The Scotsman

Cherry row is just the latest tremor before the quake awaiting the SNP

- Paris Gourtsoyan­nis

Why do SNP MPS at Westminste­r look so unhappy? The party is riding high in the polls, whether that’s at Holyrood or Westminste­r. Despite the uncertaint­y over a second referendum, support for independen­ce remains near historic highs. Labour is divided, the Tories are demoralise­d, and both are in disarray over Brexit. So certain is the SNP’S victory in next week’s European elections, it’s barely being remarked on because the fight between the other parties for the scraps is so much more interestin­g.

But the atmosphere within the SNP group at Westminste­r, insiders say, is “total sh*t”. To have a sitting SNP MP tweet about “backstabbi­ng”, in an obvious reference to party colleagues, is unpreceden­ted – not because the Nationalis­ts don’t do rows, but because we haven’t seen them spill out into the public like this since the advent of social media. Colleagues are astonished the tweet was sent during PMQS from the bench behind Ian Blackford, shortly after he had taken on the Prime Minister, and in the last week of an election campaign.

The immediate cause are the claims of bullying levelled at Joanna Cherry by four former members of her office staff, now being examined by House of Commons officials, which she strongly denies. Sitting behind that, however, are far more fundamenta­l questions.

The SNP hasn’t had a meaningful leadership contest since 2004, when the Scottish Parliament was new, Scotland was painted deep Labour red and the Nationalis­ts remained a somewhat awkward, fringe concern. For 15 years, there’s hardly been so much as a question about the party leadership. Salmond, then Sturgeon – the mantra went unchalleng­ed. Until it started being challenged by Salmond himself.

Even before the former first minister took his own government to court over its investigat­ion into alle - gations of misconduct, Salmond was pulling in a different direction from Sturgeon: on independen­ce, on his relationsh­ip with Kremlinbac­ked broadcaste­r Russia Today – and behind the scenes, in the personal intrigues that are the stuff of party politics. In her extraordin­ary

interview at the weekend, in which she blew up the row with claims of a smear campaign against her, Cherry talked about SNP parliament­arians being “hung out to dry” by their party.

That could only have been a reference to Michelle Thomson, once the MP for Cherry’s neighbouri­ng constituen­cy. Thomson had to resign the SNP whip during a police investigat­ion into her property portfolio, and was eventually denied the right to contest her seat again. Her treatment was the subject of the first rift between the enlarged Nationalis­t group at Westminste­r and the SNP hierarchy. The protest by SNP MPS had Salmond’s support.

Sturgeon has found herself destabilis­ed by the challenge of maintainin­g an independen­ce strategy amid the storm of Brexit, and by her predecesso­r. It means for the first time in a generation, the SNP is thinking about what – and who – comes next. It’s a natural question for any other political party. For the SNP, it inspires an anxiety crisis.

In one sense, the SNP is a victim of its own success. The size of Labour’s majority in 1997 fuelled the BlairBrown saga: there were more bodies to divide into factions.

Other than at the formation of the Scottish Parliament, the only SNP MP to voluntaril­y make the switch from Westminste­r to Holyrood has been one Alex Salmond. Now there are half a dozen SNP MPS or more – not to mention an MEP – weighing up whether to try for a Holyrood seat and climb the ministeria­l ladder, or even vault straight to the top.

Which brings us back to Joanna Cherry. In an attempt to smooth things over, Sturgeon used her first public comments on the row to hail the Edinburgh South West MP as “hugely talented” and a “massive asset” to the party.

Those weren’t empty words. Her critics claim Cherry is difficult, brittle and lacks friends among her Westminste­r colleagues – but she was only narrowly defeated in the ballot of MPS for group leader by Ian Blackford. “She is the best example of someone who’s intelligen­t but not clever,” one SNP insider says.

Cherry has managed to keep a foot in two SNP camps: those who want Sturgeon’s government to move faster towards a second independen­ce referendum, and the party’s staunch pro-eu supporters – some of whom are new converts to the SNP and potentiall­y to independen­ce, and therefore particular­ly valuable to the Nationalis­ts.

The QC raised her profile on Brexit by putting herself at the forefront of the legal case at the European Court of Justice that demonstrat­ed the UK could unilateral­ly revoke Article 50.

And Cherry represents a key battlegrou­nd for the SNP: a Toryfacing constituen­cy in a wedge of relatively wealthy, pro-eu and proUnion Edinburgh. Edinburgh South West is the kind of place where the SNP firewall against the Tories, Liberal Democrats and Labour must hold if it wants to renew its mandate at Holyrood. She did well to defend the seat in 2017 from a strong Tory candidate.

Which is a long way of saying this: the more unhappy Cherry is, the greater the risk to Sturgeon. “I can’t work out her strategy,” one Westminste­r SNP source says of Cherry. “She’s fighting everyone.” Another suggests the Edinburgh MP is stoking the row precisely because it keeps the ground shifting beneath Sturgeon’s feet.

Whatever the plan is – if there is one – SNP insiders know that the distractio­n, division and damage caused by this row are just a preamble to the moment later this year when Salmond appears at Edinburgh Sheriff Court.

No wonder they look so unhappy.

 ??  ?? 0 Joanna Cherry is facing bullying claims by four former members of her office staff – claims she strongly denies
0 Joanna Cherry is facing bullying claims by four former members of her office staff – claims she strongly denies
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