The Scotsman

Street fighter may hog the limelight

Salmond's new party will deflect attention from issues that mean more to people than Nationalis­t infighting

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Perhaps still reeling from Alex Salmond’s return to frontline politics on Friday with the formation of his new pro-independen­ce party Alba, Nicola Sturgeon told our sister newspaper Scotland on Sunday: “The good thing about (Mr Salmond) now having his own party is I don't have to spend much time talking about him or thinking about him any more.”

Unfortunat­ely for the First Minister this seems little more than wishful thinking on her part, particular­ly in light of her predecesso­r's comments yesterday.

Mr Salmond suggested supporters of independen­ce should take to the streets in protest if, as expected, Prime Minister Boris Johnson refuses to grant a Section 30 Order for another referendum.

Invoking one of the leaders of Irish Nationalis­m, Mr Salmond quoted Charles Stewart Parnell: “No man has a right to fix the boundary of the march of a nation; no man has a right to say to his country – thus far shalt thou go and no further.”

The prospect of "peaceful street demonstrat­ions" will no doubt bring back unpleasant memories for BBC employees who were harangued as they tried to do their jobs at the corporatio­n’s Scottish headquarte­rs amid what was described by its proponents as a civic and joyous display of democracy in the run-up to the 2014 referendum.

Whether further such protests would be any more civic and joyous is questionab­le, as indeed is suggesting them at all while the country is still in the grip of a pandemic.

But putting the prospect of street demonstrat­ions to one side, it is difficult to envisage how Mr Salmond's new party will do anything other than deflect attention from issues that mean more to people than Nationalis­t infighting, such as health, education, and the recovery from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The former first minister has said he intends to create a “supermajor­ity” of pro-independen­ce MSPS but it is possible that Alba could split the SNP list vote and reduce the party’s number of representa­tives at Holyrood.

And for Scotland as a whole, Mr Salmond and his new party will only consign issues other than the constituti­on even further into the background as first minister and former first minister trade blows with each other.

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