The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Let’s look into life after ‘Yes’

- Alex Bell

The SNP is best understood as the IRP – the Independen­ce Referendum Party. It exists to create the ideal circumstan­ces for a vote on Indy. Twelve years of government has revealed a movement dedicated to offending no one while trying to hold a referendum or two.

This is what makes the nationalis­t suggestion of a new party to press for Indyref2 so stupid.

Stuart Campbell of Wings Over Scotland says he may start a rival nationalis­t party to force the matter of a second vote.

This, he says, stems from frustratio­n at Nicola Sturgeon’s tactics.

What limits sturgeon is exactly what stopped Salmond publishing a referendum bill in the 2007-11 administra­tion – a lack of legal authority.

Sturgeon isn’t chicken – she’s simply responding to the law.

Which is not to say the idea of a new party isn’t good, but not another referendum one.

Instead there is a desperate need for a group focused on life after “Yes”.

The case for this new party can be made from an abundance of evidence, but let’s start with news that Scotland’s economy runs a £12 billion deficit.

Yesterday saw the annual ritual of the government expenditur­e and revenue Scotland (GERS) numbers showing that were Scotland to replicate UK spending after Indy, it would be in an economic mess.

Now, nobody thinks Scotland would spend like Westminste­r does, so the whole exercise is a bit silly.

That said, the SNP have never set out how they would spend come independen­ce.

It is left deliberate­ly vague, so as not to challenge “Yes” voters.

But it is a challenge that is urgently needed.

For example, health profession­als say the NHS needs an annual £3bn boost in Scotland.

If an independen­t Scotland increased health spending to that level, it would have a huge impact on the rest of the budget.

We can assume there would be no £3bn boost – but what would health spending actually be post independen­ce?

That is hard to say.

Even if GERS is inaccurate, it implies there would be some reduction.

If the NHS budget stayed at current levels, there would need to be cuts elsewhere – a much smaller defence budget, less on welfare, less on education?

In short, there is an urgent need for model budgets for post-independen­ce scenarios.

Without a rough sense of spending priorities, independen­ce could easily crush the very public services it wants to protect.

Draft budgets would be the first duty of any new political grouping.

The second would be to connect spending realities with policy change.

If there is less money, then Scotland needs to develop ways of doing things better.

What 12 years of SNP government has shown is the party has no policy ideas beyond trying to keep things as they are.

Other than a mania for rearrangin­g the public sector (police, fire, government agencies) the Nats seem to possess no vision for how Scotland might be different before or after Indy.

That would be fine if money were not a problem – but see above.

A new political party would design a Scotland that protected the services people like, such as the NHS and pensions, while remaining affordable.

Which leads on to the other great omission in Scottish politics – a rational discussion on the process of independen­ce itself.

If Brexit has helped, it is to show that winning a referendum is only the start of a very complex and difficult process.

After a “Yes” vote, money will be tight and the public services will have to change, therefore we really need to know what to prioritise when it comes to negotiatin­g our departure from the UK.

Does it make sense to trade off some assets for others in those talks, or to compromise on debt obligation­s in return for a share of foreign territorie­s, for example?

With the SNP as the independen­ce referendum party, these matters are glossed over so as not to scare the swing voters.

Which creates an opportunit­y for a new party to fill the void.

Any new grouping does not need to contest Scottish or UK elections before Indy, so there is no threat or conflict with existing loyalties.

A new party would run for election after independen­ce, when all the old tribalism will be pointless.

It is common to find “No” voters swithering towards “Yes”, but who need reassuranc­e on one matter – the economic effect of becoming self governing

The SNP bluff on this topic, while unionists become hysterical on the dangers.

In truth, neither side is clear on what would happen after a “Yes” vote.

Thus the future is there to be shaped, or at least better understood.

Certainly, Scotland could be a lot better prepared. The old white paper on independen­ce was never anything more than a sales brochure, and the Wings Over Scotland wee blue book only a primer on how to be offensive.

If Scotland is serious about a new nation protecting prized public services while playing a constructi­ve role in the world, it needs a new approach, and now.

After a ‘Yes’ vote, money will be tight and the public services will have to change, therefore we really need to know what to prioritise

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Stuart Campbell of Wings Over Scotland says he may form a nationalis­t party to force the matter of a second independen­ce vote.
Picture: PA. Stuart Campbell of Wings Over Scotland says he may form a nationalis­t party to force the matter of a second independen­ce vote.
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