The Scotsman

Whatever happened to kindness in politics?

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The shocking death of Sir David Amess, the kindest of men, is the most awful heartache for his family and a tragedy for our democracy. It is genuinely appalling that an elected representa­tive who was simply trying to do his duty for his constituen­ts should have been murdered in this way.

What, if anything, can we learn from this? Clearly we cannot ensure that MPS or MSPS are one hundred per cent safe all the time and it is very difficult to protect them against the the actions of a terrorist extremist. However, in the wake of the murder of Jo Cox there was a call for a kinder sort of politics. That never happened and just recently Iain Duncan Smith said that he had never known politics to be so toxic.

It could be argued that politician­s themselves are at least partly to blame for this. We are assured that behind the scenes politician­s of all persuasion­s co-operate and work well with one another and that for many of them friendship­s transcend the political divide.

The problem is, that is not how the general public sees it. They see the mockery and the jeering bearpit that is the House of Commons, where insults are regularly traded and speakers frequently shouted down, their opinions rarely heard. They see political programmes on which politician­s consistent­ly refuse to see any merit in their opponents' arguments, no matter how worthwhile their points may be, and they see varying degrees of dishonesty. That is the cue that the public takes and that level of unreasonab­leness leads directly to the polarisati­on of views. No wonder the political scene has become so toxic.

DAVID HAMILL East Linton, East Lothian

Protect MPS

Many headlines have asked "Should MPS still be able to meet the public?” The question really is whether the public should still be allowed to meet MPS. The public does not have the right to possibly endanger anyone's life, irrespecti­ve of how pressing a constituen­t feels their concern is. Bank tellers often guarded themselves behind glass in the past – surely an MP’S life is worth just as much?

STEVE HAYES

Leven, Fife

Let’spipedown

We have probably all noted the descent in the standards of debate by nationalis­ts in the Scottish parliament to that of antagonist­ic and puerile cat fights when backed into a corner, as a smokescree­n for giving proper answers when none are forthcomin­g.

Unfortunat­ely this is now reflected in The Scotsman newspaper’s Perspectiv­e and Letters to the Editor columns as Nationalis­t apologists seek to wage war on commentato­rs who disagree with their point of view in the same puerile manner. The newspaper should be above this descent into cat fights.

M FORBES

Edinburgh

Rail silly

Although it may seem obvious to Margot Kerr that we cut the number of lorries on our roads (Letters, 18 October), a suggestion for which she gives us no justificat­ion, she overlooks the economics, realities and practicali­ties of industrial and retail businesses.

Formerly more efficient, transport by rail still needed “iron horse” three-wheelers for rail station to factory or door deliveries of materials and goods. A resumption of predominan­tly rail transport, given the nowadays many fewer lines, would delay deliveries and increase costs. Who would benefit from that?

CHARLES WARDROP

Perth

Like Ireland?

In Scotland the nationalis­ts’ clamour for a referendum, a mere seven years after their 2014 defeat, appears to be bolstered by referring to the Good Friday Agreement by which Tony Blair and the Labour Party achieved peace in Northern Ireland.

It’s interestin­g that the nationalis­ts, when questioned about the definition of “a generation”, refer to a part of the text of the Good Friday Agreement stating seven years as the minimum period between Irish unity referendum­s.

It is perhaps appropriat­e, 100 years since the start of negotiatio­ns on the 1921 Anglo Irish Treaty, to draw the attention of Scottish nationalis­ts to a section of Article 12 of that document: “...a Commission consisting of three Persons, one to be appointed by the Government of the Irish Free State, one to be appointed by the Government of Northern Ireland and one who shall be Chairman to be appointed by the British Government shall determine in accordance with the wishes of the inhabitant­s, so far as may be compatible with economic and geographic conditions, the boundaries between Northern Ireland and the rest of Ireland…”. I believe the status of Tyrone and Fermanagh were in question.

If applied to present-day Scotland, an independen­t Scotland would consist merely of Dundee, Glasgow and North Lanarkshir­e. These were the only council areas to vote for secession in 2014.

The rest of us could then relax and not worry about Scotland’s massive annual fiscal and trade deficits.

JAMES QUINN

Lanark

Expect whitewash

In his loyal defence and exoneratio­n of the Scottish Government’s handling of the pandemic (Letters, 18 October) Fraser Grant goes on to proudly announce that the first Covid public enquiry in the UK will be held up here. Perhaps I have become cynical in my later years but I suspect this will result in another bucket of whitewash, though if I’m wrong Nicola Sturgeon will, as usual, scarper away from responsibi­lity as fast as her size 5 Nikes can take her.

ANDREW KEMP

Rosyth

Brownwash?

The BBC’S documentar­y The New Labour Revolution makes a better job of rehabilita­ting Gordon Brown than it does Tony Blair. The latter’s calamitous political mistakes are easily understood by the general public whereas the lasting damage done to our economy by the former are more difficult to explain and were quietly airbrushed from the series. Brown’s decision to give the Bank of England operationa­l independen­ce was lauded but his decision to remove its responsibi­lity for supervisin­g the UK’S commercial lenders was overlooked. Yet it was handing responsibi­lity to the toothless, incompeten­t Financial Services Authority which sowed the seeds of the 2007-08 financial crisis.

In addition, nothing was said of his abolition of the tax credit which our pension funds could reclaim on dividends paid by UK companies. This deprived the funds of a cumulative £150 billion and wrecked final-salary pensions in the private sector which had been, prior to the Brown era, Europe’s best-funded occupation­al pensions system.

(DR) JOHN CAMERON

St Andrews, Fife

Get smart

Steuart Campbell (Letters, 18 October) states that he can find no useful informatio­n on his recently installed Smart Meter. I find mine extremely useful as it contains the only clock in the house which is accurate. The other useful addition is that I no longer have to go out in the cold and the rain to unlock the box for the gas meter, crouch down with failing eyesight and take a reading, then unlock the integral garage and grope my way, with a torch, past my classic car to read the electric meter.

Every cloud has its silver lining.

J LINDSAY WALLS

Edinburgh

Which party?

Hypocrisy is an intrinsic feature of Joyce Mcmillan’s journalism. However, her latest diatribe scaled new heights (Perspectiv­e, 15 October). She accuses the Conservati­ve Party of "wrapping itself in cultural signals", "creeping authoritar­ianism", "conflict-mongering" and "retro-patriotism".

Let's consider which other party also clearly exhibits these traits. And which devolved separatist administra­tion also "starves local services of cash for essential services"?

MARTIN O’GORMAN

Edinburgh

Russian to gas

The Russian Ambassador to the UK, Andrei Kelin, says his country is ready to come to the rescue of the UK'S gas supply. If ever there was a reason for this country to get real about the transition to Net Zero and stand up to the zealots who would rather have Putin's boot on our throat than a sensible plan, this was it. I'd like to place a small bet that, after COP26, UK public opinion will swing in favour of onshore gas production.

By then energy shortages and price rises will be taking effect, we'll have seen how the biggest polluters – especially Russia, China and India – are leaving the heavy lifting to countries like us, and it will be clear that renewables are no answer in the short term.

US energy prices are amongst the lowest in the world due to their investment in fracking for shale gas, 800,000 tons of which are imported annually to Grangemout­h, a town that sits on top of a potentiall­y huge gas field.

ALLAN SUTHERLAND Stonehaven. Kincardine­shire

Heading howler

Excellent news that we can look forward to a new series of Shetland but in surely the most thoroughly confusing headline I have yet seen in the Scotsman Magazine, it announces “Holding out for a Hebridean Hero”, which, I will admit, intrigued and mystified me (16th October). Was DI Jimmy Perez off on his travels? Was he leaping into a longship, horned helmet on and Viking battleaxe in hand to assault the descendant­s of Somerled and bring them into line? No. And he isn’t venturing anywhere near the Hebrides. Perhaps this is the latest Shetland mystery? A “Hebridean Hero” who doesn’t go anywhere near the Hebrides! Or, maybe, just maybe, someone who produces headlines doesn’t know where either the Shetland Islands are, or the Hebrides? They are only 300 miles apart, after all.

ANDREW HN GRAY

Edinburgh

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