The Scotsman

Scots Tories have good reasons to look forward to the general election

◆ Scotland is more likely to be free of Humza Yousaf than Conservati­ve MPS after voters go to the polls, writes Murdo Fraser

- Murdo Fraser is a Scottish Conservati­ve MSP for Mid-scotland and Fife

The Scottish Conservati­ves gather in Aberdeen this weekend for our annual conference in better spirits than many people might expect. Polling south of the Border may continue to be grim for Rishi Sunak, but in Scotland the situation looks rather brighter.

The Prime Minister certainly doesn’t have his troubles to seek, lagging behind Labour in the polls recently and struggling to get traction with the public for his political agenda. Ultimately, he will be hoping that a relentless focus on economic progress, reducing inflation, helping with the cost of living, and stopping the boats, will convince people that he has more answers to the issues that affect Britain today than Keir Starmer, who seems to think he can coast into Downing Street by standing for nothing.

Other than envisaging his own backside in the PM’S seat at the Cabinet table, Sir Keir does not seem to have a discernibl­e vision for the country. There is clearly work for the Prime Minister to do. But when he comes to Aberdeen at the end of the week, he will be visiting one of the parts of the United Kingdom where the Conservati­ves could well make gains at the coming general election.

This is not just an idle boast. The Conservati­ves won six Westminste­r constituen­cies in Scotland at the last election, and most Scotland-specific polling that is done suggests that we are currently on course to hold all six. There are also another half-dozen or so seats which, with a modest swing in our direction, the Conservati­ves could realistica­lly gain from the SNP.

In Angus, Perthshire, South Ayrshire, Argyll, and East Renfrewshi­re, the Conservati­ves are breathing down the necks of the SNP incumbents, who are having to defend their own party’s dismal track record of 17 years in government.

There is an irony that so many SNP MPS who blame Westminste­r for all Scotland’s woes, but enjoy working there, will end up blaming their incompeten­t colleagues at Holyrood for losing their jobs.

Whilst Labour seem to be benefittin­g from the SNP’S decline if opinion polls are to be believed, it is significan­t that there are no Labour-conservati­ve marginals in Scotland. The seats we could win are all being defended by the SNP.

The strength of Conservati­ve support across Scotland is seen in recent council by-election results. Last month, in Dunblane and Bridge of Allan, there was another Conservati­ve victory with an increase of more than eight per cent in the Conservati­ve vote since 2022. In that ward, the SNP vote was down.

We had a similar result last week in Jedburgh, St Boswells and District.

Here the Conservati­ves gained a seat from the SNP, with new councillor John Bathgate securing an astonishin­g near 60 per cent of the vote in the ward, with the SNP slumping to just 17 per cent. Whilst opinion polls may fascinate the political chatterati, the story told in actual election contests, with real votes being cast, is a more accurate indicator of the political mood in Scotland. And this tells us that where the contest is between the Conservati­ves and the SNP, the Conservati­ve vote is increasing whilst that of the SNP continues to slip down the gurgler.

We have to see Scotland-wide opinion polls in the same context. In the Rutherglen parliament­ary by-election last year the Conservati­ve vote, in a contest where we lay in third place, was squeezed down, presumably by pro-union tactical voting to get the SNP out. That same pro-union tactical voting benefits the Conservati­ves in areas where we are challenger­s to the SNP.

All this rather puts into perspectiv­e Humza Yousaf ’s hubristic ambition to “make Scotland Tory-free”. The evidence of these recent electoral contests is that it is not the Scottish Conservati­ves who should fear the prospect of extinction at the next election, but rather his own party. Indeed, many within the SNP are debating how many seats have to be lost on his watch to make their party’s leadership a ‘Humzafree’ zone instead.

That said, in the Scottish Conservati­ves we know we have much to do to build our platform to be part of an alternativ­e government for Scotland. Back in August, we published our “Grasping the Thistle” paper on Scotland’s economy, with a comprehens­ive agenda of policy ideas to help reverse our economic decline.

Last month this was followed up with a new detailed policy paper on the future of the NHS in Scotland, again bursting with reforms to improve the patient experience and patient outcomes. We promise a new digital 24/7 health service, with easier access for patients’ appointmen­ts, reduced waiting times by better use of resources, and proper workforce planning. All this will be matched with a new personal contract with the NHS, expecting individual­s to play their part in leading healthier lives, to take pressure off struggling services and overworked staff.

It is ideas like these, rather than the tiresome focus of the SNP on constituti­onal grievance, that will decide how people will vote in forthcomin­g electoral contests. The evidence so far shows that voters respond positively to a party putting forward positive ideas. The Conservati­ves would rather start rebuilding Scotland in 2024, rather than constantly rerunning the referendum of 2014, in a Brigadoon version of Groundhog Day.

That is in sharp contrast to both the SNP and the Labour party who seem committed to the negativity of claiming what they are not, rather than arguing a positive case for themselves, and the public is starting to notice. Sorry, Humza Yousaf, Scotland is more likely to be free of your leadership than “Tory free” after this year’s election.

It is not the Scottish Conservati­ves who should fear the prospect of extinction at the next election

 ?? ?? Scottish Conservati­ve candidate Thomas Kerr’ vote was squeezed in the Rutherglen by-election by pro-union tactical voting, but the party stands to benefit from the same trend in other seats
Scottish Conservati­ve candidate Thomas Kerr’ vote was squeezed in the Rutherglen by-election by pro-union tactical voting, but the party stands to benefit from the same trend in other seats
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