The Scotsman

Sarwar proposal to split Lord Advocate functions is aimed at the wrong target

- ANALYSIS By ALISTAIR BONNINGTON

No doubt Anas Sarwar's proposal to split up the Lord Advocate's functions in the wake of the Salmond Inquiry is well intentione­d.

Like most Scots, Mr Sarwar will have been appalled to see Scotland's system of government function more like that of North Korea than North America. Something, he concludes, must be done.

I wonder, however, if he's aiming at the right target here. The constituti­onal setup created by the Scotland Act of 1998 was certainly controvers­ial. The post 1998 role of the Lord Advocate and its future connection with the Scottish Government and Parliament, was one of the principal problem areas for the drafters. Perhaps they didn't get it right and a change is worth considerin­g.

But we must not lose sight of the fact that the hugely embarrassi­ng problems we have been witnessing over the past weeks have not been

caused by the law, lawyers or the legal setup. The source of the difficulty is to be found in the behaviour of Scottish politician­s - particular­ly those who like their North Korean colleagues worship and are willing to do anything for the "Dear Leader". Sadly that willingnes­s appears to include the distortion of the truth for party political purposes.

Perhaps my friends are a rather cynical lot. After all, many are experience­d lawyers. But I am yet to speak to anyone who believes what the Scottish government is serving up as an explanatio­n for their conduct in this murky affair. Party political interests have clearly been, and remain the paramount considerat­ion for Ministers.

The underlying problem here is that we have a government obsessed with their public perception. To them reality - the truth - is quite secondary. So when things go wrong, the restoratio­n of "a good press" is the overarchin­g aim.

Under the SNP'S Stalinist system of government fundamenta­l legal principles such as the independen­ce of the Crown will be deemed minor matters. We will probably never know the full tale of how the Crown came to behave as they have done in relation to the Salmond Inquiry. I have little doubt that the facts would show that the faults lie fairly and squarely with party politician­s rather than the legal setup. Ultimately any constituti­onal system, no matter how brilliantl­y constructe­d will fail unless it is run by honourable and competent folk. The past few weeks demonstrat­e that getting honest, competent folk into the government of Scotland must be our first priority.

Alistair Bonnington is former honorary professor of law, University of Glasgow

Chancellor Rishi Sunak is coming under pressure from Conservati­ve MPS in the north of England to support high streets by permanentl­y reducing business rates for retailers.

Some 45 MPS from the Northern Research Group called for an extension of the business rates holiday to be followed by “fundamenta­l reform” after the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The group of MPS said there is a need for “levelling the playing field between bricks and mortar and online retail”.

They are demanding that business rates are reduced from about 50 per cent of market rent to around 35 per cent in order to help achieve this.

“With many of our town centres hit particular­ly hard by the Covid-19 pandemic, now is the time for a bold move to reduce business rates nationally,” the MPS said in a letter to Mr Sunak.

“We need to make sure that once people can go shopping again, they have high streets to go back to.”

More than 20 million people in the UK have now been given their first dose of a coronaviru­s vaccine, the Government has said.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on social media that it was a "huge national achievemen­t" and praised the NHS staff, volunteers and armed forces for their work in the vaccine rollout.

He tweeted: "20 million people across the UK have now got the jab - a huge national achievemen­t and a testament to the tireless work of NHS staff, volunteers, the Armed Forces & many more.

"I urge everyone to get the jab when called. Every jab makes a difference in our battle against Covid."

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said vaccinatin­g more than 20 million people against coronaviru­s was a "magnificen­t achievemen­t for the country". In a video on Twitter, Mr Hancock said: "I'm absolutely delighted that over 20 million people have now been vaccinated across the UK.”

 ??  ?? 0 James Wolffe, ‘not the cause of recent embarassme­nt’
0 James Wolffe, ‘not the cause of recent embarassme­nt’

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