Scottish Daily Mail

OF POTHOLES AND POWER

Once, local elections were about the humdrum – roads and bin collection­s. But in a febrile Scotland, May 4 may be a test of who holds the reins in the fight to decide the country’s future

- by Stephen Daisley

All politics is local, ran the maxim of legendary US politico Tip O’Neill, a deal-making Democrat of the old school. O’Neill worked his way up from the back room of the party machine to become Speaker of the House of Representa­tives and the wily nemesis of Ronald Reagan.

In the middle of the 1982 recession, and with an eye on the forthcomin­g elections, O’Neill introduced a $1billion jobs Bill in Congress. The House Republican leader Robert H Michel instinctiv­ely went on the attack, linking the Bill to Reagan’s ideologica­l quest against big-spender Democrats.

Gotcha. O’Neill stood up and began to read the name of every bridge in Michel’s district found to be unsafe and that was set to be repaired under the shovel-ready scheme. TV cameras hummed to life at the sight of this political theatre and beamed O’Neill’s bravura performanc­e into homes across the nation, including in Peoria, Illinois, where Michel’s constituen­ts sat puzzled by their man’s apparent indifferen­ce to crumbling flyovers.

The Republican scrambled back home to make good with the locals and save his seat in November. He had learned the hard way that all politics is local.

Voters in Scotland might be about to challenge that epigram. They head to the polls soon for the first time since last year’s Holyrood election and the twin shockwaves of Brexit and the SNP’s renewed push for independen­ce. On May 4, electors will choose who runs the 32 councils across Scotland, five years after the last local contest delivered a modest victory for the SNP, with labour coming a close second.

The Tories, meanwhile, took a minor skelping and the poor lib Dems were royally blootered. (In Edinburgh’s Pentland Hills ward, a man dressed as a penguin and answering to the name Professor Pongoo attracted more first preference votes than the lib Dem candidate.)

All this was before the independen­ce referendum and the constituti­onalisatio­n of Scottish politics, which has completed a shift away from the traditiona­l left-vs-Right divide to a split along national lines.

Since almost everything in Scottish public life now seems to be viewed through the prism of the constituti­onal question, is it even possible to have a genuinely local election? Or will Nationalis­t and Unionist voters simply fall in line behind the two main parties – Independen­ce Now or Independen­ce Never; the SNP or the Conservati­ves?

The starting point is that these elections are the SNP’s to lose. The Nationalis­ts dominate Holyrood and the Scottish contingenc­y at Westminste­r and polling shows no indication voters are tiring of the party, even as they grow more critical of its actions (or inaction) in government.

Plus, it is difficult for the majority of the country that opposes the SNP’s only policy to use the electoral system to its advantage.

Under the Single Transferab­le Vote, used in council polls to deliver a more proportion­al result, voters number the candidates in order of preference instead of choosing just one. This makes tactical voting more problemati­c than in a first past the post race, such as Westminste­r or the constituen­cy ballot in Holyrood elections.

Council elections tend to be plagued by apathy and low turnout but as the campaign gets noisier expect to hear as much, if not more, talk about the constituti­on as potholes and bin collection­s.

The SNP will be hoping for a bit of both, its diehard support backing it the way ultraloyal football fans trudge along to trivial friendlies just to cheer on their team.

But they will also want local issues to be at the forefront because outside the Church of Yes there is little appetite for further constituti­onal brouhaha. The SNP has to persuade these voters that it cares at least as much about improving their communitie­s as it does about sticking Saltires on the few public buildings in Scotland that don’t now fly them.

Ruth Davidson will be shouting at the top of her lungs to remind the electorate what the Nats really care about. She wants voters to focus on the political paralysis the SNP has kept the country in and to give the Nationalis­ts a bloody nose as a comeuppanc­e.

IF they do, it wouldn’t be hard enough to slug them off the top spot in overall number of councillor­s but there will be voters, even some of them sympatheti­c to independen­ce, weary of the unceasing constituti­onal wrangling.

They might want to send Nicola Sturgeon a reminder that they’re paying her to run Scotland, not the campaign for a second referendum.

The country, we are told, sorely wants Miss Sturgeon to ‘get back to the day job’. The country hasn’t thought this through. In making Indyref 2 her day job, the First Minister has striven to establish the case for a distinct Brexit deal for Scotland, build a majority for separation and demonise Theresa May as Maggie Thatcher in slinkier heels.

Net result: A majority of Scots want the same EU exit agreement as England, backing for a breakaway has actually gone down, and Theresa May is now more popular than, um, Nicola Sturgeon. At the rate Miss Sturgeon’s going, Glasgow and Dundee are going to ask for their 2014 votes back.

In this regard, the First Minister has done herself no favours with her royal visit to the United States this week. (She was introduced to an audience in New York on Thursday night as the ‘Queen of Scots’.) The SNP boss is ostensibly there to meet other leaders and sign a climate deal with the Governor of Califor-

nia. Perhaps it would be churlish to point out that the Scotland Act empowers the First Minister to sign nothing more binding than a birthday card. After all, the last Labour First Minister – and he probably will be the last – Jack McConnell fancied himself as something of a statesman too.

But the sight of Miss Sturgeon addressing the United Nations, glad-handing foreign dignitarie­s, rubbing shoulders with America’s power elite as if she really were head of state – the whole Indira McGandhi routine – will not sit well with some back home.

Not because, as the Nationalis­ts predictabl­y charge, critics resent Miss Sturgeon’s role as a powerful woman or are so self-loathing they don’t wish to see Scotland being recognised on the world state. (Nor does anyone begrudge the First Minister a jolly; she is recognised across Holyrood as a hard worker who puts in punishing hours.) The rub is that she isn’t the Queen of Scots – she’s the First Minister, she’s got a job to do in Scotland and she is failing badly at it.

Miss Sturgeon has delivered lofty speeches Stateside, spouting the wonders of independen­ce when education and the health service here stumble from one crisis to another. It would be nice if cancer patients could be seen on time and independen­ce was stuck on a waiting list for once.

Of course, the SNP is all but guaranteed to retain the most councillor­s across Scotland after the election. The contest is in truth one for second place.

In this, the Tories have the obvious advantage. They are the largest opposition party at Holyrood and their leader is popular to an extent that infuriates political opponents and confounds the wizened seers of Scotland’s academy and punditocra­cy.

CAN the Tories turn their starmaker and their newfound prominence into votes at council level? They might just manage it but if they do, it won’t be by following Tip O’Neill’s advice.

Tory council leaflets across the country have played up the threat of a second referendum and reminded voters it has been Miss Davidson standing up for the Union while Labour continues to tie itself in knots over independen­ce. (Comments this week by David Martin, one of Labour’s Scottish MEPs, will do nothing for Kezia Dugdale’s efforts to win back Unionists. Mr Martin told an interviewe­r he wasn’t sure how he would vote in another plebiscite on separation.)

If the Conservati­ves are standing as the anti-Indyref 2 party, Labour is barely able to stand.

The party faces meltdown the length and breadth of the country. In Glasgow, it is putting up a fight, and has the not insignific­ant advantage of being led by Frank McAveety, though few expect it to retain control of the last redoubt of socialism in Scotland.

Its campaign is not so much optimistic as quixotic. For although Labour was written off in 2012 only to cling on against all the odds, it is now up against a formidable Glasgow SNP leader in Susan Aitken.

That she gives Labour the fear was obvious from its clunky attempts to exploit Miss Aitken’s recent comments about population decline in Glasgow and Detroit.

Her argument was a reasonable one – if politicall­y naive – and was not intended to compare Glasgow to the Michigan population centre, which grimly boasts the third-highest murder rate in the United States.

But the fact that Labour sprung into action and charged her with ‘talking down Glasgow’ – a nifty appropriat­ion of the SNP’s favourite catchphras­e – shows it knows it has met its match.

For Labour, May 4 will be a salvage operation.

And what of the smaller parties? The Liberal Democrats lost almost 100 seats last time round, punished for their UK colleagues’ decision to go into coalition with the Tories. (How we long for simpler times when that was the great outrage rocking political life.)

But the party has reached a floor in support that it has been building on.

Willie Rennie has positioned his party as the only pro-UK, pro-EU party, opposing a second referendum on Scottish independen­ce while demanding a further plebiscite to keep Britain in Europe.

Mr Rennie and his colleagues will be hoping this unique stance brings them the votes of centrists alarmed by the prospect of a Brussels breakaway shaped by the Tory Right and dismissive of the SNP’s costly and divisive push for independen­ce.

The Lib Dems are famed as crafty (and dirty) local campaigner­s but in this election it could be national issues that initiate the party’s slow return to political relevance.

The Scottish Greens are hardly key players in council politics but have a distinct advantage in their longstandi­ng attachment to localism and taking more power from the centre so decisions can be made in the communitie­s that will be affected by them.

The Scottish Government has a lengthy and ignoble track record of centralisa­tion, the crown jewel being its now-defunct council tax freeze which was electorall­y popular with hard-pressed families but imposed brutal cuts on local services.

Set against this backdrop the Greens should be poised to clean up but even here, Tip O’Neill’s apophthegm could be in for a shoeing.

Patrick Harvie’s decision to abandon his party’s manifesto pledge and back a second independen­ce referendum on Nicola Sturgeon’s terms has not gone down well with people who thought they were voting for an environmen­talist party rather than the SNP juniors six-a-side team.

MR Harvie built up a reputation as a serious politician during the referendum; remember it was he who was willing (at least at first) to dissent from Alex Salmond’s Acme currency union and point out the strange ticking noise coming from within.

But like the SNP, Mr Harvie has refused to accept the 2014 referendum is over and to that end has transforme­d his party into a constituti­on-first, climate-changelate­r outfit.

Despite his politics being far to the Left of the average Scot, those who wear their bleeding heart on their sleeve have been willing to lend him their vote in the past. In return, they trusted him to keep the rest of them honest.

They may have voted for an independen­ce supporter but they didn’t vote for a yes-man.

Now that he has gone from green to a paler shade of yellow, will the Conscience of Kelvinside be able to hold onto their votes or might they decide the Greens’ pusillanim­ity at Holyrood is a bad omen for how bold they would be in local government?

Much is at stake on May 4 but local services won’t necessaril­y be at the top of the agenda.

We will find out if what is local is what still matters or if Scotland is the exception to Tip O’Neill’s rule and all politics here is now national.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Decision day: Local elections were once solely about everyday issues. Will May 4 be different?
Decision day: Local elections were once solely about everyday issues. Will May 4 be different?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom