however, been much contact between the two.

‘I’ve only had a couple of conversati­ons with him,’ carlaw admits. ‘We have been trying to fix up a date where I go down to see him. obviously it has to tie in with my parliament­ary commitment­s here.’

The last time Johnson personally got in touch was three weeks ago, but carlaw confirms he has the PM’s personal mobile number and could access him and his key aides ‘as and when required’.

The scale of carlaw’s Boris gamble is such that he has reversed Ruth Davidson’s opposition to no Deal Brexit.

We spoke before the Uk Government unveiled its new proposals on the Irish border and carlaw pushed back on the idea he had broken with the Davidson line, arguing: ‘I don’t think that, in the way it has been reported, or even that some of my colleagues have interprete­d it, it is as huge a move as some have suggested. We have argued all the way through that we believe a deal is the best possible outcome and that we leave the EU in an orderly fashion with a deal.

‘against that background, those who say they will do anything to stop no Deal have deliberate­ly not supported a deal, which would have allowed that to happen.’

He continues: ‘I’ve said we still want a deal but that, in the event the Prime Minister secures a deal and the House of commons won’t back it, or in the event that the discussion­s to arrive at a fresh arrangemen­t don’t succeed, then we are at a point where, by virtue of the outcome of all of that, the only thing we can do is leave without a deal.

‘It’s not a case of supporting it, it’s a recognitio­n that that could be the scenario in which we find ourselves. so we are not flag-wavers for no Deal.’

His MsPs were reportedly furious about the volte-face, announced at Tory conference in Manchester, but carlaw claims they were aware of the trajectory in advance, saying that at ‘the first group meeting we mapped out that this would be the policy’.

no one in London pressured him, he maintains. Rather, he reasoned that ‘the public are fed up, they want to move on, and an extension on its own doesn’t guarantee that we’ll be any further forward at the end of it’.

Even so, it does feel like the dial has shifted from the Davidson era. Her former deputy does not see it that way.

‘I’m an absolute supporter of Project Ruth. Ruth is the epitome of the conservati­ve politics I have always believed in,’ he asserts, comparing it to Teddy Taylor’s blue-collar conservati­sm, or ‘the representa­tion of the people who don’t live in big hooses’.

He is ‘absolutely committed to maintainin­g the agenda that Ruth pursued’ and wants to advance the ‘Generation Ruth’ Tories who joined the party because of the Edinburgh central MsP.

This is all well and good but the 60-year-old must know that he cannot match Davidson in electoral potency. He

concedes she was ‘a pretty unique commodity’ and the best Tory to come out of Scotland in his 45 blue-rosetted years.

‘If you’re asking if I see myself as Ruth in a suit, no, I don’t think I do,’ he says. ‘I see a whole collection of Conservati­ves now who are capable collective­ly of representi­ng Generation Ruth.

‘But I am capable of articulati­ng and fighting for that message going forward from here.’

BEFORE he can do that, he will have to fend off the threat of another Nationalis­t referendum. He goes to excruciati­ng lengths to avoid being drawn into a debate on the details of any such plebiscite, arguing that it concedes the idea of holding one at all.

He will not even declare a preference for a Yes/No or Remain/Leave question – and suggests a statement-based question of his own. He would not be pinned down on what would constitute a mandate for a Scexit referendum.

The line, which he repeated with an ideologica­l discipline of which the incongruou­s Lenin bust on his desk would be proud, was: ‘Vote Scottish Conservati­ve and we will be opposing the holding of a second referendum.’

But what if the SNP and Greens win a majority of seats in 2021?

‘You will not have Scottish Conservati­ves voting for a referendum in the next parliament,’ he reiterates.

What about the UK Tories, I query. What is their stance?

‘The position of the UK Government is pretty clear...’

‘I don’t think it is, actually,’ I dissent.

‘...now is not the time to be considerin­g having a second independen­ce referendum.’

Didn’t Unionist voters have a right to know where they stood with the Tories? ‘If you vote for Scottish Conservati­ves, it will be a referendum-free parliament.’ Of course, they cannot guarantee that and by not setting out their terms for a referendum mandate they risk allowing their opponents to set them unilateral­ly.

On the possibilit­y of further devolution, he is more forthcomin­g: ‘We will not be going into 2021 seeking further powers to be devolved.’

Getting away from the constituti­on, he wants to see Scotland become ‘an entreprene­urial, dynamic economy’ that seizes the opportunit­ies of Brexit.

How well the Scottish Tories communicat­e this message to the voters is another matter.

The party is adept at reacting to SNP failures but lacks a clear policy programme beyond opposition to another referendum on leaving the UK.

‘You know, I don’t think that’s unfair,’ he grants. ‘What we have to do now is produce, which we are working on, a policy prospectus which attracts people and fleshes out our claim to represent a blue-collar policy for Scotland.’

The Tories’ Growth Council, not to be confused with Sturgeon’s Growth Commission, will report soon with ‘key economic proposals’. The party is also looking at health and education policy.

CARLAW adds: ‘You’re right: I don’t think you can simply react; you also have to be proactive in terms of the developmen­t of policy... We cannot simply go into a Scottish election as a one-trick pony, which is, “Vote for us and we won’t have an Indyref for five years”.

‘We have to be able to say, “This is what we’re going to do and this is why we think we can represent modern Scotland”.’

There are Tories who challenge that last point and think the Scottish party should break away from its UK parent. Carlaw is agin it but I point out that several of his MSPs are for this. ‘Hang on,’ he shoots back. ‘The MSP group is not the party. There are 31 MSPs, 13 MPs, 250 councillor­s, several thousand more members than there were when we had that discussion in 2011.’

Although he regards it as not ‘the way forward’, he vowed not to block the discussion and knows how eager some colleagues are.

‘One parliament­arian,’ he recalls, ‘did say to me he thought this was something I could just announce. I had to explain that it was a constituti­onal process and it would require the membership to vote for it. I don’t think that’s where the membership are.’

Polls point to the Scottish Tories losing almost all their 2017 gains in a snap election.

Carlaw is not so sure. Voters in Eastwood, which recorded the largest Remain vote (74 per cent) of any Tory-held seat in the UK, tell him they want to move on from Brexit – albeit preferring a deal – while rejecting another referendum on leaving the UK.

SCEXIT and Brexit, he believes, will both be on the agenda in the campaign and suggests ‘bubble’ thinking might be surprised by the outcome.

‘I don’t diminish the challenge an immediate election is going to present,’ he adds, ‘but this feels more like 1992 than it does 1997.’

Timing is thought to be key. Tory insiders have briefed the Press that the party would rather a General Election in the New Year to coincide with the trial of Alex Salmond, who denies all charges against him.

A look of distaste stiffens the corners of his mouth. ‘I read that, Stephen, and I was very annoyed,’ he discloses. ‘Whoever was saying that, that’s completely the wrong approach to be taking.

‘It’s dangerous. It’s cynical. I’ll be saying to all colleagues, I don’t think that’s the right kind of language for us to be using publicly.

‘We are ready to fight a General Election whenever that should happen and we should anticipate the political weather changing at all times.

‘But I don’t think we should be identifyin­g that in any way as some sort of catalyst around which we should be trying to build support.’

The timing of any election might not be Carlaw’s concern soon. Hours after we spoke, reports emerged of a plot to oust him and hold a leadership poll. He had told me he would like to see a leadership election ‘sooner rather than later’.

He declined to confirm if he would be a candidate, though did say: ‘I am very keen to ensure that the project that Ruth began, the campaign for that blue-collar agenda, has its opportunit­y to be represente­d all the way through to the Scottish election in 2021.’

It does not take a semantics degree to read between the lines.

Some would question the wisdom of choosing this moment of national uncertaint­y to oust a veteran general in favour of a shiny-faced recruit.

That is, however, a terribly stuffy and, well, conservati­ve way of thinking, and if there is one thing the Tory Party has no time for any more, it’s conserving things.

That could end up being what does for Carlaw. He cannot feign a yearning to tear up institutio­ns, stick it to vague, nefarious elites, or wage battle from the trenches of the culture war. He’s not a radical, a populist or a nationalis­t.

He is a Tory, and the Tory Party may have had its fill of those.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Inspired: Jackson Carlaw says Ruth Davidson, inset, is the best Scottish Tory in decades
Inspired: Jackson Carlaw says Ruth Davidson, inset, is the best Scottish Tory in decades

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom