The Scotsman

SNP calls for cross-party summit

- Christine Jardine

The SNP’S Westminste­r leader has urged his counterpar­ts in the opposition parties to join him in a crossparty summit to stop a nodeal Brexit.

In his letter to the Westminste­r party leaders, Ian Blackford said: “Time is short and we must act to prevent the Prime Minister destroying the futures of citizens up and down the country.”

He wrote to Labour’s Jeremy Corbyn, Plaid Cymru’s Liz Saville Roberts, the Liberal Democrats’ Jo Swinson, Caroline Lucas from the Greens and Anna Soubry from the Independen­t Group for Change, calling on them to “coalesce against a nodeal Brexit” and the “unmitigate­d damage” it will cause.

He warned the risk of leaving the EU without a deal has increased after new Prime Minister Boris Johnson refused to rule it out.

Mr Blackford’s call follows Chancellor Sajid Javid’s announceme­nt of an extra £2.1bn for no-deal planning.

He said: “The past three years of Tory Brexit chaos has pushed Scotland and the UK to the brink, and with Boris Johnson ramping up the rhetoric of a no-deal exit there is a very real risk of being pushed over the cliff edge.

“We know that any Brexit particular­ly a no-deal Brexit - will cause unmitigate­d damage to our economy and people’s living standards.

“Time and time again economic analysis has shown that Brexit will be devastatin­g for businesses and public services. The evidence has shown the economic madness of Brexit.

“Rather than acting to prevent such an outcome, the Tory Prime Minister has instead chosen to push ahead by wasting billions of pounds of taxpayers’ cash on an entirely avoidable policy - at the same time as public services are still bearing the pain of Tory austerity.”

There was a moment on Friday when I realised that the shift in British politics, which so many of us have worked and waited years for, is actually happening.

And, perhaps ironically, it was a Twitter response to the by-election result in Wales from an SNP politician which convinced me.

In the immediate aftermath of the victory of the Remain-committed Liberal Democrats in Brecon and Radnorshir­e, the media recognised that it had been assisted by the alliance formed with Welsh nationalis­ts and the Greens.

Suddenly the Scottish Nationalis­ts were keen to get in on the act and blame others for the fact that they believe there has not been the same common approach to fighting Brexit in Scotland.

In a tweet which I was asked about on BBC Scotland, Mike Russell MSP apparently claimed that they would be happy to work with the Scottish Liberal Democrats and it was all Willie Rennie’s fault that they were not. That’s rich.

It is also a very selective representa­tion of Scottish politics. But, even more than that, it is also an important indication that they recognise where the mood of the country really is. It is with Remain. Not the SNP, but Remain.

For three years now, the SNP has been trying to use the EU referendum result to add to their array of grievance-led issues with the present UK government. The SNP persistent­ly use ideas with crossparty appeal as Trojan Horses for their own agenda.

Take for example their recent proposal for citizens’ assemblies, an approach which most parties support on a variety of issues, and could have succeeded in winning support had it not been revealed as something of a political Trojan Horse. Simply another stepping stone to independen­ce.

Or we could go right back to 2016 when the First Minister emphatical­ly promised a cross-party approach to finding a pro-eu solution that was not about independen­ce, only to dump it in favour of her party’s separatist agenda.

And that is all despite the fact that the argument they make for

remaining in the EU is precisely the same as the case my Lib Dem colleagues and I make for staying both part of the UK and a member of the EU. Which brings me to the crux of the problem.

Until the Scottish Nationalis­ts are prepared to put their campaign for another independen­ce referendum aside, they make it impossible for those of us who want to be in both the UK and the EU to work with them.

If they could just look, for a moment, at the wider picture and make resolving this Brexit crisis the only thing that matters for the time being, they might be pleasantly surprised.

I appreciate it’s difficult for them. Independen­ce is, after all, their raison d’etre. But it should not be impossible. It’s not so long ago I took part in a press conference in Edinburgh with members of the Labour, Green and SNP parties calling for a People’s Vote.

It had taken a while to get them onside for that particular argument, but they did eventually embrace it. At Westminste­r, politician­s of all parties represente­d in Scotland – including, at times, Conservati­ves – have voted together to oppose an EU withdrawal deal which we felt would be damaging to the country and to block the no-deal which would be catastroph­ic.

On television on Friday, Labour’s Chris Bryant MP revealed that he and I have been in the same room discussing our shared opposition to Brexit. It is no secret that Westminste­r is no longer divided solely along party lines but on whether you are for or against Brexit.

My new party leader, Jo Swinson, has made it clear she wants to work with other like-minded people to build the Remain movement which the Liberal Democrats lead in the UK.

Heidi Allen, the former leader of Change, was in Brecon campaignin­g for the ultimately successful Lib Dem candidate Jane Dodds because she recognises that the need for unity in opposing Brexit trumps all else. Likewise the Greens and Plaid stood aside to ensure a singular effective Remain campaign.

So for the SNP now to suggest intransige­nce on the part of anyone else just doesn’t ring true. From the most recent general election to the English council elections and the European elections in May, we have seen the shift away from the old two-party system to a more varied, and yet at same time consensual, approach grow ever stronger. The Uk-wide opinion polls now depict a three or even four-party split in England and Wales, potentiall­y five in Scotland.

And it has been abundantly clear over the past two years that what the British public wants most is for their politician­s to fix the mess that we are currently in. We will only do that by talking to each other, compromisi­ng and finding a consensus that allows us to put the bitterness and division of the past three years behind us.

In Brecon and Radnorshir­e, I believe we have made an important stride forward in achieving that goal. The modern forward-looking parties worked together, behind Jo Swinson’s leadership, to present a common cause to the public and were rewarded with their trust and votes.

Labour and Conservati­ve continued to plough their own narrow, well-trodden, tribal furrow and were rejected. That in itself should tell us that the public has had enough of the traditiona­l, confrontat­ional approach at Westminste­r.

Many of us in parliament are frustrated beyond measure when the SNP continue to reject any approach but the negative insistence on using every issue simply to pit Holyrood and Westminste­r against each other. That benefits no-one.

In September, my new colleague Jane Dodds will take her place on the bench beside me. Her victory was in part due to the recognitio­n by our colleagues in the Green and Plaid parties that there was a greater cause to pursue than our individual agendas. I continue to hope that the SNP might somehow come to that same recognitio­n and join the new politics which works for all.

 ?? PICTURE: BEN BIRCHALL/PA ?? 0 Jane Dodds and fellow Lib Dems celebrate by-election victory in Brecon and Radnorshir­e
PICTURE: BEN BIRCHALL/PA 0 Jane Dodds and fellow Lib Dems celebrate by-election victory in Brecon and Radnorshir­e
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