Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Yousaf blew it with Greens

- Ewan Gurr PONDERING POLITICS, POVERTY AND PEOPLE IN DUNDEE

WHAT once seemed like a marriage made in heaven has collapsed in catastroph­ic fashion.

An acrimoniou­s divorce is never pleasant but, if there is one crumb of comfort, it is a future in which both parties are no longer required to live in the same house.

Sadly, in politics, these rules do not apply and, therefore, elected members of the SNP and Scottish Green Party will continue to inhabit the same political home. But where precisely did the relationsh­ip break down?

In August 2021, members of both parties voted overwhelmi­ngly to approve a power-sharing agreement which pledged to achieve several things. These included making Scotland “an independen­t country within the European Union”, investing over

£1 billion in energy efficiency and renewable heating as well as committing to marine environmen­tal protection.

So significan­t was the support that 95% of SNP members and 88% of Scottish Green members backed it, and Scottish Green co-conveners Patrick Harvie and Lorna Slater entered government.

On Thursday, shortly after Humza Yousaf dismissed the two ministers, the response was as you would expect after an acrimoniou­s divorce. Ms Slater described the dissolutio­n of the agreement as “an act of political cowardice… weak and thoroughly hopeless” and, at First Minister’s Questions, Mr Harvie brusquely asked who Mr Yousaf could now rely upon for his majority. By contrast, the first minister was congratula­tory of their collective achievemen­ts in his earlier press conference.

However, what achievemen­ts are these? Consider the agreement to which I earlier referred:

● The Scottish Government has spent over £150,000 on multiple independen­ce white papers and over £250,000 on Supreme Court legal fees and Scotland is no more of an independen­t nation nor EU member state than when this agreement was co-signed.

● It has already spent much of its £1.8bn budget penalising people who wish to use woodburnin­g stoves in new-build homes as well as transition­ing from existing heat pumps and boilers, yet energy costs are still to drop.

● It spent almost £100,000 deliberati­ng on highly protected marine areas before the minister responsibl­e, Mairi Mcallan, admitted a failure of “genuine collaborat­ion” with coastal communitie­s and scrapped the plans.

The above measures have either failed, cost significan­t amounts of taxpayers’ money to implement or been scrapped

– and I have not yet touched on their involvemen­t in pushing for low emission zones, a deposit return scheme and gender recognitio­n reform. Wherever you look in the Scottish political landscape, you see Green fingerprin­ts all over every failed scheme or example of political incompeten­ce.

Their central achievemen­t has been to alienate unionists on the constituti­on, rural inhabitant­s on energy-efficiency measures, fishermen on marine areas, lowincome drivers in non-compliant vehicles, businesspe­ople on deposit return and the wider public on gender reform.

Former Scottish Green leader, Robin Harper, last year wrote: “I am seriously concerned by many aspects of the Green performanc­e in the parliament. (They) have drifted from their central ethic – the environmen­t.”

Last week, the Greens left government. This week – Humza Yousaf?

 ?? ?? EMPTY GESTURES: The deposit return scheme was incompeten­t.
EMPTY GESTURES: The deposit return scheme was incompeten­t.
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