The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Sturgeon may regret where her deal with Greens takes the SNP

- Jenny Hjul

The first fall-out from the Scottish Government’s deal with the Greens came two days after the proindepen­dence pact was unveiled. Aberdeensh­ire councillor Geva Blackett announced on Monday she was resigning from the SNP over the co-operation agreement, which will, she believes, threaten rural jobs and devastate the communitie­s she represents.

“Government policy is being made with little or no understand­ing of the challenges remote rural communitie­s face,” she said.

It is not surprising that internal opposition to the alliance emanated initially from the north-east, which is likely to be hit hardest if the Greens are successful in pushing through their anti-growth agenda.

Some 100,000 jobs in the oil and gas industry are top of the list of Green targets in a strategy that has somehow earned them a place in the corridors of power.

They are there, of course, to deliver the numbers the SNP failed to win in May’s election and provide a mandate, or so Nicola Sturgeon claims, for a second independen­ce referendum.

But it is a sign of how out of touch the first minister has become, after too long in office with too few sound advisers, that she thinks her “coalition of chaos” can hoodwink voters.

The SNP’s reneging on promises – not just those made in their May manifesto but going back years – has already sparked tensions within her own ranks, with a row brewing over road upgrades.

Green co-leader Patrick Harvie said the deal with the SNP would see an end to new major road projects, with investment instead on “safe routes to ensure everyone is able to walk, wheel and cycle safely in cities, towns and villages across Scotland”.

“The Scottish Greens would take the lead on transformi­ng Scotland’s transport network,” he said.

His triumphali­sm was short lived, however, after the SNP’s Westminste­r leader, Ian Blackford, suggested on Monday that plans to fully dual the A96, which runs between Inverness and Aberdeen, would still go ahead.

The MP for Ross, Skye and Lochaber said safety would be key to the A96 and A9 dualling.

But within hours of his comments, the Greens were again defending their deal, insisting any A96 improvemen­ts would be “subject to a review of the impact this project would have on the climate”.

Harvie even lamented the good old days of the lockdown when more people took to their bikes on car-free roads.

Blackford’s constituen­ts tend to inhabit remote parts of Scotland where walking or wheeling to work is out of the question.

None of the seven Scottish Green MSPs have to worry about constituen­ts’ best interests because they were all elected on the regional list system, squeezing in on second preference votes.

But now that they are in a position to influence government decisions, their ignorance of how ordinary people live could be regarded more like contempt.

Lorna Slater, the other Green co-leader, admitted during the election that she didn’t know where Scotland’s salmon farms were based.

As this is one of the sectors her party wants to eliminate, largely because of where it is located, her lack of insight is an insult to the people whose livelihood­s it supports.

If the Greens – two of whom are about to be made ministers under the terms of the coalition – think they can get away with patronisin­g the electorate, the SNP cannot.

Sturgeon may be confident her party will embrace her new Green ideals but such ‘madcap’ policies will end up backfiring, warned former nationalis­t health minister, Alex Neil.

Neil, who stood down as an MSP in May, said policies that voters think are ‘damaging to their interest’ would result in both the SNP and the independen­ce movement losing ground.

There must be many Scots, whatever their opinion on constituti­onal change, who agree that the SNP’s sell-out to the Greens on Scotland’s energy and transport is a betrayal.

How sympatheti­c will they be, too, to the new political partners’ commitment to introduce a gender reform bill in the first year of this parliament­ary session?

This radical legislatio­n, which would make it easier for people to self-identify as another gender, has divided the SNP, with leading female politician­s arguing that it threatens women’s rights.

As Scotland tries to recover from the consequenc­es of the pandemic, a focus on pet Green projects at the expense of bread and butter industry and infrastruc­ture will soon wear thin.

The SNP’s reneging on promises – not just those made in May

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 ??  ?? DIVIDING OPINIONS: Patrick Harvie, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and Lorna Slater at Bute House in Edinburgh.
DIVIDING OPINIONS: Patrick Harvie, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and Lorna Slater at Bute House in Edinburgh.

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