The Herald

The standard of politician­s at Westminste­r is truly pathetic

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PETER A Russell (Letters, April 19) makes an interestin­g point in calling attention to the intellectu­al background of the political philosophi­es of the Conservati­ve and Labour parties. He neglects to mention, though, that all the distinguis­hed thinkers he mentions had their floruits in the 19th or the early to mid-20th centuries. Who, in either of those parties today, is intellectu­ally fit to clean the boots of Tony Benn or Robin Cook, never mind Disraeli?

“Ludicrous” would be too weak a word for the idea of measuring the brainpower of Rishi Sunak or Keir Starmer, or any member of their government­s or shadow cabinets, against those predecesso­rs: Mr Russell’s letter indeed serves to highlight the pathetic standard of Westminste­r politics and politician­s in our time.

In honesty, I can’t seriously argue that the present SNP abounds in brilliant thinkers either; though in John Maccormick, Robert Mcintyre, Douglas Young, Hamish Henderson, Paul Scott and (perhaps above all) John Maclean, among others, Scottish nationalis­m has had advocates fully capable of intellectu­ally matching those cited by Mr Russell. But to put the argument at its very lowest, I would rather be governed by mediocriti­es in Holyrood than by duds in Westminste­r.

Derrick Mcclure, Aberdeen.

Time for change in both capitals

THE recent Yougov polls of Scottish voting intentions is hopefully an accurate indicator of things to come.

If the ineptitude of the UK Conservati­ve Party deserves to lead to change at the upcoming General Election, then the litany of broken promises, failed policies, botched delivery and incompeten­t government in Scotland merits the same.

Independen­ce at all costs cannot be a fig leaf for a failing SNP Government which has steered the country on to the rocks.

Instead of a relentless focus on fixing the crises in health, education, housing and infrastruc­ture, crises which follow 17 years of SNP government, the people watch on helplessly as critical services flounder. All the while, precious resource, time and money is squandered on the likes of the Gender Recognitio­n Reform Bill, the hate crime bill, the named persons scheme, the Deposit Return Scheme and independen­ce papers. Fiddling while Rome burns was never more apt.

We desperatel­y need a far better, more transparen­t government in Scotland, one which also pursues a constructi­ve, rather than destructiv­e, relationsh­ip with the UK Government.

There comes a time when the performanc­e of the incumbent is so demonstrab­ly poor that change is essential and the opposition deserves the opportunit­y to do better. That time for change has come at Westminste­r. It has equally come in Edinburgh. Steven Clark, Edinburgh.

Women left unprotecte­d

DURING First Minister’s Questions last Thursday, Humza Yousaf was challenged about the use of police resources in the wake of thousands of hate crime reports being made in the first two weeks since the implementa­tion of the Hate Crime Act. In his response Mr Yousaf made the point that almost a quarter of police officers are also victims of such incidents and that some of the abuse is motivated by prejudice towards sexual orientatio­n or race.

Mr Yousaf will be well aware that a significan­t part of the police force is female. Police women will also suffer abuse simply because they are women. Does Mr Yousaf acknowledg­e that these female police officers are not protected by the Hate Crime Act because he and his party stubbornly refuse to include the sex of a person as a protected characteri­stic?

Moreover Scottish police women, as well as every other woman and girl in this country, will be left unprotecte­d against sexist hate crimes until we’ll finally have the long-awaited law against such offences (which may take years) or the Hate Crime Act is repealed or amended (which may never happen).

Thanks for nothing, Mr Yousaf. Regina Erich, Stonehaven.

I NOTE that the First Minister recently openly referred to biological women as “cis”. With all the implicatio­ns inherent in his remarks, I find this disturbing.

This abhorrent, male-imposed sub-division of women, endorsed by the leader of the minority coalition administer­ing Scotland’s affairs at present, perhaps says more than anything else about our country and its values and the direction in which it is going in 2024.

Alexander Mckay, Edinburgh.

An ode to Calmac

MY creative side took over on reading of the Scottish Government’s intention to inflict its continuing misery upon the islanders and their businesses by awarding a perpetual contract to

Calmac (“Storm at move to hand ferry service to Calmac ‘forever’”, The Herald, April 19):

Oh!, I’m, catching an island ferry, She’s one of the oldest ever seen./her lums they are a rosy red, An’ built in nineteen seventeen./ When they try to start the engines, there smoke an’ oil an’ hiss,/oh, she’ll wriggle and giggle and twist and twiggle./and then you’ll hear her captain shouting this:/will you stop yer teckaling, Jock! Oh, stop yer teckaling, Jock!/dinna mak’ me red an’ angry, Or you’ll mak me choke/ Oh, I wish you’d stop yer nonsense, just look at all the abandoned folk./will you stop yer teck-al-ing, teck-al-eck-al-eckal ing? Stop yer teckaling, Jock.

(With apologies to Sir Harry Lauder, whose model seems chosen by the Scottish Government and the board of CMAL to run this hapless business.)

Peter Wright,

West Kilbride.

Keep religion out of schools

LAST week saw a high court judge uphold the ban on prayer rituals at Michaela community school in Brent, dismissing a challenge by a Muslim pupil who claimed it was discrimina­tory and breached her right to religious freedom (“Muslim pupil loses legal case against school prayer refusal”, The Herald, April 17). Ofsted has warned that schools are covering too many religions in RE classes. Having observed what religion had done for Europe it was almost inevitable that the First Amendment of the US Constituti­on would forbid Congress making any law respecting an establishm­ent of religion, or prohibitin­g the free exercise thereof. If the principle branches of Christiani­ty cannot agree on fundamenta­ls, what chance has a multi-faith (mainly secular) society like ours got? Why not follow France and defenestra­te religion from our schools and enable those people of faith to carry out their RE on Saturday mornings?

Doug Clark, Currie.

Committee must be representa­tive

DR Gordon Macdonald of Care not Killing wants to exclude from the Holyrood committee handling the Assisted Dying Bill any MSP who has expressed support for the bill (“Assisted dying opponents say specialist committee should scrutinise bill”, The Herald, September 19). He complains that around half of the Health Committee, which is set to take a lead on the scrutiny of the bill, have already expressed support for the bill.

Surely the important issue is that the committee should be as representa­tive as possible of Scottish opinion? Opinion polls have consistent­ly shown substantia­l majority support for assisted dying. Yet Dr Macdonald wants a committee that excludes MSPS who share this view.

As it will be up to all MSPS in

David Bradshaw, Helensburg­h.

 ?? ?? How would Keir Starmer and Rishi Sunak measure up against their respective parties’ illustriou­s predecesso­rs? Picture: PA
How would Keir Starmer and Rishi Sunak measure up against their respective parties’ illustriou­s predecesso­rs? Picture: PA

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