The Scotsman

Ross should leave Tory comfort zone

The Conservati­ves’ Scottish leader – a referee – is surely man enough to get out and meet regular folk, says John Mclellan

- John Mclellan is a Conservati­ve councillor in Edinburgh

The one and only time I met Gordon Brown was at the end of 2009 at one of the regional press receptions at Number 10 in which editors are given some warm wine and warmer words in the hope that they go back to base and publish nice things about the government of the day.

In the midst of the economic collapse after the previous year’s banking crash, with Alex Salmond firmly installed as First Minister for two years on the back of a series of SNP giveaways, Mr Brown was not in the heartiest of moods and was particular­ly concerned about the amount of coverage Scottish papers were giving to the devolved government. “It’s the economy that matters and that’s here,” he said, and wasn’t persuaded that as health, education and policing had been fully devolved, those were likely to feature prominentl­y in the regular news agenda.

Judging by the current Scottish election campaign, we were both wrong, because in the era of Tvdriven personalit­y politics, the SNP’S lacklustre record on health, education or law and order is making no impact on voting intentions and an Ipsos/mori poll for STV indicated independen­ce had gone from a low priority to the number one issue for 49 per cent of voters, with education (28 per cent) and health (27 per cent) some way behind.

It’s unclear if the constituti­on is now a top priority because unionists sense the danger and nationalis­ts the opportunit­y, or because of pro-independen­ce Alba, but it’s obvious from three new polls that the Conservati­ves and Labour opposition are making no headway, despite a bright start for new Labour leader Anas Sarwar.

As for Alba, Alex Salmond’s failure to condemn Russia for the Salisbury poisonings is another reason it is struggling to rise above three per cent, and The Proclaimer­s and all the other Alba-nonies should have a good think about the company they are keeping... “I’m on my way, from novichok and sarin gas today... And days from now you'll make it to the next world… ”

The SNP is so far ahead, now predicted to win up to 71 seats, that the opposition can’t rely on SNP campaign blunders, like this week’s illjudged and widely mocked “1984” party election broadcast featuring hazy images of Nicola Sturgeon on a bank of 1970s television­s. Maybe the admission of failures over care home deaths will have an effect, but with just over three weeks left, Conservati­ve leader Douglas Ross needs a new attention-grabbing strategy which challenges perception­s because so far little has worked. The Conservati­ve dialogue has all been about opposing a referendum, which the public understand­s, but what then?

Giving devolution a go would be a start, because the truth is that Labour effectivel­y only stuck an assembly on the old Scottish Office as a means to skewer nationalis­m, but since 2007 the SNP’S main aim has been to expose its inadequaci­es. The opportunit­y remains to make devolution work if both London and Edinburgh truly believe in it and two events this week show how that can be done.

Edinburgh businessma­n and Lothian Conservati­ve candidate Malcolm Offord presented a paper for the Reform Scotland think tank which outlined eight steps for the recovery, including infrastruc­ture investment, devolution of corporatio­n tax and the expansion of the Scottish National Investment Bank (SNIB), which chimed with a new study from the Oxford Economics (OE) consultanc­y on boosting Scotland’s economy for Sir Tom Hunter’s Foundation. OE was scathing about Scotland’s economic landscape; a high proportion of people have no qualificat­ions and job-related training has declined, workers are less likely to be in senior posts than the UK average and management skills are often poor. Scotland is near the bottom of UK nations and regions for the number of businesses, has a poor business birth and scale-up rate, so jobs growth is slower than the UK average.

Beyond high-speed rail links to the rest of the UK (on which the Scottish government has withdrawn co-operation), OE sees only marginal benefits in transport infrastruc­ture investment, but like Mr Offord wants a powerful SNIB at the heart of a new Scottish venture capital sector to accelerate growth. With extensive borrowing capabiliti­es, matched by reformed taxation to encourage work, investment and risk-taking alongside a targeted industrial strategy based around renewable energy and decarbonis­ation, it could give the whole Scottish economy a much-needed shot in the arm. None of it relies on independen­ce but it does need enthusiasm and good faith, and as the Conservati­ves are committed to joint Uk-scottish infrastruc­ture investment for projects of national importance, this can be part of an expanded SNIB, as Mr Offord and OE recommend.

The SNP knows how to buy votes with middle-class bribes like free school food for all, but shows little appetite for a committed programme to generate the cash to fund them, but there is nothing more Conservati­ve than backing private enterprise to create wealth and opportunit­y for the benefit of those who need it most. As Gordon Brown said, it’s about the economy, but it also needs effective communicat­ion.

I previously said Mr Sarwar should be out speaking to the people being left behind, but so too can Mr Ross meet those who need the jobs only a booming economy can deliver. That’s not financiers and factory bosses but communitie­s where the welcome for a Conservati­ve might not be warm, but which are being taken for granted by an SNP expecting to stroll back into power. As a football referee, he is used to being outside a comfort zone, but day after day in places like Castlemilk and Craigmilla­r, Linlathen and Lochend he should listen to people at the sharp end of both Scottish and UK government decisions. Who knows if it will win votes, but it will win respect.

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 ??  ?? 0 Douglas Ross with Tory candidate Dr Sandesh Gulhane in Glasgow
0 Douglas Ross with Tory candidate Dr Sandesh Gulhane in Glasgow

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