The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Tactical voting can save Scotland from the SNP and potential economic doom

- Jenny Hjul

Nicola Sturgeon has put herself at the centre of the SNP’S election battle, insisting she is the only politician offering “serious leadership” and promoting her brand rather than the party’s on campaign posters.

As Scotland’s first minister for the past seven years and by far the most visible of the current party leaders, it would be odd if she wasn’t regarded as the SNP’S biggest electoral asset.

But the day will come when she must go and, if she alone can lead, as she says, who would the nationalis­t movement be left with?

Sturgeon has said she will serve a full five-year term if re-elected first minister by the parliament after the results are in.

But what if she gets a hammering, even a relative one, tomorrow? She is defending a 9,593 majority in her Glasgow Southside constituen­cy and it would take a monumental upset to unseat her.

Her chief challenger is Scottish Labour’s new leader, Anas Sarwar, who is widely regarded to have had a good election.

He is unlikely to beat Sturgeon but if he puts a big enough dent in her support, her future will be cast into doubt and the repercussi­ons felt across the Yes project.

The SNP need to win 65 seats for an overall majority, two more than they secured in the 2016 election. The most optimistic polls – for unionists – suggest there is less than a 30% chance of that.

Anything under 60 seats would be a significan­t blow to party morale, and would force Sturgeon into the humiliatio­n of hard bargaining with Patrick Harvie’s Greens.

Worse for her is the spectre of Alex Salmond muscling in on a proindepen­dence alliance, should he or any of his Alba party hopefuls be successful on the regional list.

Sturgeon has said she will not work with Salmond and he will not co-operate with her (legal) approach to constituti­onal change – which seeks Westminste­r approval – because it is doomed to fail.

This is hardly a resounding mandate for a new independen­ce referendum, which has been the focus of the SNP’S campaign, even if they have been in denial because it is in such poor taste as Scotland recovers from the impact of Covid.

The election looks set to produce a low, perhaps historical­ly low, turnout as people put their lives back together.

The political scientist John Curtice said a comparison of polls conducted in the past few days and those from early March shows little shift in voting intentions. The

electorate, it seems, is indifferen­t to manifesto pledges and doorstep (or virtual) enticement­s.

If Sturgeon has appeared weary at times it is because she knows that the momentum needed to break away from Britain has been lost, if it ever existed.

A consistent downward trend gives the nationalis­ts about as much of a chance now as they had back in 2014, in the unlikely event that they could stage a second plebiscite.

So, what are people voting for? If it’s not the SNP’S uncosted and therefore ruinous plans for secession, why waste a vote on a party that has delivered nothing of value in 14 years in government?

The SNP has had plenty of opportunit­y to address the problems in education and the NHS. They have had resources but not resolve to fix the rural housing crisis, and invest in transport infrastruc­ture.

Voters need look no further than the

state-engineered ferry building fiasco on the Clyde for evidence of SNP incompeten­ce.

Opting for the Greens makes even less sense. Their agenda would plunge Scotland into a new Dark Ages, with all industry and means of wealth creation destroyed, and eco-diktats exerting coercive controls on our behaviour.

There is still time to stop the rot. Although the leaders of both Scottish Labour and the Scottish Conservati­ves are untested, their parties, along with the Lib Dems, can hold off the threat of further damage to Scotland.

The solution to another five years of nationalis­t navel gazing is to vote tactically for whichever unionist candidate has the best chance of winning. And then to favour Labour, the Conservati­ves or Lib Dems in the regional vote.

By delivering a bloody nose to the SNP, voters can save Scotland from the brink of disaster. We may have to wait until the

2026 election to restore a unionist government, but a minority nationalis­t administra­tion – with a weakened leader – will have no authority to pursue divisive secessioni­st politics.

Scotland has not benefited from SNP rule and deserves better governance that puts national interests before nationalis­t obsessions. The future is in our hands and we must use our votes responsibl­y, for the whole country’s sake.

We must use our votes responsibl­y, for the whole country’s sake

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 ??  ?? ON THE RUN: Nicola Sturgeon and the SNP may win the most seats – but the momentum for another vote on separation is slipping.
ON THE RUN: Nicola Sturgeon and the SNP may win the most seats – but the momentum for another vote on separation is slipping.

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