The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

SNP must get on with the day job

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We don’t have enough GPs, nurses or support staff to cope with the rapidly increasing age and needs profile of our population. Working out who to hold responsibl­e for that is a separate issue. So we must find ways to make our available resources stretch further

Sir, – The “Come Back Kid”, Eck Salmond is threatenin­g to reappear on the SNP stage; Nicola Sturgeon is indicating another independen­ce referendum is imminent. But who cares?

The majority of Scots voters have become immune to the sting of Scottish nationalis­m. The polls indicate nothing much has changed since the SNP cause was defeated in the referendum four years ago.

Under the present minority SNP administra­tion at Holyrood there are problems in most areas.

The health service is constantly under pressure from the public; performanc­e levels are well below the required standard; Scotland’s economy can only be described as lacklustre, trailing well behind the rest of the UK.

Local authoritie­s struggle to provide adequate public services, mainly due to Holyrood interferen­ce.

Police Scotland, an illconceiv­ed experiment of the SNP administra­tion struggles to provide the service expected by members of the public. It lacks control, judgment, and apparently has difficulty in conforming to budgets.

I could go on but all I will say is that it will be a blessing to Scotland when the SNP cease to have a controllin­g role at Holyrood.

What Scotland needs is to get back to the regional parliament envisaged by the late Donald Dewar and his cohorts, in which Scottish affairs were handled – well – by the Scottish Executive.

Nicola Sturgeon should try to forget about her “nationalis­t dream” and get on with her job to improve Scotland’s administra­tion. If she fails to produce, then she should stand down. The electorate expect results – not political dogma. Robert IG Scott. Northfield, Ceres.

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