The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Kezia Dugdale sees a nation suffering from Covid fatigue – but believes there is cause for optimism in the future

- Kezia Dugdale

The standoff between the mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham and Prime Minister Boris Johnson tells us so much about the state the country is in. Above all the political insights and intrigue though, lies a basic truth – we’re tired. So very, very tired of this awful virus which is taking so many lives and livelihood­s with no end in sight.

With that fatigue comes irritabili­ty and a loss of concentrat­ion, just at the point where we’re asked to dig deep and accept greater restrictio­ns on our liberties to protect our collective health. All set against a backdrop of colder, darker nights and little prospect of anything like a normal Christmas ahead.

Burnham wants a financial support package for Manchester, knowing that if his region is put into Tier 3 measures, as close to a full lockdown as we’ve known since March, it will have huge negative consequenc­es for jobs and employment in his area. With furlough ending soon and the retail and hospitalit­y sector already on its knees, the mayor is standing his ground and refusing to back new restrictio­ns should they be forced upon him from a national level.

The dispute between Burnham and Johnson speaks to a dividing line. Several, in fact, all over the country. In the absence of one set of rules for everyone, there are fissures appearing everywhere you look. With Nicola Sturgeon on the cusp of introducin­g a tier system in Scotland, she’ll know from the English experience that far from liberating areas with low infection levels, the tier system in England has thus far only bred resistance and resentment.

So strange are our times that this lefty mayor and former health secretary in Gordon Brown’s government is being characteri­sed as a crusading capitalist determined to put the economy ahead of the health of his constituen­ts. While our populist right-wing prime minister is presented as a Florence Nightingal­e figure prepared to put the health of Mancunians ahead of any other considerat­ion.

Of course, neither neat summary is true but that’s because our political discourse is so toxic and intolerant these days, people are filed into columns of hero and villain.

What I see are two elected politician­s with the same access to the facts applying their own judgment, sometimes in the face of their own ideology. It’s what we elected them to do – so why do we hold them in such low regard?

You don’t have to like or vote for Nicola Sturgeon in order to see the weight of responsibi­lity she carries. Our leaders barely get our grudging respect at a time

when the degree to which we trust them matters like never before.

Trust in the government, whether that’s Scottish or UK, and politician­s more generally is falling. It took a steep tumble from 2008 in the wake of the last economic crash, a further dip after the EU referendum and it’s sliding again.

This matters because the evidence is stark. The less trust we place in those that lead us, the less willing we are to obey the rules they set or expect others to do the same. Those falling levels of trust, combined with the fatigue we all feel and a general sense that it’s all so complicate­d, is a recipe for both disaster and despair. Merry Christmas.

That said, and in the search for optimism, there is an argument for a healthy bit of distrust in those who exert power over us. We should be probing and sceptical of laws that restrict our freedom, because without

that we’d live in an authoritar­ian dictatorle­d state.

Yet the problem with the evidence around the trust we place in those that lead us is that it’s so unequal and it’s not just the geography of our landscape determinin­g it.

Recent findings from the John Smith Centre’s research show seismic gaps in the levels of trust the young place in their leaders versus the old, between the poor and the better off. If the young and the poor are already so distrustfu­l, where will they be after a long and deep economic recession which history tells us hits those with the least the hardest?

It took the pages of this paper to fill me with a little hope in recent weeks.

The focus on Generation Next – those 35 young and ambitious Scots already investing in the social fabric of Scotland, and contemplat­ing standing for elected

office, is a real tonic for the times we live in. We need to hitch our wagons to their optimism and belief that there are better days ahead. That politics and political participat­ion is a force for good. That debate and discussion need not divide us if we set out to disagree well.

If we no longer trust those that lead us now, perhaps the best thing we can do is place our faith in Generation Next.

We need to hitch our wagons to their optimism and belief

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 ??  ?? PROTEST: Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham is refusing to back Tier 3 restrictio­ns should they be forced upon his region.
PROTEST: Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham is refusing to back Tier 3 restrictio­ns should they be forced upon his region.

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