The Scotsman

I’m backing Catholic church over Greens

We have Catholic schools so it’s not unreasonab­le to have church education representa­tives, writes John Mclellan

- Say no to Hangover Day Curing capitalism

It is a sign of the febrile political times in which we live that, in pondering over this week’s column, I quickly concluded that even for someone brought up in a Rangers-supporting, Protestant Glasgow household it would be easier to write about Catholic schools than Brexit.

In the two years since I was elected as a Conservati­ve councillor (I have to keep mentioning that otherwise social media trolls complain), there is no question the letter-writing campaign orchestrat­ed by the Catholic Church to fight a Green Party move to strip church representa­tives on Edinburgh’s education committee of voting rights is the strongest cross-city protest we have received.

Yes, we get bombarded with cut-and-paste anti-zionist complaints about the Lothian Pension Fund’s investment in the Israeli Bank Hapoalim, but this is different; after Archbishop Leo Cushley’s condemnati­on was read from pulpits a few weeks back, scores of hand-written letters and Catholic Church postcards arrive every day to demand that voting rights are preserved.

The place of three religious representa­tives on Scottish education committees is a statutory guarantee, going back to the 1918 Education Act when ‘voluntary’ Catholic schools were brought into a new state system along with board schools and given the same funding under new county education authoritie­s.

Next week Edinburgh Council will vote on a Green Party proposal to remove voting rights following a similar move in Perth & Kinross after religious representa­tives sealed the fate of Blairingon­e Primary, a school near Dollar with just six pupils which the council administra­tion was recommendi­ng for closure because it only had the prospect of five more.

In Edinburgh, the same situation is unlikely to arise because of a convention that the religious representa­tives only vote on matters directly related to faith-based education, and as yet no-one has been able to point to an issue in which the religious representa­tives have caused controvers­y or swung a decision against a political majority. In Edinburgh, this is an issue looking

for a problem. This week, an editorial in the Scottish Catholic Observer didn’t pull its punches, saying that while the Green Party had some good ideas “a strain of absolute lunacy also runs through it... The party is arrogant and blindly devoted to its cause. ‘Religion is bad, therefore statefunde­d religious schools are bad’ is their thinking.”

The Church regards underminin­g the place of religious representa­tives as the start of a process which will lead to the dismantlin­g of Catholic schools and so presents a threat to the entire system, pointing to the history of discrimina­tion as evidence of their continued relevance.

While claims that Catholics face an ever-present threat of sectarian exclusion might still have some substance in small pockets in the West, in the East of Scotland it is weak to say the least. But not so the threat to Catholic identity of which, in an increasing­ly secular age, the schools are an essential part, and as Catholicis­m is an essential part of Scotland’s heritage this is something which should be valued and understood.

But the schools also represent state-supported choice in education, which councils did so much to destroy in the 1970s with the dismantlin­g of historic institutio­ns like the Royal High, the High School of Glasgow (which I attended for three years) and Allan Glen’s. Like those schools, the choice they represent is one of improving standards. There might be a point if Catholic schools and their representa­tives were a drag on attainment and a threat to their children’s learning, but the opposite is the case with Catholic schools consistent­ly out-performing their nondenomin­ational neighbours.

Judging by the attack on private school funding and the withdrawal from all but one internatio­nal education measuremen­t system, comparison and competitio­n spell danger for the Scottish Government and eroding the position of Catholic schools would be one more step down that road.

The Edinburgh Green Party’s position has grown from their enthusiasm for giving children the day off to go on climate strikes to a desire to give pupil representa­tives a place on the education committee, but realising this is a non-starter it has decided that if the kids can’t have a say then neither can the churches. This article started with a declaratio­n of my background and some will no doubt argue that in itself is an illustrati­on of a problem which separate schooling perpetuate­s. But diversity and choice is not the same as division and as long as there are Catholic schools then giving the Church one voice on matters which directly affect the faith in those institutio­ns does not seem to be controvers­ial. The Green Party has chosen to make it so. As they say, hell mend them. On choice, shops currently can choose whether to open on Ne’er Day, but a Holyrood motion from Labour MSP Jackie Baillie bids to force large shops to close to give staff a guaranteed break. But what represents a large shop? Your local Scotmid, Tesco Metro or Sainsbury Local? In this age of online shopping and New Year tourism, it seems strange to legislate to reduce choice and in these health-conscious days, wouldn’t it preserve the notion that the day after Hogmanay is Hangover Day? For once not the main event, Gordon Brown was on stage at the Edinburgh Book Festival this week to interview Serbian economist Branko Milanovic about his new book Capitalism Alone: The Future of the System That Rules the World. “It’s a privilege to be interviewe­d by a Prime Minister,” said Milanovic, to which Mr Brown quickly replied, “Former Prime Minister. I’m unemployed.” Aw.

An expert on income inequality, Mr Milanovic’s book divides global capitalism into two categories: liberal capitalism, such as the UK and US, and political capitalism, like China and Russia, the former characteri­sed by self-perpetuati­ng affluent middle/upper classes, the latter by corruption. He did not offer an alternativ­e and many in the audience would have been disappoint­ed about his view that global capitalism offered the best way to reduce income inequality. Judging by the age profile, more than a few would baulk at his medicine for the evils of liberal capitalism – inheritanc­e taxes.

Mr Brown is back at the Book Festival a week on Monday when he shares his observatio­ns about Scotland’s place in the UK and Europe and “the challenges around understand­ing of national identity”. He could throw Catholic schools into the mix.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom