The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Aquestion of competence

As hearings into the government’s unlawful inquiry into Alex Salmond come to a climax, commentato­rs look ahead to what could – and should – happen next

- BY JAMES MITCHELL Professor of Public Policy at Edinburgh University

Forget the feud between Ted Heath and Margaret Thatcher or Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. The fallout between Nicola Sturgeon and Alex Salmond is in a league of its own.

Most SNP members are perplexed and confused by it all. Lack of transparen­cy has encouraged speculatio­n and conspiraci­es, aided by partisan spin from both camps. There are divisions within the SNP and most have nothing to do with the Salmond-sturgeon dispute. However, an absence of reliable informatio­n has allowed splits to be presented as part of that rift and that, inevitably, attracts most attention. It is poisoning the SNP.

The special Holyrood committee was given a clear agenda: to investigat­e the “actions of the first minister, Scottish Government officials and special advisers in dealing with complaints about Alex Salmond”.

It is an attempt to uncover and learn from errors, to separate fact from fiction at the heart of the matter that has caused the rift between Salmond and Sturgeon.

What is indisputab­le is that Lord Pentland found the Scottish Government’s actions were “unlawful in respect that they were procedural­ly unfair” and “tainted with apparent bias”. The promise of transparen­cy and constructi­ve engagement has simply not happened. The obfuscatio­n, inconsiste­ncies, memory losses and evasion of accountabi­lity have been shocking.

The Scottish Parliament was founded on four principles: power sharing between people, parliament and government; accountabi­lity; openness and transparen­cy; and equality. What we have witnessed has not only been the abnegation of those principles but contempt for them.

Both Salmond and Sturgeon have tried to set the committee’s agenda in ways that suit them. Salmond has sought to question whether the unfairness was due to more than apparent bias but a deliberate attempt to smear him. Sturgeon seeks to deflect attention from the committee’s formal agenda altogether by attempting to make this about Salmond rather her government.

But there is more to SNP divisions than this. It is always difficult to follow a strong leader, especially one intent on being a backseat driver. New leaders need to prove they can improve on the performanc­e of the immediate predecesso­r. For a couple of years it looked as if Nicola Sturgeon would succeed. She was Salmond’s chosen one. He had wanted Sturgeon to become leader in 2004 but it became clear that Roseanna Cunningham would have defeated her then. A deal was struck.

Salmond entered the contest 17 years ago to stop Cunningham. Sturgeon stood, instead, for the depute position. It was seen as the “dream team”. He would eventually stand down and allow her a turn at leadership.

Over the following decade, she operated in his shadow, waiting patiently for her turn. He rarely made a major speech without talking up her leadership credential­s in a classic example of succession management. It was so successful that, when Sturgeon stood for leadership, nobody else entered the contest – the first unconteste­d election for the SNP’S most senior post in over half a century.

She inherited the party at its peak – support for independen­ce was higher than ever. Salmond’s legacy included the near wipe-out of Scottish Labour in 2015 when the SNP won 56 of Scotland’s 59 Commons’ seats.

Sturgeon easily establishe­d herself as leader. Few inside the SNP openly questioned her presidenti­al style – copying Salmond’s approach to leadership – with the series of rallies in late 2014 that helped build a strong and very loyal following. But there were soon intimation­s of problems.

The SNP lost its overall Holyrood majority in 2016. The following year it lost 21 of the Commons 56 seats, though it regained 13 in 2019. Support for independen­ce appeared to have stalled, though polls suggested consistent, if modest, majority support over last year but the anticipate­d 60% has not happened. Momentum had been lost. Concerns started to be voiced, initially privately, that the leadership was complacent, relying on Boris Johnston and Brexit to make the case for

‘ Momentum had been lost. Concerns started to be voiced

independen­ce. In 2014, 55% of SNP members voted in the depute leadership contest. About a third voted the following year and in 2018 the party did not provide data on turnout – a sure sign that all was not well – with speculatio­n that only about a quarter of SNP members had voted. Much of the 2014 energy had gone.

These problems were brushed aside by SNP spin doctors. Whatever problems the SNP faces, it has an outstandin­g communicat­ions team and a leader who is a brilliant communicat­or. But SNP communicat­ions prowess has hidden deeper divisions and problems that remained unaddresse­d but caused concern amongst a growing body of activists.

Unlike her predecesso­r, Sturgeon displays little confidence in economic affairs, though she is well aware of its importance in debates on independen­ce. Her main initiative in this area was to appoint a commission chaired by lobbyist Andrew Wilson. His appointmen­t proved deeply divisive. Wilson was on the party’s right wing and Sturgeon was long thought to be on the left. His report sat for months on the first minister’s desk before it was published. The Growth Commission report is seen as an Austerity Commission in large sections of the independen­ce movement and has created a deep and festering fissure.

Most attention focused on the currency of an independen­t Scotland but there were other problems. Intended to appeal to business, the divisions created within the wider independen­ce movement led business to see this uncertaint­y as leading to instabilit­y. Sturgeon’s reluctance to give fulsome support or much sense of her position sat at odds with the strong leadership she was providing in other areas of policy. Having built a reputation on the left, her image on the economy was becoming blurred. Freezing the council tax and severe cuts in local government funding cannot be reconciled with progressiv­e politics.

Sturgeon has emphatical­ly progressiv­e credential­s on gender but a hazy image at best on the economy. This has inevitably led to criticisms and a growing awareness that any future referendum would see a very significan­t split on critical matters. Will those currently inactive SNP members feel motivated to campaign if, as seems likely, the movement is deeply divided?

In 2007, the SNP formed its first government knowing that it won despite its support for independen­ce. It had a two-stage strategy. It would convince voters that it was competent, that it could run government well. It expected this would lead to increased support for independen­ce. In 2011, it won an overall majority that led to the 2014 referendum due to perception­s of competence and, ironically, by putting independen­ce on the back burner.

But Lord Pentland’s damning indictment of the Scottish Government combined with poor performanc­es across a range of policy areas suggest something has gone wrong. Combining governing competence with campaignin­g for independen­ce is a challenge. In seeking to divert attention from examining her government’s mishandlin­g of complaints against

Alex Salmond, Nicola Sturgeon may undermine more than the hardearned SNP reputation for competence. She may end up underminin­g the Scottish Parliament’s founding principles. Accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and powershari­ng must be respected.

 ??  ?? Nicola Sturgeon watches Alex Salmond speak at the SNP
Nicola Sturgeon watches Alex Salmond speak at the SNP
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 ??  ?? Sturgeon at First Minister’s Questions in January
Sturgeon at First Minister’s Questions in January

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