The Scotsman

Mason’s knack for squabbles obscures real debate

Views of the SNP’S John Mason attract controvers­y but they bring heat where there should be light, writes Tom Peterkin

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The SNP’S John Mason has yet again demonstrat­ed that he has a gift – if that’s the right word – for rubbing people up the wrong way.

As reported in these pages yesterday, the SNP MSP for Glasgow Shettlesto­n has clashed with the British Transport Police Federation (BTPF) over one of the Scottish Government’s key policies.

Mr Mason irritated the BTPF chairman Nigel Goodband by suggesting the federation was more interested in empire building than public safety when it came to its opposition to the government’s plans to merge the British Transport Police (BTP) with Police Scotland.

The spat had its origins in a letter written by Mr Goodband and sent to all MSPS in which the BTPF chairman argued that the merger plans would have a negative impact on public safety.

Mr Mason responded by writing an email which displayed his flair for putting his size 12s in it – a talent which makes for entertaini­ng newspaper copy but must be becoming a little tiring as far as his SNP bosses are concerned.

Questionin­g the BTPF’S motive for opposing the merger, Mr Mason wrote to Mr Goodband saying: “You claim public safety is your main concern. I am not convinced. I think there is a desire on the part of a BTP and the BTPF to have its own little empire.”

Unsurprisi­ngly, Mr Mason’s observatio­n drew a rather frosty response from Mr Goodband. As the chairman of the organisati­on representi­ng 2,500 officers policing the UK’S railways, Mr Goodband was unhappy at the suggestion that safety was not at the heart of everything his organisati­on does.

“To question our motives is simply distastefu­l,” the BTPF chairman wrote to Mr Mason. “Earlier this month as highlight in my correspond­ence to Ministers, it was our brave colleagues in BTP who were first responders to the destructiv­e attacks in Manchester, many saving lives. It was a BTP officer who bravely took on three terrorists in horrific attacks at London Bridge.”

That Mr Mason should find himself at the centre of controvers­y has become par for the course for the stormy petrel of SNP politics.

This, after all, is a man who forced an apology out of Nicola Sturgeon after he suggested the IRA could be considered freedom fighters when the deaths of three Scottish soldiers at the hands of the terrorists were being discussed on Twitter.

This latest spat involving Mr Mason should not overshadow the substantiv­e issue – the merits or otherwise of the Scottish Government’s plans to merge BTP Scotland with Police Scotland.

As a doughty – if clumsy – defender of the government’s position, Mr Mason believes a merger is “common sense” with the public expecting a “joined up” police force.

Others, however, may see the irony in an SNP politician accusing the BTP and BTPF of empire building in light of this merger proposal.

There has also been the Scottish Government’s centralisi­ng police reforms that led to the creation of Police Scotland. That particular piece of empire building has been far from an unalloyed success, with the single force coming under fire for a host of controvers­ies.

These have included the deployment of armed officers, concerns about a lack of public accountabi­lity, and the control room blunders that led to a car containing a dead couple lying undetected by the M9.

With the Scottish Government

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