The Scotsman

Who’s obsessed?

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Be in no doubt, Theresa May’s unveiling of the new design of the post-brexit passport is symbolic. It’s a message that, like or loathe it, Brexit is coming (your report, 23 December). Of course, what that Brexit will look like is less than clear.

What’s interestin­g, however, is how Nicola Sturgeon has reacted to Theresa May’s descriptio­n of the passport as being an “expression of our independen­ce and sovereignt­y – symbolisin­g our citizenshi­p of a proud, great nation”.

The fact that Ms Sturgeon uses the same kind of rhetoric to describe the smallest SNP policy announceme­nt obviously rankled her a little, so Scotland’s top nationalis­t responded on Twitter by saying her kind of nationalis­m was better than Mrs May’s: “The open, inclusive, civic, internatio­nalist Scottish independen­ce movement that I’m so proud to be part of could not be further removed from this insular, inward-looking, blue passport-obsessed nonsense”.

There is, of course, a number of problems with this. Not least the fact that for many years nationalis­ts have been using mock Scottish passports, which just happen to be blue, as props at political events because symbolism is always more important than action where the SNP is concerned. That’s why we no longer have “bus passes” for older people in Scotland, we have the “Saltire Card” – what vacuous nonsense.

Ms Sturgeon may not feel that Nationalis­ts are inward looking, but it’s her supporters who trawl supermarke­ts looking for Union Jacks on food produce, boycott “disloyal” Scottish businesses and troll strangers on social media. Indeed, there is nothing more inward looking than taking a hammer to a box of teacakes because they are deemed not to be Scottish enough.

I also question Nicola Sturgeon’s inferred position at the head of the independen­ce movement. Many in that movement are now openly questionin­g her leadership and, more recently, cutting of council services to fund tax cuts to people earning £50,000.

Indeed, rather than posturing on Twitter, perhaps Ms Sturgeon should get on with her day job and start supporting the large section of Scottish society who don’t own a passport because travel overseas is simply unaffordab­le.

(CLLR) SCOTT ARTHUR Labour – Colinton/fairmilehe­ad

City Chambers High Street, Edinburgh

The SNP obviously do not do or understand irony. The First Minister speaks of the decision to revert to blue passports as “Insular, inward looking and nonsense” while her government happily spends many thousands of pounds on their pet vanity project of dual language English / Gaelic signage, foisting it on areas that were never Gaelic speaking in the first place.

I was rather sorry to lose my blue passport.

BILL ELLIOT Newbattle Abbey Crescent, Dalkeith

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