The Scotsman

With two years to go, Yousaf already appears to have run out of steam

◆ The polls show that the SNP is losing its place as the voice of the independen­ce movement, writes John Mclellan

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Your elected representa­tives will be trudging back to Holyrood today for the last session before the summer recess, an 11-week run-in without a break, in what already feels like the fagend of a tired Scottish Parliament. But, as the UK readies for change, the Scottish Parliament will stay the same for two years, two years of increasing resistance to what the Snp-green coalition thinks is good for us and an agenda for which a growing number of people did not realise they were voting.

Approval ratings are low for all the current political leaders, but that only 29 per cent of SNP supporters believe Humza Yousaf is doing a good job is quite an achievemen­t. SNP support is now down to 31 per cent, according to Yougov, which if reproduced on the day would see its number of MPS cut from 43 to 18.

Fearful nationalis­t MPS can’t look to Holyrood for a lifeline, and the new session will get off to a flyer with this afternoon’s ministeria­l statement on the implementa­tion of the Hate Crime and Public Order Act. By any stretch of the imaginatio­n, an unmitigate­d public relations disaster, Mr Yousaf’s administra­tion will try desperatel­y to pin the blame on vexatious complainan­ts, especially those who reported his now infamous “white” speech when justice minister in 2020. But the arrest, search and short detention of a 74-year-old Troon woman on suspicion of committing a hate crime on the say-so of a nuisance neighbour says everything anyone needs to know about the atmosphere and confusion that this legislatio­n has caused. For that, the buck stops squarely at the door of St Andrew’s House, and there will be more of it tomorrow when the Scottish Conservati­ves lead a debate in which they will call for its repeal.

The temperatur­e isn’t likely to be turned down next Tuesday when the Victims, Witnesses, and Justice Reform Bill comes up for its stage-one debate, controvers­ial legislatio­n which proposes to create pilot rape trials under a single judge without a jury which, if implemente­d, c ould lead to a raft of appeals from those denied what until now was a basic legal right, and see rapists go free as a result. The new Victims and Witnesses Commission­er smacks of the creation of an expensive and confusing layer of bureaucrac­y, and one which has run into trouble in England.

The following day, the Children (Care and Justice) Bill reaches its final stage, which will include the withdrawal of controvers­ial plans to ban the identifica­tion of anyone under 18 who is a witness, victim or perpetrato­r of a crime because of unforeseen consequenc­es arising from a flawed consultati­on process. For Scottish Conservati­ve justice spokesman Russell Findlay, it’s as if all his Christmase­s have come at once.

Of the other 24 live bills, the Gender Recognitio­n Reform Bill was passed 17 months ago and is going nowhere after being blocked by the UK Government. Similarly, the catchy European Charter of Local Self-government (Incorporat­ion) (Scotland) Bill went through over three years ago, only for the Supreme Court to rule some provisions were beyond Holyrood’s powers. The Circular Economy (Scotland) Bill is linked to the botched deposit return scheme, also blocked by the UK Government because of its impact on the single UK market.

It's not to say there is not important legislatio­n on the conveyor belt, such as the Visitor Levy (Scotland) Bill, which provides the framework for local tourist taxes, but much of the rest of it is procedural stuff unlikely to enthuse a Scottish public increasing­ly disenchant­ed with the choices on offer. Myriad plans are bubbling under in the consultati­on process, like heat

Much of the Scottish Government’s programme smacks of legislator­s searching for something on which to legislate

in buildings; bans on conversion therapy; the “Good Food Nation”; marketing restrictio­ns on food and drink high in fat, sugar or salt; and biodiversi­ty laws, all spell trouble for the SNP. Legislatio­n for the eradicatio­n of bovine viral diarrhoea could be a euphemisti­c metaphor.

Readers can, of course, make up their minds about these plans, but so much of it smacks of legislator­s searching for something on which to legislate, and the products of pressure group lobbying. But with so much division – and in the case of Gender Recognitio­n Reform, and the failed Named Person scheme, outright rejection by a clear majority – the claim by retiring MP Stewart Hosie that the SNP “has always been, and will continue to be, Scotland’s voice” does not stand up to a moment’s scrutiny.

Mr Hosie has never been short of confidence, but the polls show that never mind Scotland, the SNP is losing its place as the voice of the independen­ce movement. And with Mr Yousaf ’s tumbling approval ratings, and prominent SNP figures like Kate Forbes and Fergus Ewing diverging from the current orthodoxy, it’s even questionab­le if the leadership is the voice of SNP members. “Whether that’s in councils, in Holyrood, at Westminste­r and on the world stage,” Mr Hosie told the Herald on Sunday, without a hint of irony.

Yet the Voice of Scotland has nothing to say about Dr Hilary Cass’s devastatin­g indictment of gender clinics, the use of puberty blockers and irreversib­le changes in the bodies of children, which cuts across the Snp-green position on trans rights. A government apparently dedicated to the protection of children was silent for days, the Voice of Scotland appearing to develop selective laryngitis.

Mr Yousaf will gargle with the political Benylin before addressing the STUC congress in Dundee later this week, trying to maintain the conflation between the SNP and national “values”, whatever they may be, to stem Labour’s advances. “I will be calling on people to vote for what they believe in, and vote for a progressiv­e future for Scotland that I know we all want to see,” he is expected to say.

And this from someone who conjured up the unprogress­ive council tax freeze? When even SNP supporters are looking for a different delivery man, for nationalis­ts the summer can’t come quickly enough.

Legislatio­n for the eradicatio­n of bovine viral diarrhoea could be a euphemisti­c metaphor

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