The Scotsman

Brian Wilson: How the SNP is now turning truth on its head

- Brian Wilson

Ihave spent the past few days in foreign climes doing my ambassador­ial best to promote excellent Scottish products that create jobs and prosperity at home. A long- distance perspectiv­e on domestic politics does not improve the view.

The outside observer might conclude that nothing matters in Scotland but the constituti­on – a constant argument about “powers” which bores on even while the devolved government is having great difficulty utilising the queue of new powers which already exists.

Those countries I visited are challengin­g for exporters – customs delays, bureaucrac­y, tariffs, all that pesky stuff which has to be overcome by diligent people. Ideally, the whole world would be a single market but meantime it seems sensible to hang onto the ones we’ve got, the UK and EU.

Then, lo and behold, I find the Sage of Glendaruel, Michael Russell, declaring that “there is no such thing as a single market in the UK”. There is, he conceded, an “integrated market” while failing to elabo - rate upon the distinctio­n.

What is he talking about? A single market is one in which goods and services move freely, without restrictio­ns or tariffs. On what conceivabl­e grounds does the UK not meet that test – as well as being overwhelmi­ngly the biggest market for what Scotland produces?

Yet we cannot laugh off Mr Russell’s protestati­ons for they tell us a lot about what is going on. Truth has to be stood on its head in order to serve a single, overriding imperative. To justify breaking up the UK and its single, unfettered market, it is first necessary ( however brazenly) to deny one exists.

This also addresses ( however absurdly) the contradict­ion at the heart of SNP posturing. While prepared to die in the last rhetorical ditch to defend the EU single market, they toil night and day to extract us from one that is of far greater significan­ce to Scottish families, jobs and prosperity.

My preferred logic is to stay in both. Anti- EU Nationalis­ts like Jim Sillars are unconcerne­d about staying in either, which also has its own intellectu­al consistenc­y. The only position devoid of that quality is to wave flags for the EU single market while striving to break up the UK. That is not a policy but a prejudice, as its less discreet standard- bearers would cheerfully confirm.

The context of Mr Russell’s remarks was the supposed “constituti­onal crisis” he has been trying to crank up for the past year. In reality this is no more than a political prob - lem and an inevitable by- product of Brexit which ( as in Wales) is perfectly capable of resolution – though not by those whose vested interest is in prolonging and inflating it.

We are invited to believe the crucial issue is whether some powers go direct to Holyrood or via a transition period while the complexiti­es evolve. That is not a power grab but common sense. When one looks at the current inability of the Scottish Government to pay EU grants to farmers and crofters on time, it is difficult to sell the case that “powers” per se matter more than the ability to apply them.

I read the transcript of the Holyrood debate and its striking feature was the absence of reallife examples of why all this matters. One might have expected Mr Russell’s speech to bristle with illustrati­ons, genuine or contrived, of how it impacts upon communitie­s, businesses, jobs. There was not a single one. It is all about manufactur­ing a high principle in order to keep the words “power grab” in the headlines. Labour, as guardians of the devolution settlement, do not wish to be outflanked but at least are looking for a solution. In an auction of grievance- driven indignatio­n, there is only one winner and it isn’t Scottish Labour.

When the 1998 devolution settlement was agreed, the EU was ignored and the divvy- up took place between Westminste­r and Edinburgh. If we had been leaving the EU at that time, exactly the same issues would have arisen and been dealt with in a grown- up manner. But we weren’t, so the questions did not arise. Repatriati­on of powers from Brussels will lead to Holyrood having greater responsibi­lities.

Equally, it is clear to any reasonable person that there are policy are - as where every part of the UK has a legitimate interest in how these are balanced and co- ordinated. Wales, which served as a fig- leaf for a while, has accepted a sensible accommodat­ion. Why not Scotland?

Try standing back for a slightly broader perspectiv­e in order to consider the farrago of dishonesty revealed in the Court of Session case about fracking. I am neither pro nor anti- fracking because I am unqualifie­d to have an absolutist view. That is why we have a planning process to determine the merits of each developmen­t proposal. Undermin- ing that process with a “ban” always seemed disrespect­ful and cavalier.

Jim Ratcliffe of Ineos should enjoy the nation’s gratitude for going where others fear to tread. He challenged the “ban” on grounds that Scottish ministers acted unlawfully. For once, the Nationalis­ts were called to account.

So what was their case for the defence? James Mure QC informed the court: “The concept of an effective ban is a gloss. It is the language of a press statement.” So the categoric assertions from Ms Sturgeon downwards were meaningles­s. This was the case for the defence and it took shamelessn­ess to a new level.

Mr Mure’s words should now hang over everything the Scottish Government touches. Nothing is as it seems. Until proven otherwise, it is all “a gloss” and “the language of a press statement”.

Where better to apply that brave new mantra than to the utterly bogus “constituti­onal crisis”?

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 ?? PICTURE: MICHAEL GILLEN ?? 0 Ineos chairman Jim Ratcliffe, centre, deserves praise for his stand, says Brian Wilson
PICTURE: MICHAEL GILLEN 0 Ineos chairman Jim Ratcliffe, centre, deserves praise for his stand, says Brian Wilson
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