The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

The Courier will give you the facts – and let you make up your own mind

- Letter from the editor David Clegg David Clegg is editor of The Courier and can be contacted at editor@thecourier.co.uk or on Twitter @davieclegg

Ten years ago I was appointed political editor of this newspaper and immediatel­y thrust into covering the 2011 Holyrood election campaign. Back then, pollsters were predicting a Scottish Labour victory, Alex Salmond and Nicola Sturgeon were the best of friends and an independen­ce referendum seemed a distant dream.

If a day is a long time in politics, a decade is an eternity. Scotland has changed beyond recognitio­n in that time.

Who could have predicted the drama of the 2014 referendum, the UK’s departure from the European Union or that we would be contesting this election in the spectre of a deadly virus that has killed tens of thousands of our fellow citizens and forced unimaginab­le changes to how we live our daily lives?

The stakes in this election are higher than ever. Our high streets remain largely shuttered. Our health service and its dedicated staff are on the point of exhaustion. Our education system is battling with remote learning. Tens of thousands of people are fearful for their jobs. The scourge of drugs is still causing far too many needless deaths – especially in cities like Dundee. And the devastatin­g mental health impact of the pandemic may not be known for some time.

So we are not just deciding who is first minister for the next five years in this election, but also answering existentia­l questions about the nation’s future.

With that in mind, The Courier has conducted a large-scale study of voters – not just our readers – across Tayside and Fife, with our polling partners Survation, to ask them what is important to them.

The results make stark and sobering reading. People across the region are full of anxiety about what life will be like after the pandemic.

They are worried about young people’s job prospects, the local economy, the impact of poverty and whether health and mental health services will be able to cope with demand.

One respondent, Molly from Perth, summed up the troubled mood when she said: “I think most people feel lost and have no hope for the future.”

And yet there is a risk all these crucial issues will be overshadow­ed in this election. We must do better than a campaign dominated by constituti­onal bickering, the settling of old scores and meaningles­s soundbites.

This election manifesto sets out the issues which you told us were important and explains how The Courier will put

them at the forefront of our thinking as we cover this election.

Our first and most important pledge is we will not tell you how to vote. The Courier will give you the facts – and some trenchant opinion from different sides of the debate – and let you make up your own mind. Trust, transparen­cy and impartiali­ty are of paramount importance to our team.

Secondly, we pledge to repeatedly ask the questions that matter to you. Our team of reporters and editors will relentless­ly remind our candidates of this at every opportunit­y and do all we can to stop it becoming a policy-free election dominated by personalit­ies.

We are investing unpreceden­ted resources into our election coverage to ensure we can ask those questions tirelessly and forensical­ly.

Ten years ago, I was a one-man band on the politics beat for The Courier and solely focused on what appeared in a few pages of the print product. Today we have the largest political staff of any Scottish newspaper with eight dedicated reporters and a group head of politics working

alongside data visualisat­ion and social media teams, as well as videograph­ers and photograph­ers.

This has allowed us to bolster our coverage online and in paper with a new offering called Election Hub Live – a daily political show broadcast live on our website from our Dundee headquarte­rs. There will also be a dedicated election page at thecourier.co.uk and our popular Stooshie podcast will be running more frequently as we get closer to polling day.

Our new comment editor, Morag Lindsay, will also augment our existing columnists by finding fresh perspectiv­es to challenge our readers and provoke debate.

I strongly believe engaging with alternativ­e views is a vital part of coming to a more rounded picture of the world we live in. In the time of social media bubbles and intense tribalism, it is more important than ever that outlets like The Courier provide a range of stimulatin­g voices.

Finally, a word on adverts. The Courier will accept political advertisin­g provided it is clearly marked as such and creates no confusion in the minds of readers with

regular editorial copy. Acceptance of these ads does not indicate any support for a party or cause and we will not carry these ads on the front page.

This is arguably the most important election campaign in the history of devolution. The Courier will be here to inform, explain and entertain our readers, listeners and viewers every step of the way.

We look forward to you joining us on the journey.

We will repeatedly ask the questions that matter to you

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 ??  ?? FUTURE: People across the region are full of anxiety about what life will be like after the pandemic. Picture by Steve MacDougall.
FUTURE: People across the region are full of anxiety about what life will be like after the pandemic. Picture by Steve MacDougall.

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