The Herald on Sunday

Iain Macwhirter

- Iain Macwhirter

THE Prime Minister is a serial abuser of the democratic process. There really is no justificat­ion for this snap election, in defiance of the Fixed-term Parliament Act. Theresa May said repeatedly that Britain needed “a period of stability” following Brexit, and she was right. Donald Trump has heightened internatio­nal tensions. Voters have no idea what kind of EU relationsh­ip they’re voting for – and neither does the Government.

Last year, she tried to use royal prerogativ­e to push through Article 50, triggering Brexit without MPs being allowed a vote. It was left to the Supreme Court judges to remind her that Britain is supposed to be a parliament­ary democracy. Then Queen May opposed Parliament’s right to have a meaningful say on the final deal with Brussels on the grounds that this might “weaken her hand”. She dismissed the Scottish Parliament vote for a referendum in 2019, saying “now is not the time”, then called her own snap election. This she justified on the dubious grounds that political parties are opposing her in Parliament – which is exactly what they are supposed to do.

Theresa May is behaving like a Home Counties version of Turkey’s president Recep Erdogan. She’s even refused to submit to a televised debate, which is now an essential element of the democratic process. Presumably she senses that all her early promises to govern for “working-class families” and not for “the privileged few” will disintegra­te, if exposed to view. For it is becoming clearer by the day that Brexit was not just about Europe – it was something akin to a right-wing coup.

The most conservati­ve elements of the British establishm­ent saw the narrow and ambiguous 52 per cent Leave vote in June as an opportunit­y finally to push through the kind of reforms many have dreamed of since the days of Margaret Thatcher. Leading Brexit ministers such as Liam Fox have made no secret of their desire for a “small state” solution. The Internatio­nal Trade Secretary, who has close links with right-wing think tanks here and in America, wants to roll back the remnants of the welfare state and turn Britain into a low-tax, low-regulation haven for the most exploitati­ve form of global capitalism. Fox even claimed that David Cameron had collaborat­ed with “a great socialist coup”.

Britain is to be placed on a level playing field, not with socially responsibl­e Europe, but with the low-wage countries like India and China. British capitalism will have to be reconfigur­ed, abolishing regulation­s on the environmen­t and consumer welfare that impede profit. Nor must Parliament be permitted to get in the way of this Global Britain project. Hence the language increasing­ly used by the Brexit press to demonise opposition, such as “crush the saboteurs”. The role of the opposition parties is to act as cheerleade­rs, not critics.

What stands in the way of this Brexit dystopia? A well-meaning but ineffectua­l Labour leader in Jeremy Corbyn. Actually, he made a rather spirited start to his campaign in his Church House speech last week, promising to “break the rules” that the “wealth extractors” impose on left-wing government­s. It was a promising attempt to capture the populist, anti-establishm­ent mood of the times. He handled the questions from a hostile media intelligen­tly and with genuine passion, especially over the “vilificati­on” that radical politician­s have endured since the days of Keir Hardie, Labour’s first MP. Labour’s policies also have the merit of being rather popular. However, we must be realistic about Labour’s chances. Most of the damage to Corbyn has already been done – not least by his own party. There has been no shortage of Labour MPs willing to trash Jeremy Corbyn, on and off the record. Only last year, Labour’s Parliament­ary group of MPs passed a motion of no confidence in their own leader, and most experience­d Labour politician­s refused to serve in his cabinet. It is hardly surprising that Labour is 20 points behind in the polls. Labour’s fratricida­l civil war has made victory in this election an all but impossible task.

THE Tory election guru, Lynton Crosby, is preparing an unpreceden­ted campaign of vilificati­on against Corbyn, presenting him as a friend of terrorists, a closet Remainer and a soft touch for benefits cheats. The Labour leader has already been forced to reject any repeat referendum on Brexit, and any broad progressiv­e alliance with other parties. Mind you, that hasn’t stopped the Tories accusing Corbyn and Nicola Sturgeon of plotting “a coalition of chaos”. No doubt he will be depicted on billboards, like Ed Miliband, in Sturgeon’s top pocket.

For her part, Sturgeon has made clear that this General Election is not about indyref2, the mandate for which was secured in the Scottish Parliament. It is about offering resistance to the right-wing Conservati­ve Party and policies such as the rape clause. This election should be an opportunit­y to remind voters of the £12 billion cut in welfare spending, of which measures like the twochild cap are only a part. Much of the SNP leader’s anti-austerity manifesto from the 2015 General Election still applies – though she might have difficulty calling for a restoratio­n of the 50p tax band, having rejected it in Scotland.

The Scottish Parliament can mitigate some of the worst cuts, like the bedroom tax, but it is powerless to reverse the welfare and economic policies of Westminste­r. This has to be a key message of the SNP campaign. Nicola Sturgeon will also warn that, far from Scotland getting any special post-Brexit arrangemen­t like Northern Ireland or Gibraltar, the Tories are planning to curb the powers and authority of the Scottish Parliament itself. Sturgeon is an impressive performer who, during the 2015 General Election, briefly became the most popular politician in the UK. It is no surprise May is running scared of meeting her in televised debates. But the absence of the Prime Minister from the airwaves is an opportunit­y for the First Minister to lead a progressiv­e front against continuing Tory austerity and hard Brexit.

Of course, Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale will try to make this election about independen­ce, but she will have a hard job. Few voters will be in doubt that this is about challengin­g a right-wing government in Westminste­r, which has all but extinguish­ed the opposition and looks set to govern for the foreseeabl­e future.

The SNP will almost certainly lose seats. The tsunami of 2015 was a unique event and unrepeatab­le. But this election should be about more than one party. All progressiv­e politician­s in Scotland need to ensure the Scottish Conservati­ves, who on paper could return five seats in June, do not regain a foothold in Scottish politics. The greatest service they could perform, not just for Scotland, would be to encourage tactical voting to ensure the Tories are wiped out in Scotland – as they were in 1997.

Theresa May is behaving like a Home Counties version of Turkey’s president Recep Erdogan. She’s even refused to submit to a televised debate

 ?? Photograph: Andrew Yates/Getty Images ?? As PM Theresa May calls a snap election, voters have no idea what kind of EU relationsh­ip they’re voting for – and neither does the Government
Photograph: Andrew Yates/Getty Images As PM Theresa May calls a snap election, voters have no idea what kind of EU relationsh­ip they’re voting for – and neither does the Government
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