The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Nicola Sturgeon: a warning at the end of the road

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Nicola Sturgeon’s resignatio­n is a massive political event. We shall return to that. But it is also something more, and this too is massive. Her resignatio­n is a warning. The warning is best summed up in 10 plain words spoken by Scotland’s first minister in her surprise announceme­nt in Edinburgh on Wednesday: “I am a human being as well as a politician.”

Politician­s do not ask for pity, love or praise. Too often, however, they get only cynicism, abuse and even, in another word carefully chosen by Ms Sturgeon this week, brutality. This is particular­ly true of women politician­s, who still have to cope with intolerabl­e attentions and pressures that men are often spared.

What Ms Sturgeon said on Wednesday is concerning and shaming. A modern leader is never off duty, never has privacy, is unable to do “ordinary stuff” like go for a walk, and is spotlit and held to account with far greater ferocity than in the past. The responsibi­lities are immense, and so is the physical and mental impact.

Ms Sturgeon is not the first leader to succumb to the pressures, as Jacinda Ardern showed. Nor will she be the last. This attrition of talent and decency should make us reflect. The polarised attack culture, for which the media bear a large responsibi­lity, is a social evil; its civic consequenc­es are dire. Politician­s, women politician­s in particular, should not have to endure it. If we are not careful, politics risks becoming the preserve of the wealthy, the corrupt, the brutal and the brazen.

To be clear, for many years Ms Sturgeon gave as good as she got. Behind the brilliant communicat­or and landslide election winner was a tough and sometimes ruthless operator. She would not have survived for 16 years at the summit of politics without both sets of abilities. But Scotland is not the

only place that urgently needs something better than the politics of angry noise.

Ms Sturgeon has not resigned simply because she has had enough. She is still by some distance the most popular politician in Scotland, though her numbers have dipped. Her Scottish National party remains politicall­y ascendant, still backed by 44% of voters in a Holyrood match-up and 42% in a Westminste­r one.

She is going, above all, because her independen­ce referendum strategy – the heart of what she and her party stand for – has run out of road. Her attempt to cast the next UK election as a proxy referendum is on the verge of collapse, a testament to her wider failure to leverage the SNP’s many electoral victories into another independen­ce vote in an attempt to reverse the failure of 2014.

More immediatel­y, her domestic policies are also facing a concatenat­ion of criticism. Her handling of gender recognitio­n reform has made her unpopular. Her promises on the NHS, education, public services and roads have not been fulfilled. Her government is in trouble over costly ferry-building projects and disputes over its deposit return scheme. Her party is being investigat­ed by police over financial transparen­cy issues, including a £107,000 loan from her husband.

Ms Sturgeon’s road has ended. The SNP’s rivals, especially Labour, naturally sense an opportunit­y. They should not assume this tolls the knell for independen­ce. David Cameron misread the signs after the referendum in 2014.

The result was a huge swing to the SNP. As Ms Sturgeon in turn now quits the scene, neither Conservati­ves nor Labour should repeat Mr Cameron’s mistake of thinking that traditiona­l UK politics will re-establish themselves in Scotland either soon or easily.

 ?? Andrew Milligan/PA ?? Nicola Sturgeon arrives home after announcing her departure as first minister. Photograph:
Andrew Milligan/PA Nicola Sturgeon arrives home after announcing her departure as first minister. Photograph:

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