The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Scots Tories had a clear choice between voting to uphold the law or not (no spoilers)

- Mandy Rhodes

With the resignatio­n of the UK’S Government’s most senior law officer in Scotland, the Advocate General, the Scottish Conservati­ves are left with a choice – do they back the law, or do they break it?

And extraordin­arily, with the ink hardly dry on Lord Keen’s resignatio­n letter, and with lawyers sitting in the Commons and Lords unnerved by being privately told they will never practise law again should they support the Internal Markets Bill, it is the latter path that Douglas Ross’s party has chosen.

All six Scottish Tory MPS supinely trailed through the Westminste­r lobby last week, voting to support the law-breaking bill that they said was good for the country even though all five living former PMS had already condemned it as irresponsi­ble, illegal and dangerous.

The Conservati­ve Party, once the party of law and order, has gone feral. Its elected members now operate in a lawless state where the issue of legality means nothing.

And with the exit of Lord Keen, a former chair of the Scottish Conservati­ves, Ross has revealed himself as a leader less willing to stand up for Scotland than to stand by the side of an English-centric prime minister cocking a snook at devolution and the rule of internatio­nal law.

Douglas Ross has led the Scottish Tories for just over a month and has already shown himself to be a hypocrite, resigning his previous government post on a point of principle over Dominic Cummings breaking lockdown rules but is now standing by his party leader as he rides roughshod over legal principle.

Ross has repeatedly said that the SNP does not speak for Scotland. But he is the one that refuses to listen.

This isn’t, as has been painted by the Scottish Conservati­ves, another

example of grump and grievance from the SNP attempting to shoehorn any old excuse into their arguments for independen­ce. The Internal Markets Bill has been condemned by the Labour-led, proUnion Welsh Assembly as much as by the Scottish Government, by European leaders and by US President hopeful Joe Biden, who has pledged there will be no trade deal with a UK that does not respect the Good Friday Agreement.

For a brief moment, the new leader of the Scottish Conservati­ves was his own man, someone that stuck to his principles, and seemed to be no poodle of Boris Johnson’s government. But no longer.

And far from speaking up for Scotland, it feels like we are now hostage to a law-breaking, no-deal making, unscrupulo­us Tory party that is willing to sacrifice devolution on the altar of Brexit, and Ross is happy to hold the jailer’s key.

I was recently asked, in a discussion involving European journalist­s, why Scotland was so out of step with Westminste­r when it came to Covid lockdown rules and I had to correct the speaker and ask why England was so out of kilter with the rest of the UK.

Devolution has given us the opportunit­y to do things differentl­y and it is only now, with a prime minister who is so steeped in the past glories of a Britannia that really did rule the waves, that it should become so clear to England that the rest of the country has moved on.

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 ??  ?? Douglas Ross
Douglas Ross

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