The Scotsman

The Rainbow Parliament is a distant memory as new normal prevails

Before the SNP took over from Labour as the dominant party in Scotland, the electorate embraced new voices and views

- Scott Macnab

The Scottish election of 2003 produced the “Rainbow Parliament”, the broadest mix of political parties and widest crosssecti­on of views ever to occupy the 129 seats at Holyrood.

Seven party groups were returned, including a record seven Greens and six Scottish Socialists. Older people also found a direct voice in Holyrood through John Swinburne, leader of the Scottish Senior Citizen’s Unity party. There was also three independen­ts with both Margo Macdonald in the Lothians and Dennis Canavan in Falkirk returned, while former GP Jean Turner won a shock victory in Strathkelv­in and Bearsden, standing against hospital closures.

The Labour Party still had the biggest quota in the chamber with 50 seats, almost twice the SNP figure of 27. but both the two main parties had lost seats, while the Conservati­ves had 18 and the Liberal Democrats 17.

It signalled a shift towards a greater diversity of debate at Holyrood. And although Labour and the Liberal Democrats still had the numbers to form a Coalition administra­tion, the new political make-up at Holyrood did usher in a more collegiate approach in the days before politics

in Scotland became so dominated by the constituti­onal issue.

Perhaps the defining moment of the new “rainbow” make-up was when the Scottish Socialist Party’s Rosie Kane was sworn in, taking her oath to the Queen with her right hand raised to reveal the words “my oath is to the people” scrawled on the palm of her hand.

The Rainbow Parliament saw a record nine members’ bills introduced by MSPS themselves, rather than waiting for the Government tolegislat­e.this compared with two the following session between 2007 and 2011.The veteranant­i-poll tax campaigner Tommy Sheridan, leader of the Scottish Socialist party (SSP), was among first off the mark with a bill which would have seen the council tax abolished and replaced with a local income tax. It fell at the first hurdle when MSPS rejected the general principles, despite the SNP campaignin­g on a similar policy in 2007 when the party won the election.

Margo Macdonald also took on the controvers­ial issue of prostituti­on, introducin­g a bill to legalise “tolerance zones”. It came after a long-running experiment, operating in Edinburgh’s Leith area was scrapped after complaints from residents. The move did thrust the issue into the spotlight although Margo eventually withdrew the bill after Scottish ministers pledged to take it on and subsequent legislatio­n was passed. It fostered a sense that the Parliament was emerging as a fulcrum of creative ideas and people. But the dream began to tarnish as the SSP was torn apart by infighting when Sheridan sued the now defunct News of the World newspaper over claims about his private life. The subsequent trial gripped Scottish politics, but tore the party apart, as some of its MSPS claimed Sheridan had admitted visiting a swingers club in Manchester to them, while he denied it.

The fall-out saw the SSP wiped at the election of 2007, while the Greens were reduced to just two. With Canavan stepping down, only Margo survived outside the main parties.

The Rainbow Parliament was probably less about a new dawn than a shifting political dynamic. Voters weren’t particular­ly enamoured with Jack Mcconnell’s management­style approach to governance and John Swinney was uninspirin­g as SNP leader. As the bigger parties floundered, Scots were ready to look elsewhere. By 2007, with the SNP in the hunt for victory under Alex Salmond, the election became a traditiona­l twohorse race with the smaller parties squeezed out. And as constituti­onal politics appears to dominate all in Scotland, the prospect of 2003 being repeated any time seems as distant as that pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.

As the bigger parties floundered, Scots were ready to look elsewhere

 ??  ?? 0 Rosie Kane was one of six Scottish Socialists elected in 2003. All lost their seats in 2007
0 Rosie Kane was one of six Scottish Socialists elected in 2003. All lost their seats in 2007

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