The Sunday Post (Dundee)

If someone claimed chips would be crispier after independen­ce I wouldn’t be surprised

- By Euan McColm

EVERY time it seems Scottish Labour has hit rock bottom, it finds a little further to fall.

Just a decade ago, the party dominated our politics, controllin­g councils across the country, in charge at Holyrood, and sending a regiment of MPs to Westminste­r.

Now, the giant is felled. As a poll for The Sunday Post reveals, Labour is on course to come a humiliatin­g fourth in terms of seats won in June’s General Election.

The Survation poll illustrate­s starkly just how dire are the straits in which Scottish Labour finds itself. In 2015, Labour was polling more than 24% yet won just one of Scotland’s 59 Westminste­r seats; now the party can count on the support of just 18% of Scots.

Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale should count it a triumph if its sole Scottish MP, Ian Murray, retains his seat.

To compound Labour’s misery, Scottish Conservati­ve leader Ruth Davidson has transforme­d her party’s fortunes. Back in the foreign country of the noughties, Labour candidates could turn up on housing estates, get out of their cars by the swings, shout “Thatcher”, and be back in the West End of Glasgow in time for duck confit for tea at the Ubiquitous Chip, safe in the knowledge that the necessary votes were in the bag.

Labour members reading our poll will wince at the increase in support for the Tories – up from below 15% in 2015 to 28% now. And after the initial jab of pain, the burning, all-consuming agony of the realisatio­n that some of those planning to back the Conservati­ves are the very voters upon whom Labour could, until recently, depend.

Inevitably, regardless of what policies are raised by candidates, the campaign in Scotland will be about one thing only – independen­ce. If I was in the chippy and the bloke behind me in the queue said chips would be crispier in an independen­t Scotland, I would not be at all surprised.

The poll contains good and bad news for the SNP. The bad news is that a majority of Scots continue to oppose the break-up of the United Kingdom. No leads Yes by 53 to 47.

The good news for the SNP is that more than a third of Scots say a Conservati­ve majority (and, barring some kind of miracle, that’s what we’ll get) in June would make them more likely to support independen­ce.

The SNP faces quite the challenge if it’s to replicate its success of 2015. The poll suggests the party might pick up 47 seats, down from 56 in the last General Election.

By any standards, victory in all but 12 of Scotland’s constituen­cies would represent a stellar success for the SNP but Miss Sturgeon will be concerned if the result shows any loss of

momentum. If the SNP does lose seats, it is the Conservati­ve Party that stands to gain, with polling suggesting Scotland could soon have eight Tory MPs.

Miss Davidson’s success is no accident, of course. After the 2014 referendum, while Labour foolishly tried to woo disinteres­ted Yes voters, the Scottish Conservati­ves staked a credible claim to be the defenders of the Union.

Miss Davidson’s grasp of the new political divide – with the constituti­onal question replacing old arguments of left v right – saw her campaign on a promise to do all she could to prevent Indyref 2.

Now the most popular unionist politician in Scotland, Miss Davidson has – to a degree – detoxified the Tory brand. And she stands to come through the election strengthen­ed by the result. Whether the Tories have reached their peak in Scotland is a question that remains unanswered.

If there is any comfort to be had by Labour members, it is from the prospect of crushing defeat hastening the departure of Jeremy Corbyn. It is not at all clear that the Labour brand can be saved but, if a credible replacemen­t for Mr Corbyn can be found, the party may have a chance of revival (south of the border, at least).

Nicola Sturgeon proposes to hold a second vote on independen­ce either late next year or early in 2019 (I know. Can you believe how lucky we are to get to vote so often?).

The result of the General Election should give us an idea of whether the First Minister’s referendum plan is wise.

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