The Scotsman

After the confusion, a clear choice emerges

Voters will decide on a government, not a single issue, despite promptings on Brexit and independen­ce

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On the eve of the general election, the country finds itself with a choice it had not expected when the campaign kicked off seven weeks ago. From the start, it looked like a breeze for Theresa May, as she went to the polls in search of a mandate to negotiate Brexit on her own terms, unhindered by carping both from the opposition and from within her own party. It would not take much of a rebellion to threaten a 12-seat majority in the Commons.

What no-one anticipate­d was how poor Mrs May’s campaign would be, and today we have the once unimaginab­le prospect of Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn – yes, the unelectabl­e Jeremy Corbyn – having closed the gap by enough to make tomorrow’s ballot a genuine contest. If voters do not want Theresa May to continue as Prime Minister, they have a clear alternativ­e. Meanwhile in Scotland, the defining issue of the campaign has been the desirabili­ty of a second independen­ce referendum, and the resurgence of the Conservati­ve Party has given voters a clear choice between union and independen­ce, should they wish to cast their vote on the constituti­onal question.

The Scotsman has spent the past seven weeks exploring these issues, and we hope that we have brought you a wide range of views and varied analysis of the key issues, from all political perspectiv­es. We strive to go beyond the political rhetoric of the party leaders, and get inside the issues that our readers want to know most about. But having laid out the various cases, and made our observatio­ns on the pros and cons in key areas, we now leave the final decision up to you. We will not tell you how to vote in this election, or in any future independen­ce referendum, because every one of you will make up your own mind on the evidence available. A significan­t number of voters will be loyal to a party, and others will have known which way they will vote since the day the general election was announced. It serves no useful purpose to say that the newspaper takes the opposite view, and by inference, tell those readers that they are wrong.

This was the commitment we made in our own election manifesto on 2 May. For those who may have missed it, the pledge was inspired by the words of the Scotsman prospectus which pledged “impartiali­ty, firmness and independen­ce”. And on its 200th anniversar­y, The Scotsman called on those values to declare: “This title is politicall­y independen­t and we believe that a quality newspaper should strive to present the facts without this being coloured by a political rosette.”

We have virtually stood alone on that front. A number of newspapers – usually titles published in London with Scottish satellite operations – have been unable to conceal their desire for a particular outcome. Comment has been presented as news in pages of thinly-veiled propaganda, with journalist­ic principles cast to the wind.

At The Scotsman, we want simply what is best for Scotland, and that aspiration is not the exclusive preserve of one single political organisati­on. When we have criticised or taken a stance, it is because we believe our position to reflect what is best for the country, not because we wanted to – or were required to – reflect an affiliatio­n.

This election was called because of Brexit, although in Scotland, Mrs May wanted it to be about independen­ce. But instead, it has turned out to be about who we want to govern – appropriat­ely enough – and the result will reflect more the UK’S verdict on Mrs May than its view on any other single issue.

Brexit and independen­ce have become red herrings. Brexit will not be stopped by Friday’s result, and if there is a second independen­ce vote, it will be some years away, as the SNP acknowledg­es. As we go to the polls, each of us should consider who we want to represent us at Westminste­r on all issues, rather than just one. Despite the impression, this vote is not a referendum.

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