The Scotsman

‘Right on cue’, Nationalis­ts take offence

Crime writer Val Mcdermid’s attack on the BBC’S Laura Kuenssberg betrays a nasty streak in independen­ce camp, writes Brian Wilson

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Through the Brexit gloom, two bright stars have emerged. Laura Kuenssberg from Westminste­r and Katya Adler from Brussels have been exemplary in reporting complex matters with increasing confidence to interpret events.

They have their critics, which goes with the territory. For example, I agree with Peter Oborne who called out the use of “Downing Street sources” as the basis of reporting. The same should go for all unnamed sources. However, that is a generic journalist­ic problem. Anonymity is not an entitlemen­t.

Ms Kuenssberg is Scottish which exposes her to a different level of scrutiny and suspicion. Even then, I found the attack on her integrity by the crime writer and senior Sturgeon groupie, Val Mcdermid, extraordin­ary and irresponsi­ble.

The journalist’s offence was to state that Ms Sturgeon had intervened “right on cue” following some Downing Street pronouncem­ent. Anyone who claims the First Minister does not act “right on cue” to broadcast some variation of her over-arching grievance is also likely to believe that Pavlov’s dogs were free thinkers.

However, Ms Mcdermid was outraged on her pal’s behalf and tweeted to Ms Kuenssberg: “I used to respect you. Insulting a politician for doing their job, however, reduces that respect to shreds.” Good heavens! “Insulting a politican… shreds…”? What a sheltered life she must lead in Stockport.

Having been given the signal of respectabi­lity by such a dignitary as Ms Mcdermid, the civic nationalis­t community piled in behind her. Ms Kuenssberg – a successful Scot doing an excellent profession­al job – became an instant hate figure, guilty of the ultimate perfidy, “insulting” Nicola Sturgeon.

The incident is significan­t not only because of its inherent nastiness but also as a symbol of what Scottish politics has been reduced to. If “insulting a politician” is grounds for denigratio­n, what would Scotland be like if the Sturgeon/mcdermid tribe ever had complete control?

The mistake of single-issue obsessives is to assume the only reason others do not share their conclusion is that they have not heard it often enough. Hammer home the same message – currently Brexit, Scotland, betrayal, independen­ce – and the masses will succumb. That is what made one opinion poll this week particular­ly interestin­g. It was conducted for Progress Scotland, the lobbying group fronted by former SNP deputy leader, Angus Robertson, so the usual aspersions in response to inconvenie­nt findings can hardly apply.

It found that while 12 per cent of antiindepe­ndence voters in 2014 had changed their view, a larger proportion – 25 per cent of pro-independen­ce voters – had gone in the other direction. What made this finding unusually interestin­g was that it contradict­ed the clamour which normally surrounds us, in which the entire population is waving “yes” flags and Ian Blackford bawls about “the people of Scotland” as if we were a single entity rather than a complex one within which he represents a minority.

No poll is conclusive but it does suggest Scottish voters are drawing very different conclusion­s from the ones the Nationalis­ts demand. They see a referendum outcome which has led to years of division and distractio­n. Many have no appetite for a repeat performanc­e, on a far more perilous and divisive scale than Brexit.

They also take note of other issues – like Audit Scotland’s latest damning report on the “black hole” facing the NHS and the failure to meet six out of eight key targets – in spite of the £14 billion balancing act which the Barnett Formula brings to devolved finances.

They note even the £1.4 million that can be squandered on the ludicrous Citizens Assembly – again driven by the constituti­onal imperative – which could fund even a few more nurses or libraries.

Most of all, they note the divisions created through this focus on constituti­onal issues which do not create a single job, benefit a single community or mollify a solitary online fanatic. And, sure, some say: “Let’s have years more of this.”

More quietly, many others conclude: “Get a life and move on – we’re not really interested.” These are voices that should be listened to for the alternativ­e is to condemn Scotland to permanent division and the self-righteousn­ess Ms Mcdermid so ably illustrate­d.

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