The Scotsman

SNP and Tories continue indyref2 phoney war

- Conor Matchett Politics correspond­ent conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

There will be no independen­ce referendum until after the 2024 UK general election, Michael Gove has said, launching yet another pointless missile into the phoney war of the constituti­onal debate.

Mr Gove, a master of the art of political illusion, had said in an interview he “didn’t think” there would be any circumstan­ces in which Boris Johnson would allow a referendum until the election.

Hardly a rock solid commitment.

He continued, saying it would be “at best reckless, at worst folly” to attempt to move the focus of the UK Government on to the constituti­on at a time of continued national crisis with Covid-19.

It’s hardly reckless, as Mr Gove puts it, to move to talk about the constituti­on when the UK Government just three days earlier had briefed the plan to attempt to give all blood and soil Scots a vote in any future vote.

The First Minister responded in kind. "Sneering, arrogant condescens­ion” was the descriptio­n of the comments from Nicola Sturgeon.

Every time UK Government ministers say anything about the Union, support for independen­ce continues to strengthen, she said.

But if the exchange of views carried such a sense of deja vu, Scots would be forgiven for thinking they exist in a purgatoria­l state of perpetual constituti­onal debate.

Rather than present a case for independen­ce as the SNP should, or provide a reason for nationalis­ts to back the union, as the Conservati­ves should, the two are happy to play to their bases and shore up support among the significan­t majority of Scots who are content with the side of the fence they sit.

All of this is done without risking the possibilit­y of the debate moving forward, or for any real options to be laid out in front of Scots who may vote on such an issue as soon as 2023.

Until the SNP bring forward a genuine policy case for independen­ce beyond its favoured version of grievance politics and until the UK Government make a meaningful effort to make a positive case for the union, this phoney war will continue. What a depressing thought.

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