Gulf Today

Did Sturgeon actually get referendum result she wanted?

- Cathy Newman,

Politician­s love a victory rally. But I’ve never witnessed one in celebratio­n of defeat before. That’s what happened ater the Supreme Court ruled Nicola Sturgeon didn’t have the power to hold a second independen­ce referendum as planned next year: Scotland’s first minister promptly gathered her supporters in Edinburgh to hear tub-thumping speeches about liberating themselves from the English oppressors.

Watching the saltire-waving crowd, I was struck by the exuberance of a bunch of people who had just been defeated.

And make no mistake, Sturgeon’s response to the Supreme Court ruling — that she’d treat the next general election as a “de facto” referendum — was almost universall­y seen as a gamble that she lost.

The stakes in the SNP leader’s bet have risen even higher in recent months, as Labour’s resurgence nationally — and in Scotland, under their sure-footed leader, Anas Sarwar — will surely deprive the SNP of votes at the next election. Under her own terms sketched out yesterday, if Sturgeon fails to secure 50 per cent of the vote, she’s lost her de facto referendum. And even in their best performanc­e, the SNP has never reached that benchmark. So now, with Labour likely to make serious inroads in Scotland, her task looks tougher still. Her predecesso­r, Alex Salmond, with whom she long ago parted company, twisted the knife yesterday — warning the woman he once considered his protegee that she had led his former party down a blind alley by taking the challenge to the Supreme Court.

Even Sturgeon herself seemed somewhat cresfallen. And yet…

Returning to last night’s defeat rally, it’s easy to write off the mood of the crowd as the fervour of evangelist­s devoted to their cause. But there’s something else that explains it too.

Could it be that Sturgeon and her crew are energised, excited even, by this fresh grievance against the Westminste­r establishm­ent?

Though the Supreme Court roundly dismissed the SNP’S perennial argument that it was being oppressed; the ruling provided fresh fuel for the party’s burning resentment of the English political classes. Talking endlessly about independen­ce – a kind of “neverendum” campaign — not only focuses the —arty and its grassroots on the issue they care most about, but also provides a welcome distractio­n from scrutiny of the Scotish government’s domestic record.

Scotish school standards compare poorly with England’s. In maths and science, for example, Scotland’s 15-year-olds lag behind England by 17 points, the lowest since 2012 in the OECD’S authoritat­ive Pisa education rankings.

On the NHS, A&E waiting times are the worst ever — though England’s health service is admittedly struggling even more. And Scotland has the highest rate of drug deaths in Europe.

Defending all that, then, ater the SNP’S 15 years in power, would be more challengin­g than being able to bash the Tories on their refusal to allow a second independen­ce referendum. The SNP are themselves the establishm­ent in Scotland, but picking a fight once again with Westminste­r allows them to play their preferred role of the plucky insurgents.

An exclusive Channel 4 News poll by Find Out Now in the wake of the Supreme Court decision found that 50 per cent of Scotish voters would back the SNP at the next general election if it could lead to Scotland leaving the UK.IT’S highly risky, but going for broke on independen­ce could still be a winning formula for Sturgeon. And Labour and the Conservati­ves — though they’d never admit it publicly — know that. Otherwise, if they were so confident of winning the argument on the union, they’d call the SNP’S bluff and consent to another referendum.

 ?? ?? Nicola Sturgeon
Nicola Sturgeon
 ?? ?? Anas Sarwar
Anas Sarwar

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain