The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Is the Prime Minister secretly recruiting for the SNP? There seems no other explanatio­n

- Mandy Rhodes MANDY RHODES IS EDITOR OF HOLYROOD MAGAZINE WWW.HOLYROOD.COM FOLLOW ON TWITTER @HOLYROODMA­NDY

If the SNP was to employ a recruiting sergeant for independen­ce, it would look a lot like Boris Johnson.

The Tory prime minister, who is also remarkably the so-called minister for the union, may well be accused of shirking on his own leadership responsibi­lities, but he is certainly doing Nicola Sturgeon’s job for her. And then some.

His latest faux pas came during a Zoom session with his newly acquired collection of north of England MPS which was designed to reassure them that having helped Johnson back into No 10, they hadn’t been forgotten. Instead, his comments left the Scottish Conservati­ves wishing his memory and his concern had drifted just that bit further north of Hadrian’s Wall.

During the meeting Johnson inexplicab­ly went on a tirade about devolution. He said it had been “a disaster” north of the border and described it as “Tony Blair’s biggest mistake”.

And notwithsta­nding the fact that, just possibly, the Iraq War was Blair’s biggest mistake, the comments come on the back of a surge in support for independen­ce which appears directly linked to a widespread antipathy in Scotland for Johnson personally, an anger over Britain’s exit from the European Union of which he is seen as the architect, and more clumsily, on the eve of the Scottish Conservati­ve Party’s annual conference this weekend, at which the new party leader, Douglas Ross, makes his bid for power in the very institutio­n of devolution that Johnson has just slagged off.

And despite the transparen­tly cynical reverse ferret attempts by No 10 to say how much the prime minister applauded devolution – just didn’t like the separatist­s that dominate it – his comments only

served as red meat to the nationalis­ts and as a big redder for Ross.

Johnson’s ability to put his foot in it is legendary and while many Scottish Tory politician­s might wince every time he opens his mouth – indeed, one told me he was happy that as a backbenche­r he was no longer responsibl­e for having to answer for the PM’S gaffes – there is very little they can do to stop him.

Ross, to give him his due, may publicly disagree with Johnson on some matters, but it is quite literally gesture politics. He and his Scottish colleagues cannot disassocia­te themselves from the PM or his words. And while logic might take them back to the radical idea mooted by the Tory MSP, Murdo Fraser, in 2011 in his own leadership bid, of creating an independen­t Scottish party, that ship has sailed. For the party to separate now would simply be another own goal in an argument dominated by the constituti­on.

Imagine at every turn, Ross would be having to defend his own bid to separate from a party that continues to deny the SNP a referendum on independen­ce. Sturgeon told her Twitter followers that it was “worth bookmarkin­g” the prime minister’s descriptio­n of devolution. That’s because his comments will be repeated ad nauseum and simply feed into the nationalis­t argument that the Scottish Parliament is not safe in the hands of the Tories which kind of makes the election in May next year to that place, a slam dunk for the SNP.

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