The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Time to look to future, not past

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Sir, - During the 2014 independen­ce campaign I led more than 100 Better Together volunteers in an area of Edinburgh which is home to tens of thousands of people.

Over that summer each volunteer I trained was told that our message was that a no vote was about securing more powers for Holyrood.

This was the vow we made on literally thousands of doorsteps.

Eighteen months later it is now clear that the vow has been delivered with the negotiatio­ns on the Fiscal Framework reaching a successful conclusion.

As John Swinney said on BBC Radio Scotland: “The Smith Commission report has been delivered”. And as Nicola Sturgeon said in Holyrood: “This deal will ensure that funding for Scotland will not be changed without the Scottish Government’s agreement.”

This is what Scotland voted for in 2014.

As the party of government, it fell to the SNP to ensure that more powers were delivered while ensuring “not a penny” is taken from the Scottish Government’s budget.

The SNP’s role is ironic given the financial ruin that would have come with their preferred referendum outcome.

An outcome which no independen­t fiscal analysis has shown would be in Scotland’s interests.

We cannot, however, let more powers and fiscal agreements be the end point of Scotland’s political enlightenm­ent.

The SNP have shown themselves to be a timid government which is happy to tinker at the edges of the problems Scotland faces and manage gradual decline.

It is now time for the political class in Scotland to put their constituti­onal difference­s aside and draw up bold plans for Scotland’s future.

Let’s talk less about the 1707 Act of Union and more about using Holyrood’s newly won powers to ensure health, education and welfare in Scotland is fit for the 21st Century.

Dr Scott Arthur. 27 Buckstone Gardens, Edinburgh.

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