The Scotsman

Snps’ dominance shattered a year after sturgeon’ s arrest

◆ Labour realises the political and personal undertakin­g that switching from the SNP to Labour represents, says Jackie Baillie

- Jackie Baillie is MSP for Dumbarton, Scottish Labour’s deputy leader and her party’s spokespers­on for health

This time last year, as the Scottish political village absorbed the shock resignatio­n of Nicola Sturgeon as First Minister, police swooped to arrest her husband. Peter Murrell, by then the SNP’S former chief executive, was arrested in a dawn raid and later released without charge, pending further investigat­ion into party finances.

The event was accompanie­d by the now iconic blue investigat­ion tent on the couple’s lawn, the bizarre discovery of a £110,000 camper van at Murrell’s mother’s home, a raid on the SNP party HQ, and the arrest and release of party treasurer Colin Beattie.

By then the SNP had lost 30,000 members, lost its communicat­ions chief over the mis-direction of the press on that figure, and failed to allay concerns about £666,953 raised between 2017 and 2020 to fund independen­ce campaignin­g and a party treasurer’s resignatio­n over a lack of the “financial informatio­n” necessary to do the job.

A year on, and after the inevitable arrest of Sturgeon, we await the conclusion­s of the police and possibly the procurator fiscal’s considerat­ions of Operation Branchform. That unimaginat­ive title simply does not match the detail of the saga contained therein. In that year the SNP has lost its way, the governance of Scotland has plunged into chaos, and a luxury Jaguar car sold to the “We buy any car” site has been thrown into the mix.

That was the least of it. A deeply divisive leadership battle threw up a continuity candidate who hasn’t been up to the job. Senior MSPS have been suspended, a rival has crossed to the pre-tarnished Alba party, and one MP has left the party to spend more time with his sheep, claiming they show more signs of independen­t thought than his former colleagues.

Policies have been jettisoned in the face of public anger and panic, the economy has flatlined, the health crisis has deepened, and the ferries still aren’t ready. Yet, such is the sense of in-built arrogance that the SNP’S Westminste­r leader Stephen Flynn feels he can make lame jokes about requisitio­ning the infamous campervan for travel to this summer’s Euros.

The sense of entitlemen­t of a party in power for too long reached its apex with failed Heath Secretary Michael Matheson concluding it’s somehow OK to charge the public purse for his £11,000 ipad bill. Matheson misled the public over the affair and, worse, the First Minister continues to back him.

When last year’s arrests happened, the Snp’ s political dominance was beginning to slip. Now it’s shattered. The chaos engulfing the Tory party is matched by incompeten­ce and entitlemen­t of senior SNP politician­s. On the doorsteps, their own members tell us of the sense of betrayal they feel over leaders they once admired.

The latest polling has Scottish Labour set to return as Scotland’s major party at Westminste­r, with the SNP trailing behind. That won’t happen without former SNP voters, who may well be former Labour voters beforehand, moving their support across. None of us in Labour underestim­ates the political and personal undertakin­g that will be for many.

But we will work as hard to earn the trust of voters as much as the SNP has dispensed with it.

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 ?? ?? The iconic blue investigat­ion tent on Nicola Sturgeon’s lawn
The iconic blue investigat­ion tent on Nicola Sturgeon’s lawn

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