Scottish Daily Mail

PM: NOW IT’S TIME TO COME TOGETHER

Warning Nationalis­ts are ‘trying to turn us all against one another’

- By Rachel Watson Deputy Scottish Political Editor

BORIS Johnson has accused the SNP of trying to turn Scotland ‘against itself’ with calls for a vote on independen­ce when the country needs to ‘come together’ to recover from the pandemic.

The Prime Minister yesterday hit out at Nicola Sturgeon’s plans to hold a second referendum in the next Holyrood term, insisting the focus must be to ‘build back better’ after Covid.

In a rousing speech to the Scottish Conservati­ve Party conference, Mr Johnson said it was ‘incredible’ that the SNP continued to push for separation at a time when people will ‘soon be reunited with our family and friends’.

He added: ‘The SNP think that this is the time to turn us all against one another.’

Mr Johnson’s attacks on the Nationalis­ts came as a new poll showed 45 per cent of Scots do not believe there should be an independen­ce referendum in the ‘next few years’.

Miss Sturgeon has previously set out her plans to seek a vote on breaking up the UK in the early part of the next Holyrood term, which runs from 2021 to 2026.

SNP Westminste­r leader Ian Blackford said last week there could be a vote late this year.

But the Panelbase poll carried out for the Sunday Times appeared to show little appetite for one, with only 25 per cent backing a vote in 2021.

It is the latest in a series of recent surveys to show support for independen­ce falling – with 47 per cent of Scots saying they would back the Union, compared to 46 per cent supporting separation.

Mr Johnson said: ‘Just when everything is beginning to reopen again, when we will soon be reunited with our friends and family, the SNP think that this is the time to turn us all against one another, to start another political fight.

‘Perhaps I shouldn’t be surprised: it is their party’s obsession. Yet surely even they have a sense of prithem? ority, of what is important right now? The SNP can see – after the impact of coronaviru­s – that people want time to renew their lives and to rebuild relationsh­ips that have become stretched.

‘They know that workers are concerned primarily about their jobs and businesses concerned for their future. How can the SNP say that a referendum is the priority to It is the last thing they need right now.’

Mr Johnson said there was a ‘tidal wave of opportunit­y and investment’ ready to ‘flow into Scotland’ to help support the postpandem­ic recovery.

He said all four nations were needed to ‘drive our UK recovery’.

The Prime Minister added: ‘We can build back better – but only if we all come together.

‘The SNP want to divide us, to turn Scotland against itself, at this of all times. So that is the goal for all of you in May, and what is at stake: to stop an SNP majority government and secure Scotland’s and the whole of the UK’s economic recovery from the coronaviru­s pandemic.’

Mr Johnson said the strength of the Union had been shown in recent months. He pointed to the successJoh­nson, ful vaccine rollout and signalled that ‘every single adult across the entire UK will have received their first injection by the end of July’.

He added: ‘What an incredible achievemen­t that is for our country. And it’s been a team effort that has shown the brilliance of every part of our Union, and has brought our country together.’

Mr Johnson also insisted the UK will ‘beat Covid’ and that ‘in the not-too-distant future’ businesses would be able to reopen and people would once again be able to hold family and friends.

He stressed the strength of the UK Treasury, which has delivered an additional £13.3billion for Scottish public services, protected more than 930,000 jobs and funded loans for 90,000 Scottish firms.

But Constituti­on Secretary Mike Russell last night hit back at Mr claiming that ‘no one is proposing holding an independen­ce referendum now’. He added: ‘The Prime Minister and his colleagues know that a Trump-like bid to deny democracy is untenable and unacceptab­le – which is why they are so busy in the background making plans on how to contest an independen­ce referendum.

‘This election boils down to one important question: who do voters want to lead Scotland’s social and economic recovery – a Scottish Government, democratic­ally elected in Scotland by the people who live and work here, or a Westminste­r govern

‘Reunited with our friends and family’

‘Brilliance of every part of our Union’

ment that we didn’t vote for led by the likes of Boris Johnson?

‘If Scottish voters in May back the SNP’s plan to hold a post-pandemic referendum, then he has no right to block it.’

Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross was yesterday interviewe­d as part of the conference by Holyrood leader Ruth Davidson.

In his keynote speech today, he will urge Miss Sturgeon to treat Scots like ‘adults’ as she sets out her routemap out of lockdown.

The First Minister is due to reveal her plans tomorrow, and they are likely to include indicative dates for the reopening of the economy.

Mr Ross is expected to say: ‘I challenge Nicola Sturgeon to stop putting Scotland’s future on hold.

‘Finally, after weeks of offering so little hope, publish the full plan that we’re all waiting on.

‘Not another half-hearted, halfwritte­n holding document that tells people to wait and see.’

GLANCING at the opinion polls, pro-Union voters could be forgiven for growing disconsola­te. Keeping half the country constantly ginned up for constituti­onal conflict may not create a single job or get a single child up to literacy standards but it certainly gives you a formidable electoral bloc.

As Ruth Davidson conceded in her opening speech at the Scottish Tory conference on Saturday, the SNP is going to win the May 6 election. If Nicola Sturgeon went to every door in the country and insulted the owner’s child, pet and/or colour scheme, she would still come out on top. That’s the way of it when the entirety of politics takes place in the narrow square inches of a flag.

But, as Davidson stressed, ‘that doesn’t mean we all pack up and go home’. There was ‘too much – far too much – at stake’ to do so. The SNP has already said that, should it win a majority, it will legislate for another independen­ce referendum – and if Westminste­r doesn’t like it, it will go to court. It’s hard to think of a course of action more likely to stir up rancour and division.

Davidson argued it was ‘absolutely essential’ that the Nationalis­ts be ‘held in check’ and you need not be a Conservati­ve to agree. It is in the interests of all the opposition parties, indeed all of Scotland, that there be a brake on a government bent on setting Scots against one other yet again.

Contempt

There are reasons beyond the constituti­on, too. The pattern of obstructio­n seen throughout the Salmond inquiry, the contempt for the Scottish parliament, for the idea of accountabi­lity itself – these are deeply troubling behaviours.

That the SNP has been able to get away with them as a minority government begs the question of how it might conduct itself with a majority.

An SNP victory cannot be stopped but there is a chance that an SNP majority can. Although it would see Sturgeon remain in power, her government would not always get its way. If the SNP and the Greens combined fell short of the 65 seats needed for a majority, plans for Indyref 2 would be dead in the water. The prize: respite from tedious constituti­onal wound-poking. The cost: tactical voting.

It’s a source of long-running debate whether tactical voting works but, if wellorgani­sed, it could help keep SNP gains to a minimum. But it needs voters across the opposition parties to set aside tribalism. It doesn’t work if one group casts their ballot tactically while the others stick with their side no matter what. Tactical voting is a two-handed operation: one to hold your nose, the other to vote for a candidate you would not otherwise back.

Helensburg­h Tories might not share Jackie Baillie’s social democratic worldview, but the Labour MSP is a tough-asnails political fighter against the SNP.

Not only does she stick up for the Union, her blunt questions and no-nonsense demeanour have made her the stand-out MSP on the Salmond inquiry.

Voting Conservati­ve in Dumbarton would hand the seat to Sturgeon’s candidate, who pulled up there having failed to win Edinburgh Western five years ago. A political GPS that guides you from one end of the M8 to the other in search of a winnable seat is a sign of a savvy candidate, but local voters might prefer an MSP with a different kind of compass.

In North East Fife, Willie Rennie is also facing a challenge from the Nationalis­ts. Whatever you think of the Scottish Lib Dems, their leader is firmly opposed to independen­ce and can be found daily hounding the SNP for its failings on Covid-19, education and mental health.

Sometimes when you see him in full flow, getting stuck into ministers with gusto and a dollop of good humour, you wonder how he ended up leading a bunch of wet flannels like the Lib Dems. But that is all the more reason to keep him in post.

For tactical voting to work, it has to go in both directions. In Ayr, John Scott, a moderate Conservati­ve, has a majority of just 750 over the SNP in a seat where more than 5,000 Labour votes were cast in 2016. These electors hold the key to victory.

If they stick with Labour, they could wake up with a Nationalis­t MSP; if they lend their vote to the Ballantrae farmer, they will deny Sturgeon a gain. Ditto in Galloway and West Dumfries, where Sturgeon loyalist Emma Harper aims to overturn Tory Finlay Carson’s 1,500 majority.

What no one can yet tell is what kind of SNP surge might occur in any given seat. The Conservati­ves’ Rachael Hamilton might seem safe with her majority of 9,000 in Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshi­re, but the Nationalis­ts will be pulling out all the stops to install list MSP and energy minister Paul Wheelhouse.

Last year, when Conservati­ve MP John Lamont spoke about celebratin­g Burns Night, Wheelhouse told him: ‘Rabbie Burns was a proud Scot every day of the year… not just once a year – unfortunat­ely you’re more likely to have a political epitaph of being one of a modern day “Parcel Of Rogues in a nation”…’ Labour and Lib Dem supporters, aware their parties stand no chance in this constituen­cy, might consider a one-off Tory vote given the alternativ­e on offer.

The biggest risk in tactical voting comes on the regional list. Truth be told, proUnion voters are being encouraged to waste their vote on minor parties that are not going to win a single seat. Those who feel the Scottish Tories are not assertive enough may be tempted to chuck a protest vote to All for Unity or the Abolish the Scottish Parliament Party, but they should ask themselves this question: Why hasn’t the SNP uttered a single critical word about these parties?

Attacking

They claim to be standing on the regional list to stand up to Sturgeon but Sturgeon is busy attacking the Scottish Tories, not these late-arrival Unionists. Might that be because she appreciate­s the value of these outfits to her chances of winning an outright majority?

All for Unity and those like it are too tiny to elect any MSPs but, with a fair wind, they might garner enough list votes to cost the Tories a seat here or there. The biggest irony may be that the parties that claim to be the most Unionist end up doing the most damage to the Union.

Take the Central Scotland list, from which the Tories elected three MSPs last time. The top three candidates are former Stirling MP Stephen Kerr, sitting MSP Graham Simpson and Meghan Gallacher, the Tory group leader on North Lanarkshir­e Council. If enough 2016 Tory voters switch to one of the fringe parties, Gallacher could miss out in favour of an SNP or Green MSP.

Given this is someone who vows to ‘focus on issues that matter, not a divisive independen­ce referendum’, it would seem counterpro­ductive for anyone who agrees to keep her out of Holyrood. The same goes for Glasgow, where the Tory list vote was just 6,000 ahead of the Greens in 2016. One Patrick Harvie is already one too many. Do we really want another one?

All for Unity is all over the place. It has endorsed Labour’s Monica Lennon in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse. Yet, when Nicola Sturgeon was demanding a second referendum in 2019, Lennon said: ‘If Boris Johnson isn’t prepared to grant this request, he should allow the Scottish parliament to decide.’ I happen to rate Lennon highly but it seems odd that a campaign which says it aims to ‘stop Nationalis­ts from holding a second independen­ce referendum’ would back a candidate who wouldn’t necessaril­y do so.

Pro-Union voters should not despair. There is still a chance to deny Nicola Sturgeon a majority, but to do so will require the setting aside of partisansh­ip and a fair dose of common sense about which parties are serious contenders. Scotland needs more MSPs who put Covid recovery first and fewer who put independen­ce before everything.

Any chance to bring that about should be taken up with vigour.

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 ??  ?? Interview: Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross with Holyrood leader Ruth Davidson yesterday
Interview: Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross with Holyrood leader Ruth Davidson yesterday
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