The Sunday Post (Inverness)

‘Too wee and too poor’ was No message

Tory grandee’s indyref anniversar­y blast

- By Andrew Picken apicken@sundaypost.com

FORMER Scottish Secretary Lord Forsyth has savaged the Better Together campaign, claiming it told Scots they were “too wee and too poor to run their own affairs”.

Speaking on the second anniversar­y of the 2014 Scottish independen­ce referendum, the Tory peer slammed the pro-Union side’s tactics and said he was “astonished” their mistakes had been repeated by the Remain camp during the Brexit campaign.

In a BBC documentar y, Nicola Sturgeon – who was on the losing side of the 2014 poll – also slammed her opponents’ negative strategy, claiming: “I could have made a better fist of it.”

But Better Together leader Lord Darling hit back, arguing the SNP was ducking tougher issues and obsessing about the constituti­on.

Asked about the pro- Union campaign, which won the independen­ce referendum with 55% of the vote, Lord Forsyth said: “It was absolutely appalling, I was regularly telling George Osborne to stop running a negative campaign, to stop telling Scots they are too wee and too poor to run their own affairs.

“And stop telling them they couldn’t have the pound.

“We started off in that campaign with only 28% supporting independen­ce and we ended up with 45%.

“The thing that astonished me is that they used the same playbook in the Brexit referendum, with catastroph­ic results.”

When asked if she would have been more worried about a less negative No campaign, Miss Sturgeon admitted she would have feared a No campaign that talked about “the great things about being British, a positive No campaign.

“That is the campaign I think we would have been much more troubled by, but they never ever got their act together.”

Speaking on the BBC Two documentar­y Scotland And The Battle For Britain, to be aired at 8pm tonight, the First Minister said: “I could have made a better fist of it than those who ran the No campaign.”

Asked about the prospects of a second referendum, Miss Sturgeon said: “I think an independen­ce poll is likely and the logic is that it comes about in the period before the UK leaves, but we don’t know when that is going to start.

“We don’t know if that two-year period will both see the UK leave the EU and negotiate its new relationsh­ip, or whether that two-year period will be just for Brexit.

“So there are so many unanswered questions for the UK right now.”

Lord Darling said: “When you think about it, if you spend three years telling people the answer to everything is independen­ce, you’re not going to give up on that.

“You are not going to say the day after, ‘oh well, we’ll try something else’.

“I just wish we could channel some of that energy into dealing with some of the problems Scotland has got.

“Children of low-income background­s still don’t get to university in Scotland. What sort of indictment is that in the second decade of the 21st Century?

“Constituti­onal questions are sometimes easier to debate than doing things that might actually make a difference to people.”

 ??  ?? Lord Forsyth.
Lord Forsyth.

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