The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Politics has become feral, the old rules are gone and the cheats and liars are thriving

Corbyn will not rush to green-light another vote on the constituti­on

- BY CHRIS DEERIN

a UK level will completely reframe the terms of debate around the constituti­onal questions in Scotland.” On Fr i day an opinion poll showed support for Scottish Labour has fallen dramatical­ly over the last two years.

The Yougov poll put Labour in fourth place on 12%, down from 27% at the 2017 General Election.

The polling website, the Electoral Calculus, suggests that this could leave Labour with just one MP in Scotland, the same number they won in 2015.

Mr Leonard spoke to The Sunday Post while campaignin­g in Pollok in the marginal Westminste­r seat of Glasgow South West.

The SNP won the seat two years ago with a majority of just 60, with a swing of 12% to Labour. Their candidate, Matt Kerr, is contesting the seat again.

Mr Leonard said: “We know that in 2017 the polls showed Labour over 20 points behind the Tories, and over the course of the campaign when we started getting broadcast media covera ge and got our message across on the doorsteps there was a huge transforma­tion in people’s voting intentions.

“We saw not only a rise in the number of Labour MPS in Scotland, from just one up to seven, but in many seats, including this one, there was less than 100 votes between the SNP and Labour.”

In an open letter to Labour supporters yesterday, Conservati­ve MSP Annie Wells urged them to vote for her party to stop another independen­ce referendum.

She wrote: “It is not the Labour Party of old.

“It’s certainly not the Labour Party of Red Clydeside or of Donald Dewar.

“It’s not even the Labour Party of Gordon Brown, who so passionate­ly defended the union in the last moments of the 2014 referendum campaign.”

Meanwhile, Lib Dem leader Willie Rennie said the Conservati­ves were losing support with Boris Johnson becoming Prime Minister and Scottish leader Ruth Davidson resigning.

He said: “We need to learn the lessons of Brexit, not repeat the mistakes with independen­ce. That’s why I am directly appealing to everyone who wants to end the constituti­onal division to come with us.”

There’s nothing new about lying politician­s. You could write a book about them. In fact, lots of people have – a quick click on Amazon can fill your shelves with weighty volumes on the subject.

I suspect there will be more than a few additions to the canon following this general election campaign. This is, of course, the age of Donald Trump, who has normalised lying to such an extent that it is safest to presume everything he says is untrue unless advised otherwise.

He, and populists like him, are helped in their manipulati­ons by modern technology. Social media such as Twitter allows politician­s to make instant, calculated and inflammato­ry statements that are shared among millions of supporters in the blink of an eye, regardless of veracity. The old adage that a lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is getting its boots on has never been so apposite.

In Britain we have often looked across the Atlantic with a sort of amused superiorit­y. The cartoonish nature of US politics, its dayglo politician­s, the vast sums of cash spent on hokey TV adverts and brutal attack campaigns – America might be the world’s most powerful nation, but its political process is corrupt and ludicrous. Currently, though, British politics is every bit as rank.

Consider the video put on to Twitter by the Conservati­ves last week that showed Keir Starmer, Labour’s Brexit spokesman, being interviewe­d on TV about leaving the EU. The Tories edited the clip to make it look as if Starmer failed to answer the questions. It was a straightfo­rward and mendacious distortion of the truth.

We will see more rather than less of this. Politician­s are, I think, like bankers – we do our best to regulate their behaviour but they will always find loopholes that give them an advantage. When the technologi­cal wild west is offering new opportunit­ies to get one over on the opposition, it is sadly unimaginab­le that political campaigner­s would pass up the chance. How long until we see the first deployment of “deep fake” video, where digital manipulati­on can make it look like a person has done and said things they never have?

I know a large number of politician­s, of all stripes, and the overwhelmi­ng majority are deeply committed to serving the public good. Most believe they are doing the right thing, for the right reasons.

However, there’s a reason so many of the best MPS are quitting before December’s election: the old rules and decencies no longer apply, the game has become feral, and it is those most willing to play dirty who are thriving.

Every blatant lie told by a campaign is targeted to rile further the ravening hordes who have already made our public space intolerabl­y unpleasant. The resulting abuse, both verbal and physical, of politician­s is exactly what the populists want.

Susan Aitken, leader of Glasgow City Council, wrote last week that “those who feed, encourage and amplify these accounts are as guilty as the trolls themselves for the harassment, fear and alarm. We are in a dangerous place.” She is right.

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 ??  ?? Shadow Brexit Secretary Keir Starmer last week
Shadow Brexit Secretary Keir Starmer last week
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