The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Why it suits the SNP to blame Johnson for pain of Scotland’s cost-of-living crisis

- Alex Bell COLUMNIST OF THE YEAR

Remember all the hopey hopey stuff prompted by the pandemic? After lockdown we would rise again better. “When things come apart – when the kaleidosco­pe of our lives is shaken – there is an opportunit­y to see them put back together differentl­y,” said an unusually poetic Nicola Sturgeon in April 2020.

“And we can start to think together, and work together, to decide the kind of Scotland we want to emerge from this crisis”.

It makes you weep that such dreams are expressed by a government that has done so little to act upon them, but such is the melancholy at the heart of Scottish politics.

The SNP’S shadow treasury spokespers­on Alyson Thewlis said this week: “Ordinary families are bearing the brunt of a cost-ofliving crisis.”

Since the Resolution Foundation published a report saying the average family might see a £1,200 rise in the cost of electricit­y, food prices and tax this year, the price of living in post-brexit, post-covid Britain has become a hot topic.

The increase in National Insurance to pay for NHS improvemen­ts and a nascent National Care Service affects all taxpayers equally.

The same applies to increasing electricit­y bills – when the standard rate increases it affects rich and poor alike.

Petrol prices do not discrimina­te between the battered family car and the Ferrari, while the price of food goes up across the board, regardless of how wealthy the shopper.

However, better-off families have saved up billions during the crisis.

The crisis is not universal.

While the middle class have been saving, the poor have been losing.

Lower income households have used up savings to survive.

Thus, what looks like a circumstan­tial problem is the latest example an age-old one. The wealth gap.

However, the SNP have dropped ideas about correcting structural injustice, as alluded to by Sturgeon at the beginning of lockdown, and have decided the problem lies elsewhere.

Unsurprisi­ngly, it’s the prime minister’s fault.

Thewlis describes it as an issue “which Boris Johnson’s government is doing nothing about”, while her colleague, shadow Finance Secretary Richard Thomson MP, rails against the “Tory-made cost-of-living crisis”.

The problem with the SNP’S latest campaign is that it doesn’t fit into the

“Scotland good – Westminste­r bad” trope.

Johnson championed the increase in National Insurance for a national care service.

Policy wonks have called for stateprovi­ded care for decades. So have the SNP.

In August last year Nicola Sturgeon’s government issued a consultati­on for a national care service.

To date, she has not said how it will be paid for. Blaming Boris for getting the same policy started seems a bit rich.

The rise in electricit­y cost has many factors, but a significan­t one is the switch from coal and nuclear to renewables.

Again, the impact is felt more by some than others, but a first minister who attended COP26 in her home town can’t object.

The 2019 SNP manifesto says “we are committed to…opposing new nuclear power plants and prioritisi­ng investment

on cleaner, cheaper forms of electricit­y generation.”

The consequenc­e of that policy is higher bills. Hypocrisy of a high order is at play here. Worse, the SNP might be responsibl­e for the biggest cause in Scottish households feeling the pinch.

Once elected on the promise of freezing the tax, the SNP’S last Scottish Budget went to the other extreme by removing any limit on increases.

The Resolution Foundation’s report on the cost-of-living crisis was Uk-wide and did not include the exceptiona­l burden on Scottish families from the radical reversal on council tax levels.

Boris can’t be blamed for those, as extra money has come to Scotland under Covid provisions while the Scottish Government has cut its grant to local councils.

Back when Sturgeon was doing the vision thing, she said “we can go further at

rebuilding and look seriously at social and economic reform”.

To date, the Scottish Government has given us only words.

The challenge for all western democracie­s is how to transition to higher levels of care provision, and higher care for the planet.

In a grown-up debate about a real problem, the SNP sound confused and petty.

A first minister who attended COP26 in her home town can’t object

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 ?? ?? MONEY TROUBLES: First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has turned fire on Prime Minister Boris Johnson as household bills have shot up.
MONEY TROUBLES: First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has turned fire on Prime Minister Boris Johnson as household bills have shot up.
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