Scottish Daily Mail

New year, no change from SNP politics of secrecy and failure

- Grant GRAHAM

It was a year that was almost beyond imaginatio­n – and most of us were glad to say goodbye to 2020. But 2021 could prove just as tumultuous as the global fight to turn the tide against Covid goes on.

Vaccinatio­ns are under way but it remains to be seen how quickly they will break the cycle of lockdown.

and whether government will rise to the logistical challenge of rolling out the coronaviru­s jabs rapidly is perhaps the greatest variable.

the margin for error is small, the stakes are high and the SNP’s record is poor when it comes to granular detail – and getting the job done.

Within weeks, we will also be pitched into full- scale election fever – a prospect that will fill many with a sense of trepidatio­n if not downright dread.

For the SNP, it’s important to maintain a sense of momentum after a series of polls show a majority in favour of independen­ce.

Certainly, no one presents a real threat to Nicola sturgeon’s incumbency on the opposition benches, and there is little doubt the Nationalis­ts’ popularity has grown during the pandemic.

the fact that their boasts about having beaten Covid into submission were frankly ludicrous has been overshadow­ed by the frequently chaotic handling of the crisis by Boris Johnson.

Divisive

But it is likely to be the nastiest campaign since the referendum in 2014, which unleashed divisive forces that have shaped and indeed poisoned our political discourse ever since.

An SNP majority will make yet another call for an independen­ce vote inevitable, and Mr Johnson, who has suggested a date of 2055 for a possible referendum, may find the pressure to cave in to the party’s demands intolerabl­e, calculatin­g that holding firm carries its own risks.

Blocking it could see support for separatism rising further, as the Nationalis­ts are past masters when it comes to stoking constituti­onal tension.

Unionists will fervently hope he doesn’t buckle, but the clearest path to salvaging the UK lies in depriving Miss sturgeon’s party of a majority.

Doubtless the SNP wouldn’t just forget about independen­ce, but its claim to have any kind of democratic mandate for another referendum would lie in tatters.

It is within the grasp of the tories to achieve this goal by relentless­ly focusing on the myriad faults and shortcomin­gs of the SNP after nearly 14 years in office.

eclipsed by Covid, they cover every area of domestic policy from education to health to a record number of drug deaths – the highest fatality rate in europe.

The progress of the vaccine drive could well become an election issue – it’s an understate­ment to say i t’s the nation’s top priority.

As for Brexit, we may start to see the beginnings of an economic boost afforded by eu withdrawal in short order, now that the gruelling negotiatio­ns are finally over.

It will become harder for the SNP to speak out against Brexit, though it will continue to do so.

But it’s worth bearing in mind that historical­ly it was a euroscepti­c party, and that it has changed its mind previously on big issues (including devolution).

Politicall­y, a pro-Brexit pivot would be tricky f or Miss sturgeon to sustain, though many of her core voters are veteran Brexiteers.

The central message of getting us back into the eu, handing back hard-won powers to Brussels, will be a harder sell on the doorstep.

We can also expect a host of inquiries this year: it’s a growth industry, and it’s in peak condition.

One of the most important high-profile probes will be the public inquiry into the death in custody of sheku Bayoh, amid allegation­s of police brutality.

the scottish Child abuse Inquiry, launched in 2015, will focus on Claims of historic abuse at top private schools.

The Salmond inquiry is ongoing. so too is the standards probe into the conduct of the First Minister over her knowledge and reporting of the allegation­s against her former mentor.

That could expand further to investigat­e whether she misled parliament and if it finds that she did, Miss sturgeon could face calls to quit.

The MSPS’ inquiry into the salmond scandal is also likely to hear soon from alex salmond himself, and the First Minister – testimony that could prove seismic in its impact.

And don’ t forget the rangers fraud debacle – out of court settlement­s costing millions have been agreed over claims of wrongful arrest and malicious prosecutio­n.

Lord advocate James Wolffe, QC, is set to make a public apology at Holyrood – a seminal moment in scottish political and legal history.

Miss sturgeon has publicly committed to an inquiry into what went wrong, but when it will happen and in what form haven’t been decided yet.

Delayed

It’s a reasonably safe bet that there will be no immediate rush to set up the promised inquiry into the hundreds of coronaviru­s deaths in care homes earlier this year.

Thousands of patients were sent to homes without having been tested for Covid during the first wave, while more than 100 were discharged to residentia­l care despite having the virus.

Then there’s the major inquiry into scotland’s superhospi­tal, the Queen elizabeth university Hospital in Glasgow, after patient deaths were linked to contaminat­ed tap water – and the delayed opening of the royal Hospital for Children and Young People in edinburgh.

Health secretary Jeane Freeman is preparing to quit at the election, despite supposedly mastermind­ing the Covid vaccine drive – though if she wasn’t leaving of her own accord, it’s possible that she would have been sacked.

Possible rather than likely – because the SNP tends to cling onto its under-performers for as long as it possibly can. You have to be exceptiona­lly poor, like hapless former public health minister Joe FitzPatric­k, before you’re shown the door, or encouraged to step down.

Either way, the SNP’s knack for cack-handed governance means the inquiry conveyor belt will be kept busy.

They’re a convenient way to kick difficult problems into the long grass, but in time they will expose institutio­nal failings on a grand scale.

It’s unlikely, however, that this will happen in time for the election as some inquiries will take years to complete.

And we don’t even know how much cash most of the esteemed figures running them are raking in for all their hard work – because the government won’t tell us.

Whatever they decide, those who make the worst mistakes tend to hang onto the highest office, or are richly rewarded – just look at disgraced former finance secretary derek Mackay, cashing in on his expenses despite not being seen at Holyrood since he lost his Cabinet seat.

In uncertain times, there are some things we can bank on – not least an intensific­ation of constituti­onal warfare, and t he continuing evasion, secrecy and incompeten­ce of the SNP.

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