West Lothian Courier

Tories do not speak for us

- Andrew Stuart 66 Norfolk Court Glasgow

As a nation Scotland hasn’t voted Tory for 60 years and, even despite overtaking Labour, still languish at less support than Margaret Thatcher’s low point.

Yet particular­ly since the Brexit vote they act as if the people of Scotland overwhelmi­ngly support them and will accept anything the Tory party wants to impose on them.

Before the independen­ce referendum Ruth Davidson promised us voting “No means we stay in” the EU.

She and David Cameron signed a pledge saying “power lies with the Scottish people ... to decide how Scotland is governed”. Cameron went further by saying “all the options of devolution are there and are possible” if Scotland voted No.

The Tory rhetoric was clear. Both Theresa May and Ruth Davidson said Scotland was an “equal partner” in the UK. David Cameron promised “no going back to the way things were”.

But what have they done since winning the 2015 election and the Brexit referendum that puts 80,000 Scottish jobs at risk and will result in living standards as the falling pound threatens inflation?

A referendum that they only held because of splits in the Tory party. A Brexit Ruth Davidson said was based on “lies” yet now tells people will be wonderful.

Despite saying a No vote meant power lay with the Scottish people and that we could have all options of devolution the Tories voted down proposals by 95 per cent of Scotland’s MPs that more powers should be devolved.

Scotland voted No on the promise that the Tories wouldn’t return to the way things were done in the past and on the basis power lay with the Scottish people.

Scotland voted to Remain in the EU and the European single market to protect jobs. The reality under a Tory Westminste­r government doesn’t even come anywhere near that.

It is their arrogant actions that are narrowing the choices for Scotland’s future meaning the only way we can have an equal partnershi­p with the rest of the UK is independen­ce because the alternativ­e is a future of Tory government­s telling Scotland what to do just like they did in the 1980s.

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