Scottish Daily Mail

Humza has gone, and SNP must be driven from office

- By Douglas Ross SCOTTISH CONSERVATI­VE LEADER

THE whole of Scotland will breathe a sigh of relief that Humza Yousaf has finally realised that the game is up and offered his resignatio­n.

But that’s not enough. The rest of the SNP government must follow as soon as possible. They may be in crisis but, for now, they remain the government.

Humza Yousaf is trying to cling on so that they can pick a new leader. We can be sure that, whoever it may be, their number one aim will still be ripping Scotland out of the UK.

They will still ignore Scotland’s real priorities – the NHS, schools, jobs and services. They will still depend on the support of the extremist Greens, who were trying to dictate terms yesterday.

And, though they opportunis­tically backed our motion, both Labour and the Liberal Democrats lined up to back many of the SNP-Green government’s worst measures, including the disastrous gender identity Bill and higher taxes.

No one who cares about the future of Scotland can relax until the SNP are driven from office. Only the Scottish Conservati­ves have a robust record in genuine opposition. We have seen off Nicola Sturgeon and Humza Yousaf.

In many seats it’s a straight choice between us and the SNP. We are making substantia­l gains – as we did last week in the Arbroath West by-election, a thumping win in a previous Nat stronghold.

We won’t let up until we’ve seen the back of this disastrous government.

WHILE, on a personal level, I wish Humza Yousaf and his family well, there is no disguising the fact he has been an unmitigate­d disaster since he took office.

Attention has naturally focused on the chaos that has engulfed him and his SNP government since last Thursday, when he ditched his agreement with the Greens and I tabled a motion of no confidence in him as First Minister.

The prospect of a vote on that motion – a vote that he was bound to lose, having lost the confidence of everyone outside his own party – was what finally resulted in his statement yesterday.

But even before we forced the issue, chaos has been the hallmark of Humza Yousaf’s parliament­ary career.

As First Minister, he lurched from crisis to crisis, as he had done as a minister.

Having failed as transport, justice and health secretary, he failed his way into the top job by promising to be the ‘continuity candidate’. From the moment of his election, that meant pushing a legacy mired in scandal and a programme which had caused profound damage to Scotland’s economy and essential services.

A series of ill-conceived and divisive policies that were disintegra­ting throughout his time in office. A legacy described yesterday by a former deputy leader of the SNP as ‘less than mediocre’.

There was hardly a day on which his judgment was less than catastroph­ic.

That began by continuing to deal with the Greens, a bunch of far-Left zealots opposed to economic growth and obsessed by infantile positions on highly marginal and contentiou­s issues.

The irony is when he finally did the right thing and ditched them – to preserve his own personal position – it served only to illustrate his weakness and unfitness for office.

His policies were always botched. But it’s the policies themselves that are destroying Scotland.

They include the abandonmen­t of oil and gas jobs, endangerin­g our energy security, underminin­g a crucial component of Scotland’s economy.

Broken manifesto promises to complete the much-needed dualling of the A9 and A96, which has betrayed local communitie­s and cost lives.

Rent controls which decimated the amount of accommodat­ion available with a huge rise in rents.

Housing emergencie­s in our two largest cities and other council areas.

RURAL Scotland – undermined and forgotten, with the SNP ignoring warnings about land management and wildlife regulation­s. The removal of the First Minister doesn’t end the threat from the SNP, who will still push their independen­ce obsession at the price of the real priorities.

It won’t make Labour and the Liberal Democrats less likely meekly to line up with any replacemen­t administra­tion on a host of deeply damaging policies.

The rest of the SNP must follow Humza Yousaf out the door. And it’s the Scottish Conservati­ves who can deliver that.

 ?? ?? Vote for change: Douglas Ross says the Conservati­ves can push the SNP out
Vote for change: Douglas Ross says the Conservati­ves can push the SNP out

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