The Scotsman

SNP take advantage of lack of political accountabi­lity

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

There is a distinct lack of political accountabi­lity across the United Kingdom, and the ferries fiasco is the SNP’S opportunit­y to exploit this democratic deficit.

Not every scandal is a resignatio­n matter, but for a democracy to function in a meaningful fashion visible accountabi­lity is required.

Over the past few decades we have seen a move away from personal responsibi­lity for the failures of ministers towards an obstinate refusal to resign for personal or department­al failures.

This change of culture can predominat­ely be put at the feet of the Conservati­ve government under Boris Johnson.

This includes his failure to sack home secretary Priti Patel for bullying, housing secretary Robert Jenrick for his lobbying scandal, or former chief aide Dominic Cummings – at least at first – which demonstrat­es this belief of being close to untouchabl­e if you are an ally of the Prime Minister.

The potential hypocrisy of Mr Johnson not resigning should he be found to have broken the law in regards to Partygate while he and his Cabinet call for the chief executive of P&O to resign for breaking the law will not be lost on voters.

In Scotland, the ferries fiasco provides the SNP with an opportunit­y to exploit this cultural shift.

If you fail so catastroph­ically on an issue central to your remit, you should face consequenc­es.

However, for Kate Forbes and Nicola Sturgeon, they have a convenient fall guy in the form of the disgraced Derek Mackay, even if as the First Minister said, the “buck stops with me”.

Add in the failure to have documentar­y evidence for how ministers assessed the risks associated with the Ferguson Marine deal and who made the final decision and why, and you have a vacuum of political accountabi­lity.

We know the First Minister will not resign over something she likely views as a trivial political irritant rather than what it is – a damning indictment on government competence. Political scandals do not always equal political scalps, but a handful in Scotland in recent years should have done. But taking responsibi­lity no longer seems to be in vogue.

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