The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

‘Respect must be reciprocal’

- Murray Chalmers ● Regular columnist Jenny Hjul is currently away.

Iwonder if Nicola Sturgeon has time to reflect on the seemingly Sisyphean nature of life right now as she continues to lead our country through 2020 with clarity, decisivene­ss, intellect and common sense.

You will recall that Sisyphus had to repeat the same task of rolling a huge boulder up a hill, only to see it roll down again, a feeling many of us would empathise with as we struggle through this hellish year.

Now imagine having to do this while dealing with those self-serving idiots in Westminste­r, whose approach to the pandemic has been so damaging the UK Government has just “paused” publishing daily death figures, claiming with their customary world-beating chutzpah that the figures are overexagge­rated due to statistica­l flaws. How convenient for them! But this admission that they still can’t even give the dead the dignity of being properly accounted for says more than any words ever could.

Despite all this, only an occasional impatience with the sillier questions at her daily briefing has given any indication of the first minister’s frustratio­n that – unlike Boris Johnson – the more accountabl­e she has been, the more contradict­ory, inconsiste­nt and party-politicise­d have been the responses to her transparen­cy.

Fresh from a Panelbase poll that showed her approval rating at a massive 60 points (Boris Johnson scored a rather embarrassi­ng MINUS 39), you might expect the first minister to feel that she was getting something right. She is.

After 13 years in power, support for the SNP is at a record high, a figure demonstrat­ed most recently with the news that 54% of Scots want independen­ce – a five point rise since March. A recent UK-wide Flavible poll has also predicted the SNP will achieve 6% of the UK vote share which, given that Scotland makes up just 8.4% of the UK population, is cause for further optimism within the party.

A toothless opposition has seen that, despite Keir Starmer and Richard Leonard avowedly opposing independen­ce, 37% of Scottish Labour voters now back it, a rise of 2% in a month. Meanwhile Jackson “fear of relegation” Carlaw has himself presented such a laughingly hypocritic­al presence that he joined his billionair­e boys club paymasters in Westminste­r in calling for Scotland’s chief medical officer Catherine Calderwood to resign immediatel­y (she did) after two trips to a second home during hard lockdown, while continuing to back Dominic Cummings after he, Boris Johnson’s most senior adviser, drove his family on a 260-mile trip during hard lockdown (and didn’t resign).

With each hammy tweet and interventi­on Carlaw advances the cause of independen­ce with a consummate skill he would do well to develop, albeit in another trade.

Close to home, in Dundee itself twothirds of people support independen­ce, the highest percentage for any city in Scotland. All these statistics give credibilit­y to prediction­s that the consistent rise of the SNP will deliver them a landslide victory in the elections next year.

However, these indisputab­le gains for the party do not come without questions and debate. No one should pretend that storm clouds aren’t on the horizon, with some of the ructions from within the party itself. The naysayers will have a field day but I hope Nicola Sturgeon can see them off because the SNP are within a sprint of victory and it would be catastroph­ic if that were to be derailed by in-fighting and rancour.

For me then the real opposition at Westminste­r is the SNP, led by Ian Blackford, who continues to be a thorn in the side of the Tories, displaying a captivatin­g mix of mischievou­sness, disbelief and anger, often in the face of breathtaki­ng arrogance from the government. Prime Minister’s Questions is a farce; the Joker sits, surrounded by his Riddler, Penguin, Two Face and Poison Ivy, all playing to their gallery, batting away any attempt at debate with a smirk and a boorish disdain for the truth that only a majority of 80 can embolden. How hard it must be for these toffs to realise that some of their new Brexit constituen­cy are the same thugs who attack the police and urinate on statues.

Keir Starmer, meantime, can’t fail to look dynamic when compared to his predecesso­r – but then so would a burst balloon. His much-lauded coruscatin­g skirmishes with Johnson remind me of a geography teacher displaying slight irritation that you don’t know where

Madagascar is. Watching him face Johnson is like watching an old married couple trading accusation­s – ‘you said! No, YOU said!’, displaying an ennui that makes the whole process seem as futile as the House of Lords. Where is the anger? Where is the attack? Starmer looks increasing­ly like the rookie young boxer who shot his bolt in round one and now finds himself pinned against the ropes by the real pro, who ultimately knows how to bend the rules better than everyone.

Meanwhile a politician like the SNP’s Alyn Smith can stand, as he did recently, and present a masterful, dignified case for a reboot of the whole sorry mess, with a clear, unemotiona­l yet challengin­g message to this ailing, flounderin­g disaster of a Westminste­r Government – “respect must be reciprocal if it’s to exist at all”.

Smith knows the establishm­ent are worried. They should be.

How hard it must be for these toffs to realise that some of their new Brexit constituen­cy are the same thugs who attack the police and urinate on statues

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? A member from All Under One Banner takes part in a demonstrat­ion for Scottish independen­ce outside Holyrood.
Picture: PA. A member from All Under One Banner takes part in a demonstrat­ion for Scottish independen­ce outside Holyrood.
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