The Sunday Post (Dundee)

First Minister’s message of hope as thousands march for Yes

First Minister has the talent to make monumental change but will she risk it?

- By Chris Deerin MAIL@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Nicola Sturgeon says the SNP is giving people hope for a better future while the party’s rivals disintegra­te over Brexit.

The First Minister was speaking ahead of the party’s autumn conference in Glasgow today. Ms Sturgeon said the three-day event will focus on domestic matters such as improving the NHS and boosting wages.

She added: “At this most crucial time in the UK’S negotiatio­ns on its future relations with the EU, Labour and the Tories have fallen apart into bitter faction-fighting.

“The people of Scotland deserve better than the despair, incompeten­ce and chaos of Westminste­r – and the SNP is offering a clear message of hope.

“In government, we’re building a fairer and more prosperous Scotland – protecting the most vulnerable in society, making the tax system fairer and investing in our NHS and other vital public services.

Yesterday, tens of thousands of proindepen­dence supporters marched through the streets of Edinburgh before rallying near the Scottish Parliament.

Organisers claimed the numbers were approachin­g 100,000 but police estimated the number to be closer to 20,000.

At the SNP conference today, Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf will announce a dedicated task force to improve victims’ experience­s of the justice system.

The taskforce will hear evidence directly from victims on their experience­s of the justice system.

Mr Yousaf said: “I have made clear my determinat­ion to develop a truly victim-centred approach which will demand coordinate­d action by justice system partners and victim support organisati­ons.

“This task force will accelerate progress by keeping up momentum and ensuring accountabi­lity, focusing on the improvemen­ts that matter most to victims and working together to break down barriers to change.”

There are only a handful of Scottish political leaders whose names truly resonate across the decades.

Most are Labour. Tom Johnston, the Red Clydesider who became Churchill’s wartime Scottish Secretary and who created the North of Scotland Hydro-electric Board that brought electricit­y to the Highlands.

John Smith, who returned his party to electabili­ty and who but for his tragic early death would have made it to No 10.

Donald Dewar, who piloted the legislatio­n to create the Scottish Parliament through the Commons and then became the country’s first First Minister.

And Gordon Brown, powerful Chancellor of a three-term government, who as Prime Minister rose to the global challenge posed by the financial crisis.

The SNP hasn’t yet produced one of these leaders: a figure whose achievemen­ts and reputation place them above the prejudice of party politics.

Alex Salmond won two Holyrood elections for his party but showed little interest in producing transforma­tive policy for the country; and he lost the independen­ce referendum. His predecesso­rs are largely of interest only to SNP historians.

Nicola Sturgeon had – and perhaps still has – the potential to be different, and earn herself a place in the pantheon.

She is a politician of surpassing gifts: a commanding orator, a keen appreciato­r of the nuts and bolts of policy, the single most-important player in the overdue feminisati­on of Scotland’s macho political culture.

She is emotionall­y intelligen­t, morally driven, has a sharp sense of humour and is no stranger to selfdeprec­ation. She reads books and draws lessons from them, a rarer quality in politics than one might expect. She is unchalleng­ed as the pre-eminent figure in her party and government (as one SNP MP put it to me last week, “if something happened to her tomorrow who would step in as leader? Who fills those shoes? I have no idea”.)

She pretty much has it all, then. And most impressive, I think, is her capacity for personal growth.

Sturgeon was a shy and introverte­d child who spent her fifth birthday party hiding under a table reading, as her friends played ring-a-roses.

She admits, she “wasn’t particular­ly outgoing… and I was like that through my teenage years.”

In her early days as a politician she was “quite po-faced and serious. Too serious”. The woman who, mistress of all she surveys, will confidentl­y deliver her set-piece speech to the SNP’S conference in Glasgow this week has been on quite the journey.

But there is one thing standing between the First Minister and true historical importance, one flaw that threatens to limit her to the ranks of “good but not great,” and it is nothing to do with whether she secures Scottish independen­ce or not – it is her caution.

Sturgeon gives the impression of being allergic to risk, perhaps even of being scared of failure. And while caution is in some ways and on some occasions an admirable trait, there are times when a leader must go for it

There are times when a leader must go for it, pick fights where they really matter

– pick fights where they really matter, win them, and be willing to make enemies along the way. I don’t doubt the First Minister’s head and heart are in the right place.

I’ve talked to her and the people around her often enough about policy to know that on education, to take one key issue, she knows what needs to be done to improve our under-performing schools.

Her problem is that the only way to bring about this long-overdue change is to go to war with Scotland’s protection­ist education establishm­ent: the General Teaching Council, Education Scotland, and the EIS, Scotland’s main teaching union.

As the former SNP deputy leader Jim Sillars put it to me last week, “reforming education means taking on vested interests like the EIS, which is one of the most conservati­ve institutio­ns in the country. That requires courage but the government has retreated.

“That’s a real sign it can’t find the will to examine an issue, come to a conclusion and drive it through.”

Sillars is no fan of Sturgeon’s leadership – she “is more of a technocrat than a leader with the kinds of qualities required,” he says – but in a series of conversati­ons over the past week I found his analysis is shared even by supporters.

To quote a senior member of her party: “She is more strategic where Salmond was tactical, but that meant that Salmond was on it every minute, driving the agenda.

“She is longer term but that can make it seem like she’s letting things happen to her. She’s got to drive herself. Everything is in her favour, there were some good things in the Programme for Government, but she’s not following through.”

And James Mitchell, professor of public policy at Edinburgh University and a leading thinker on Scottish nationalis­m, said: “There are so many deep-rooted policy challenges around the economy, demographi­c change and so on. I think there’s a tiredness there, and a bit of timidity. What they need are new ideas, but they seem frightened of their own shadow.”

In the end, independen­ce is not in the First Minister’s gift, and those expecting some big announceme­nt on the issue at SNP conference seem likely to be disappoint­ed.

But there is much that is in Sturgeon’s control – choices that only she, with the might of her office, can make. She finds herself at the helm at a time when the world is convulsing and shape-shifting.

Britain is leaving the EU, power is shifting from the West to Asia, and we are only in the foothills of a technologi­cal revolution that will transform the way we live and work. A little boldness is essential if Scotland is to take advantage of this change.

In short, take some risks, First Minister. Give us something to remember you by.

 ??  ?? Thousands march through Edinburgh
Thousands march through Edinburgh
 ??  ?? Workmen finish off the stage set for SNP conference in Glasgow yesterday; Nicola Sturgeon, right Main picture Andrew Cawley
Workmen finish off the stage set for SNP conference in Glasgow yesterday; Nicola Sturgeon, right Main picture Andrew Cawley
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