The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

2023 referendum proves Sturgeon is tone deaf to Scots on independen­ce

- Jenny Hjul

ISturgeon also milked the Covid crisis to gain political advantage

n her conference speech two years ago, Nicola Sturgeon said a second independen­ce referendum “must happen next year”. That was 2020 and, as it turned out, it was not the best time to stage a political campaign.

In last year’s speech, some eight months into the pandemic, she pledged to hold a referendum in the early part of a new parliament if the SNP won the May 2021 election.

Now, with her Green coalition giving her a pro-independen­ce majority at Holyrood, she has told the party faithful she is seeking a new vote before the end of 2023.

The SNP has an “unarguable mandate”, she said, and the time is now approachin­g.

Separatist zealots can be excused at this point for feeling exasperate­d with the Scottish Nationalis­t leadership.

How many mandates have come and gone since the SNP won power 14 years ago without the prospect of breaking up Britain drawing any closer?

The lack of progress in achieving its only goal has created deep divisions within the secessioni­st movement and within the party itself.

Of course, there are other factors that have driven a wedge between the different factions, the most obvious being the falling out of the two leaders, past and present.

But this enmity provides a convenient platform for dissent, so that disillusio­ned nationalis­ts, once bound by internal party discipline, can now openly attack the first minister for dragging her heels.

They have taken to this with relish in the breakaway Alba Party, with leader Alex Salmond telling his conference that Sturgeon’s attempts at a rerun of 2014 were like Groundhog Day.

Sturgeon also has outspoken critics in the SNP, most notably the MP Joanna Cherry, who has called for Scotland to pursue the Irish route to independen­ce if Westminste­r continues to withhold its permission for a referendum.

And the SNP MP Angus MacNeil reportedly tried, but failed, to bring a motion to conference arguing for the 2026 Scottish election to serve as a de facto referendum should the SNP win again.

Sturgeon has presided over her party during circumstan­ces that favoured the independen­ce agenda.

First there was Brexit, opposed by a majority of Scots, giving the SNP grounds to claim another mandate.

And then there was Boris Johnson, disliked in Scotland regardless of the independen­ce question and therefore another gift to the SNP.

Sturgeon also milked the Covid crisis to gain political advantage, appearing on our television screens almost daily in her mother of the nation broadcasts.

But recent polls show Scottish attitudes to independen­ce have remained entrenched, with more than half the electorate still to be convinced of its merits.

Political scientist John Curtice has suggested a referendum now would be risky for Sturgeon.

She has said before that there would not be a new ballot unless there was “strong evidence” that a clear majority of Scots support breaking away from the union.

Why does she not just accept that she is nowhere near this target?

There are plenty of other burning issues for the Scottish Government to attend to, not least the painful economic recovery from Covid, that would justify her delaying further referendum talk.

But as her tenure goes on, she is sounding almost as desperate as the fundamenta­lists in her party, clinging on to the independen­ce dream that she must now realise is unattainab­le under her command.

The fact that she has devised no strategy for separation and has not brought forward legislatio­n for a referendum in her programme for government suggests she knows she will not see it through.

Instead of detailed planning, she builds mirages. An independen­t Scotland could be like Denmark, she said.

But Denmark is not the drugs capital of Europe and does not have a national deficit, even before Covid, of £36 billion, the highest in Europe.

Nor does it have a reputation for incompeten­ce.

As one of her own economic advisers, Mark Blyth, said: “Denmark took 600 years to become Denmark.”

The nationalis­ts under Sturgeon have had seven years with control over domestic policy, and higher per capita spending than the rest of the UK, to tackle crises in health, education, transport, law and order, and the economy.

But she has become tone deaf to the demands of the people of her country, with her focus on constituti­onal upheaval.

A weekend Panelbase poll revealed only 17% backed a new independen­ce vote in the next 12 months.

She is out of touch with voters on every issue, from gender recognitio­n reform, to reducing car use, to replacing North Sea oil jobs, and expanding wind farms.

Sturgeon rages at Westminste­r for holding back Scotland’s “destiny”. Democracy will prevail, she said.

But the democratic will of her country, as clearly stated in 2014 and in nearly every poll since, is to remain part of the UK.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? OUT OF TOUCH?: Nicola Sturgeon says the SNP has an “unarguable mandate” for a new independen­ce referendum.
OUT OF TOUCH?: Nicola Sturgeon says the SNP has an “unarguable mandate” for a new independen­ce referendum.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom