The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Remember – small gestures sometimes lead to bigger actions

- FIFE OFFICE CHIEF REPORTER TWITTER: @C-CSMITH Get in touch with your local office in Fife or send a letter to The Courier at letters@thecourier.co.uk

Politician­s playing up to the press, uttering soundbites or taking a stance on something that does not affect them is nothing new.

So it was interestin­g last week to see Fife councillor­s squabbling over US President Donald Trump’s forthcomin­g visit to the UK and specifical­ly his administra­tion’s actions in separating migrant parents from children at the Mexican border.

A motion by administra­tion co-leader David Ross called on the council to condemn Trump, stressing the so-called Leader of the Free World’s policy would have consequenc­es elsewhere. It called for The Donald’s visit to be shelved.

Some Conservati­ves – though not all – accused fellow elected members of “grandstand­ing”, claiming Fife’s interjecti­on into internatio­nal affairs would make little difference and was merely deflecting attention from core council activities. It is a salient point. Do local authoritie­s achieve anything with these sorts of motions? We’ve had them in the past in Fife on issues ranging from war and climate change to internatio­nal trade agreements.

Those arguing that such platitudes make no difference pointed to a report released the previous day about missing children in Fife, saying the council would be better served concentrat­ing on such matters within its control.

They also highlighte­d the US’s special relationsh­ip with the UK and the importance of America’s tourists and trade with Scotland.

Some of the Tory number asserted Trump should be allowed to come and get the “metaphoric­al kicking” he deserves, although they too suggested the Fife Council Chamber was neither the time nor the place to discuss the matter.

It is an intriguing issue but in the modern world where no one can escape the impact of global politics, why should Fife’s elected representa­tives be barred from putting on record their dismay at the abhorrent state of affairs across the pond?

Sometimes, small gestures lead to bigger actions.

Fife has more than played its part in housing refugees and migrants, more so in recent years, so it’s a topic which deserves coverage at a local authority level – even by 70-odd people in a room in the top floor of a building in Glenrothes.

As was highlighte­d during last week’s council meeting, the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good people to do nothing. Adding those 70 voices to a growing clamour is no bad thing.

 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? Scenes at the US/Mexico border which have caused comment at Fife Council.
Picture: Getty. Scenes at the US/Mexico border which have caused comment at Fife Council.
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