The Scotsman

I was wrong about gerrymande­ring before – but not this time

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Afew years ago when still in ministeria­l office, I foolishly sent a tweet comparing action by Tory councils against poll tax non-payers with voter gerrymande­ring in the US southern states. Whilst there was some legitimacy in my comments it was hyperbole and inappropri­ate for a minister.

I didn’t need the condemnati­on from conservati­ve columnists or political opponents as the First Minister had rightly upbraided me. Of course, many of those most trenchant in their denials and condemnati­on of my comparison then are now wringing their hands as Brexit Britain slides into nastiness and even overt abuse of the democratic process.

The poll tax was driven by rightwing ideology about only paying for what you use and forcing a privatisat­ion of the collective.

It would though have had an effect on voter registrati­on, which no doubt, whilst not the real reason, was far from unwelcome for those making the change.

Now more overt steps are being taken to interfere with the need, not just the desire, for citizens to participat­e.

Identifica­tion and other rules

have been brought in that impede and seem malign. But the exclusion of EU citizens from their democratic right in the EU elections wasn’t down to oversight or just unforeseen consequenc­es. Those in charge knew what the outcome would be. It most certainly was down to a desire to restrict the franchise.

That’s what’s happened for generation­s in Alabama and Georgia. It’s reprehensi­ble but it’s now hap - pening here as a right-wing American model is followed.

 ??  ?? 0 It was scandalous that some EU citizens were prevented from voting in the European Parliament elections
0 It was scandalous that some EU citizens were prevented from voting in the European Parliament elections

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