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07-30-2020 , 10:35 AM
Another tough day for Jackson Carlaw, mans doing more than anyone for Scottish independence
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07-30-2020 , 03:43 PM
In other news, the parish council of Much-Rutting-in-the-Mire have decided to paint the village pump green.
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07-31-2020 , 07:32 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by haadgi
a bit of a stretch, only people who criticised them were the usual tories who've went out of their way daily to try politicise this pandemic, which i have no problem in them doing, just the hypocrisy is another level
They've been criticised accross the political spectrum and they've now said the money raised will go to charity. This is despite the website saying the funds would be used to support the SNP. They also don't actually know what charity the funds will go to yet.

Btw, what was your old username?
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07-31-2020 , 04:37 PM
Johnson's 'dissolution list' of nominations for peerages seems to have gone down well. Particularly former Revolutionary Communist Party member, former Brexit Party MEP, IRA supporter, Bosnian genocide denier and paedophile excuser Claire Fox.





There's also Ruth Davidson (to keep her quiet and out of the way, presumably) and some normal ones like Ken Clarke and Philip Hammond, and a case could be made for the prime minister's brother Jo Johnson, but it mostly looks like a list of general hazards to traffic.

https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/top...ages-1-6772161

https://royalcentral.co.uk/features/...e-made-146593/
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07-31-2020 , 04:58 PM
Oh dear. How very unfortunate. One of Johnson's principal personal financial backers, hedge fund manager Crispin Odey, appears to be in a spot of legal bother. Criminal rather than civil, I'm afraid.

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07-31-2020 , 05:20 PM
Surprised about Odey, he doesn't look like the type.
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08-01-2020 , 01:42 PM
I know, right? I mean Charlie Elphicke's a likewise ageing reactionary tosspot, but he's nothing like as fat.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-53554485

Wait a minute. I think I've got something.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-53611958

Quote:
In the run up to the 2016 European Union referendum, Mr Odey donated more than £870,000 to pro-Brexit groups.

He has also made the headlines in the past for spending about £150,000 on a Palladian-style stone temple to shelter chickens at his Gloucestershire mansion.
He 'shelters' chickens in a 'temple' at his 'Gloucestershire mansion', does he? I think we all know what's going on there.



https://www.examinerlive.co.uk/news/...aving-18695204

Last edited by 57 On Red; 08-01-2020 at 01:51 PM.
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08-01-2020 , 03:42 PM
Well, this is something, I suppose.



It would be better -- Starmer is about 20 points ahead of Johnson on net approval -- except for the obvious lingering-stain problem.



And, as if to prove the point, the rump Corbynites of 'Young Labour' have spent the day pack-attacking Rosie Duffield MP for daring to mention that only women have cervixes. (Strangely, they never object to anyone saying that only men have prostates. Funny how that works.)
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08-02-2020 , 02:38 PM
The slight problem with removing the whip from the 'former Tory minister' accused of rape is that he would immediately show up on Parliamentary websites as 'Independent', so MPs would all know who he is. (Even though most of them probably know already.)

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-53630497

The larger problem, I gather, is that media outlets have previously published reports linking the suspect and the complainant, so that if the suspect is now named, the complainant's identity will become obvious.
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08-03-2020 , 02:05 PM
DW Sports busto, another 1700 jobs at risk, gjge boris
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08-03-2020 , 05:57 PM
people have no idea what is coming. 9m furloughed, 1/3 of the workforce, how many of these jobs will be there once furlough ends?
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08-03-2020 , 08:25 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Husker

Btw, what was your old username?
this is the only ever account I've commented on here from
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08-03-2020 , 10:12 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by 1&onlybillyshears
people have no idea what is coming. 9m furloughed, 1/3 of the workforce, how many of these jobs will be there once furlough ends?
I agree. It's not that long since I was open-mouthed in astonishment at people discussing about whether there would be a recession or not - amazing levels of denial. This is likely to be game-changingly massive, not least because it's not just us, it's the whole world.

What is a mistake is that thinking it could be avoided once covid arrived. Government restrictions have been going with the flow but even without them, people with money to spend will lockdown as the deaths rise to such a large extent that the economic disaster in inevitable.
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08-04-2020 , 04:17 AM
I'm one of the idiots staying at home. I don't know how it will play out this winter but there's a very real problem that can't just be hand waved away

Government can say what it likes but like many I have no faith in hancock and co, or in boris's enthusiasm* - I dont care what they say, they have to actually deliver. If they then I will give them full credit but in the meantime I will help by reducing the strain.

*I'll be fair to boris who seems to have cottoned on to just how big the risk is, and who I think is really trying now. But it's tough, really really tough as we have far too many cases, have pressing need to open some things up and don't have tried and tested system in place.
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08-04-2020 , 09:58 AM
Quote:
Mod removed reference to deleted post.
No I don't agree the IFR of covid is the same as for flu although flu is very serious. No I wouldn't stay at home to avoid the flu but I assume I will be getting a flu jab which helps. If and when a covid vaccine become available then life may begin to return to normal.

Waiting until the death figures are high is insanity - it's too late by then because of the lag. I have extended family in Melbourne, some of whom are particularly vulnerable and it's a huge and real concern over there.

People who think this is over or even manageable in the UK, Europe and beyond are taking a very rose tinted best case as the likely case.

Last edited by tame_deuces; 08-04-2020 at 02:04 PM.
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08-04-2020 , 10:04 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by haadgi
this is the only ever account I've commented on here from
So you have another account on 2+2 but prefer to hide it for some reason? Or you have no other 2+2 accounts and somehow joined an American poker forum to discuss British politics?

Either one of these options is weird.
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08-04-2020 , 04:04 PM
On the upside, the Astra Zeneca 'Oxford' vaccine could be ready to go in November, with 100 million doses already on government order. As for media grumbles that it may 'only' give 12 months' to two years' immunity, so we may all need an annual jab, frankly I'll take that any day.

https://inews.co.uk/news/health/astr...-months-567672

I mean we're already buggered. As a tiny example, theatres can't possibly plan for Christmas pantos, the way things are, and they depend on that annual income boost, so a lot of them are just going to go out of business. You can multiply that many times over across the whole economy. But if an effective vaccine does arrive this year, it'll head off a lot of further damage.
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08-04-2020 , 04:06 PM
And the present death rate in England is very low. (A hell of a lot better than Florida, where unfortunately my nephew's in-laws live.)

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08-04-2020 , 04:20 PM
I cleaned up some posts which were borderline on Covid-19 denial. If people have an issue with this, they can post about it in the moderation sticky.
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08-06-2020 , 09:07 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Husker
So you have another account on 2+2 but prefer to hide it for some reason? Or you have no other 2+2 accounts and somehow joined an American poker forum to discuss British politics?

Either one of these options is weird.
Or I had an account on 2+2 that opened like ten years ago that I now don’t have log in details
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08-06-2020 , 09:51 AM
Lol I used to have a dozen or more other accounts but I lost or forgot all the passwords years ago. Mostly for comedy trolling.

My favourite was teh herp
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08-06-2020 , 01:41 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by diebitter
Lol I used to have a dozen or more other accounts but I lost or forgot all the passwords years ago. Mostly for comedy trolling.

My favourite was teh herp
But you already have this one for trolling purposes.
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08-06-2020 , 08:27 PM
this is my true face
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08-08-2020 , 07:08 PM
As I've posted before, the failures of the Scottish Government, and it's basically everything they've touched, isn't reported on in England as they are seen as regional news rather than national news, so heres a report on the reality of the situation in Scotland from a left wing indy supporting stalwart about the death of democracy in our country

https://sourcenews.scot/robin-mcalpi...-worry/http://

PICKING what to write about this week isn’t easy – I could happily unpack what I think is going on with Cherrymandering, the SQA debacle, the return of lockdown in Aberdeen, the virtual admission that Sturgeon misled parliament about a crucial meeting, the latest nonsensical stuff coming out of unionism…

But are they really separate issues at all? Or is something systemically wrong with our political system and our democracy?

Let me start by doing something which isn’t done enough; stating specifically the foundational principles on which Scottish democracy is based (remember the 1998 Scotland Act anyone?). This isn’t a random system – it has specific elements for specific reasons.

Scotland’s entire political system is designed around the intention of cabinet government and parliamentary government (alongside powerful committees). It expects a professional and autonomous civil service to facilitate the elected government, but also to stand as the first line of defence against unlawful actions and to answer to the nation’s democratic institutions.

It has a series of checks and balances on executive power written into its ‘constitution’ (which isn’t actually codified in one place). It assumes a mass party-political system in which the priorities of the system are driven by the large-group participation of ordinary people who ‘own’ and govern the parties they choose to join.

It is built on the assumption of a plural democracy in which a competent group of opposition parties hold government to account. It is based on a diverse free press to monitor all of this and it assumes this takes place in a society with a broad and active civil political culture.

So does it not seem of great concern that every single one of these foundations has crumbled to a point where asking us to believe they are fit for purpose is a very big ask indeed.

Let’s look briefly at each.

Cabinet Government

There is no longer any point in pretending (not that anyone has been pretending): Scotland suddenly has a hacked-together presidential system forcibly imposed on top of a democracy which is not designed for it.

I’m weary of writing about this – I’ve spoken to five cabinet members about this exact issue and not one of them has sought to pretend that government policy is made in cabinet. This is reflected in the fact that the first minister barely mentions it and the media never shows any interest in it.

Every week, the UK media discusses what will be on the agenda for the Westminster cabinet meetings; this isn’t even a subject of mild curiosity in the Scottish press, and everyone knows why.

Presidential systems generally have checks and balances built in, like legislatures in which the president does not sit and can’t fully control. We, on the other hand, have one politician who governs according only to what she wants.

Let’s take the SQA debacle; like everything else, it seems clear to me that the only real consideration was how the exam problem would make the first minister look. She clearly wanted a slight improvement – but not too much. In other words, to look like last year with a slight uptick.

It’s plain as the nose on your face that the methodology was retrofitted to achieve the outcome. Fearing that the Scottish Government would catch a Daily Mail backlash if poor kids got decent results, it was made sure that they didn’t.

Had I pages and pages to spare, I would document dozens of examples where government in Scotland has been calibrated primarily to the interests of a first minister who behaves like a president in a system ill-equipped to deal with this concentration of power. It is why virtually everything this government has done in five years has failed – you can’t weld a presidential model onto a parliamentary democracy without consequences. They’ve been dire.

Civil service

Another consequence of this presidential model is that the civil service and its agencies have all gained the clear signal that they will always be protected if they work in the interests of the first minister.

Let’s look at the SQA again – it at no point ever behaved as if it was answerable to Scotland’s democracy. A government agency refusing to talk to a Westminster parliamentary committee would be virtually unthinkable; in Scotland, it’s pretty routine. The first minister will keep every loyalist in their job no matter what, so there is only one incentive.

This is an acute problem at the centre. The ‘independent’ head of the civil service in Scotland thinks nothing of aligning herself with the First Minister in what she calls a ‘war’ with her predecessor which is absolutely and purely political. The civil service has no business being within a country mile of this stuff.

When even one of Sturgeon’s most loyal sidekicks states the bleeding obvious – Evans should resign or be fired – what does Sturgeon do? Extend her contract. Contempt is a currency for this administration.

What Evans and those below her should have been doing was the core business of, you know, providing the government with regular written briefings on the unfolding virus crisis around the world. That is not what it was doing; it seems to have been trying to work out how to provide the least information it could to another parliamentary committee.

Much more is going to come out on this, and again and again the conclusion returns; it is hard to identify where the Sturgeon team ends and the civil service begins. This might seem obscure to some of you, but it’s hard to overestimate how dangerous this is.

I may be critical of many UK institutions – and the civil service no less so – but its scrupulous independence (I’ve seen it in person a number of times) is why endemic governmental corruption isn’t one of the UK’s problems. I’m not sure you can say that in Scotland now.

Checks and balances

The first and most important check on the Executive (the government) ought to be the Legislature (the parliament). But since every SNP politician knows that one act of dissent and their internal career is over (forget constituency support from HQ for their next election), there hasn’t been a single dissenting vote this entire parliament.

And since either the Tories or the Greens (alternating) give them a majority at the drop of a hat, they don’t seem to see parliament as a decision-making body so much as a theatre.

As for the other checks and balances – well, when parliamentary committees can’t get crucial information from the civil service or its agencies, they can’t function. And while there just isn’t space to cover the other ways this administration is degrading other little transparency and accountability measures, I’ll give you just one example.

How many countries in the world made the first act they took when Covid hit to effectively suspend freedom of information laws and float abandoning jury trials and the suspension of elections more than a year in advance? Not Trump. Not Putin. Not Bolsonaro. Sturgeon.

Party

It is I think finally possible to write in public what everyone has been saying in private; SNP HQ is utterly corrupt and has been for years.

This is an entity in which the person in charge of the rules can receive a very serious complaint of sexual abuse, suppress it, be publicly exposed for this – and not only face no consequences but be there corrupting the party’s decision-making processes months later.

Everyone, in my experience, has been saying that SNP HQ is an utter disgrace for five years. I talk at SNP branches a lot, and when I do I am the picture of diplomacy (you don’t go to someone else’s house and criticise the wallpaper). Three years ago, I was asked at one meeting why the SNP’s political campaigns are so incompetently organised.

I gave a diplomatic non-answer. Asked again, I suggested there was a quality deficit in HQ. A respectable-looking older woman immediately got to her feet and shouted “Peter Murrell is a disgrace!”. The room burst into loud and unanimous applause and shouts.

I know a group of business figures in the party were proposing a vote of no confidence in Murrell (based on the fact no Chief Exec could be that bad and keep their job in their sectors). They backed off when they were told (effectively) that Sturgeon/Murrell would burn down the whole house if they tried.

“It’s an indivisible package,” one told me, “unless we are willing to rip the party apart”.

HQ routinely (and remarkably openly) smears internal critics. It rigs things to favour preferred candidates. It simply ignores serious complaints if they’re about ‘the wrong person’. It is toxic and nasty, but people have believed they have no option but to stomach it.

The real truth is that it doesn’t pretend to act for the party as a whole, but only for the leader and a small clique organised around her. It is a stain on Scotland’s democracy.

Opposition

The great majority of these above failures are the direct result of the Sturgeon/Murrell regime and can be traced back directly to their household. But even I can’t blame them for the opposition.

It’s barely worth covering this so obvious to everyone is the state of things but Labour is more hobby than party and the Tories are obsessive and irrelevant. Both are transfixed by the constitution and, frankly, their hatred. They don’t seem to want to recover – go read Hothershall and you’ll get the idea.

Among them there is only one who has asked effective, competent questions on a regular basis. I may have had my differences with Neil Findlay, but our democracy will miss him. So unusual was the competence of his questions that Sturgeon could get away with ‘choking up with emotion’ and refusing to answer.

(This isn’t completely fair, particularly on the Greens who individually have done great work, and others like Adam Tompkins, Iain Gray and Monica Lennon who have had their moments. But this ain’t an opposition.)

Every time Sturgeon fails (which is a lot), they manage to fail worse. What’s a democracy without an opposition?

Media

Is Scotland’s media incompetent and biased or under-resourced and powerless? I swing between emphasising either view on a daily basis. Let’s just say a bit of both – but it’s definitely not working.

It’s hardly worth detailing this, but let me give one case study. Last year, Nicola Sturgeon announced that she intended to make Scotland a ‘world leader’ in 5G. For anyone not technically literate, 5G has a very short transmission distance and so roll-out in sparsely populated and mountainous territory is very difficult.

There are only three players in the technology side: the US, China and Finland. Scotland isn’t at the races, so it can only be roll-out she meant. So what is her plan for overcoming the enormous physically difficulties in making Scotland a ‘leader’?

Just so we’re clear, this claim is as off-the-wall and impossible to support as anything Donald Trump has said. So was she questioned on this? Nope – the newspapers wrote it up and moved on. She wasn’t mocked for weeks like Boris Johnson or Trump (or Corbyn or May or Cameron) would have been.

And earlier in the year, when the UK Government announced the banning of Huawei equipment (delaying roll-out for two years at the UK level), did the Scottish media ask Sturgeon how this would impact on her (non-existent) plans to be world-leading? Nope, they did not.

Scotland is a country in which the first minister can blurt out utterly ridiculous bursts of unsupportable braggadocio with no consequences at all.

This is a minor matter, but it tells the story. Right now, it is my belief that the Scottish Government’s point-blank refusal to put in place the pre-symptomatic randomised test and trace system Common Weal detailed, costed and called for four months ago is going to lead to substantial new lockdowns – if not another national lockdown.

Every day Johnson is held to account for the failures of his test and trace system, and yet I’m dubious Scotland’s is actually better from what I can see. Up here, the first minister says she’s done it, so the journalists are satisfied.

Civic Scotland

Where are you? Where are the academics documenting the decline of democracy in this country? Where are the health or wellbeing charities holding the government to account for its Covid response?

Where is the vibrant and wide-ranging debate about our economic future given the crisis we face? Where was there a proper public debate about what to do about this year’s exams?

The little players (like Common Weal or Living Rent or Friends of the Earth) are carrying much, much more of the civic weight than they should be. This is deeply unhealthy.

Why? Partly the ‘complicity strategy’ started by Tony Blair and loved by everyone since (make charities reliant on you for income and they stop talking and put their hands out). Partly its the desperate lack of funding available in Scotland. And partly it’s because they all know what happens if you’re marked down as a ‘dissident and enemy’ in the Sturgeon/Murrell era.

Should you worry?

This should worry you deeply. This is not abstract. This is a real and present danger to Scotland’s democracy.

But you shouldn’t despair, because while not all of it is temporary, one of the core reasons for all of this is that Sturgeon/Murrell won’t be around forever – perhaps not much longer, by the looks of things – and at this stage almost anything would be better for our democracy.

And there is nothing at all in the above which cannot be fixed – and fixed quickly – by a government actually keen on democracy.

But I beg you; please greatly up your vigilance between now and then, because there is one final element of democracy they haven’t quite managed to degrade yet. The people.
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08-08-2020 , 07:13 PM
I should add to the above that the Scotthish Govt has not had a single achievement in the past few years. Again, from the same author:

10/10/2019
SeanBell

Common Weal director Robin McAlpine takes a hard look at the state of Nicola Sturgeon’s government, and what its achievements and failures mean for the cause of independence

I BELIEVE the independence movement needs a government that is inspiring people by being bold and showing the kind of change that could be possible with independence. Most people accept that Nicola Sturgeon’s government is not that.

She instead pitched her government as being about ‘competent management’ and asked that she be judged on her education track record.

These are her strategic choices and the independence movement cannot behave as if they have no impact on us; Sturgeon has made herself almost the only recognisable face of independence. If she’s not delivering the inspiration I think we need, is she delivering the competence?

With 18 months to go until the Scottish election we need to ask that question now, to look beyond the personality politics at the real record. I’m afraid the answer is that it is very difficult to make a case that she’s delivered competence either and the cause of independence may pay the price.

So, close your eyes and hide behind the couch if you must, but what follows is the reality…

Centralisation, control and personality politics

There simply isn’t space to go into this properly here but the coterie of people who make the decisions in this administration is very small indeed and is generally accepted not to include cabinet (this includes the view of members of cabinet from the period). Sturgeon controls all major decisions and her colleagues often find out via the media or social media.

There is no meaningful cabinet government, internal dissent is not accepted and the administration has been built mainly around the personality of its leader. There is no obvious defining mission other than its leader’s thoughts and feelings.

The attitude to dissent

Messages were sent early (and often since) on the attitude to dissent. For example, a ‘Poverty Tsar’ was appointed with a heavy media push. The Poverty Tsar then wrote a report calling for major action which she followed up a year later with a second report expressing disappointment that none of her initial report had been enacted.

That was the last mention of a Poverty Tsar, the last time I am aware of her involvement in government in Scotland and certainly her last report.

If you criticise, you’re out; everyone else got the message. Very widespread civil society misgivings about policy and delivery therefore stay private and there is no dissent from parliamentarians.

The announcement cycle

From the beginning the focus of this administration has appeared to be image-building for its leader. The primary means of doing this has been a headline-orientated ‘announcement cycle’. All governments prioritise public communication but it is seldom the primary driver of policy.

There are a number of methods used by this administration to generate announcements. Working group establishment is crucial – the announcement is strong on ‘value signalling’ rather than specific plans, so the newsworthiness of the announcement is propped up by the establishment of a working group.

I’m reliably told that, in five years, there has been more than one created for each five working days of this administration. It is much harder to identify meaningful outcomes from working groups and many seem to disappear from view once the announcement is over.

For example, I’ve spent two years on the stakeholder group carrying out a feasibility study into the possibility of a limited pilot into a Universal Basic Income, a policy the Scottish Government does not have the power to implement.

Another announcement-producing strategy is target-setting. These produce PR-without-delivery by generally being for the distant future but are routinely missed when the target date is reached and are seldom (if ever) accompanied by an adequate programme of action.

Another is statements on aspirations to be ‘world leading’ which often bear little relation to reality. For example, the statement that ‘Scotland will be a world leader in 5G’ is in every sense technically unsupportable, virtually disregarding the laws of physics. It has no basis in fact whatsoever.

Another headline strategy is ‘announce and devolve’. The Scottish Government’s position on district heating is to say we will be world leaders (even though catching up with Denmark would requires many billions of pounds of expenditure) – and then devolving all the responsibility for this to cash-strapped local authorities, but with no meaningful funding.

A common approach is to pick out a headline-grabbing element of what would need to be part of an integrated plan, but without the other essential elements of that plan. A good example is ‘£500 million for hydrogen busses’, but with no funding for generating hydrogen and no funding for hydrogen refuelling infrastructure (we price that at not less than £600 million alone).

Likewise ‘the one pull-out soundbite’. I can’t reveal this policy area because I was told in confidence, but a major Scottish charity was told ‘ban X’ was to be put at the heart of strategy Y. They said ‘no, that’s marginal, it’s not the point at all – it has to be a coordinated plan’. While this is not yet complete, ‘ban X’ is on course to be the soundbite for FMQs and little else of substance is in the strategy.

Finally, there is simply too much over-claim. You will struggle to find so much as a single ‘wellbeing economist’ who could reconcile recent statements about aligning budgeting with wellbeing with current practice. The same is true (probably more so) with climate change.

The lobbyist’s agenda

Lobbyists have an inordinate influence on this government. This is because, from the beginning, the administration has been built around personality rather than a clear political mission.

In the absence of a clear mission-orientated policy agenda (other than ‘value-projection’ which is part of the image-building), and without a serious policy unit or proper links to the Scottish public policy community, the vacuum has been filled by the requests of lobbyists.

The leadership vigorously resisted an outright ban on fracking (keeping the door open for fracking companies such as Algy Cluff, a client of the influential-with-Sturgeon Charlotte Street Partners lobbying company run by the Growth Commission’s Andrew Wilson). It took a strong campaign by the internal SNP ‘SMAUG’ group to force their hand.

When Sturgeon announced that the sale of petrol and diesel vehicles would be banned in 2030 (though with no serious investment in the electric recharging capacity required to make this a reality), the lobby group for the big bulk housing developer corporations requested that the additional carbon savings be removed from their own targets. This was immediately granted.

The ‘big housing’ lobby has been particularly successful at delivering its agenda – many examples include the failure to tighten environmental building standards further and the reintroduction of a ‘help to buy’ scheme, the main impact of which is to inflate house prices and so increase developer profits.

Lobbyists for the private fitness industry wanted the rates relief local authorities get for public sports facilities removed to give them additional market advantage. I understand Ministers were minded to comply until local authorities explained how many sports centres it would close down. The compromise (currently in the NDR legislation) is to cap rates relief at current levels to discourage the further expansion of public sports facilities.

The capitulation to the AirBnB lobbyists (where the SNP voted with the Tories to prevent regulation of short-term lets causing major social problems in places like central Edinburgh) is well known. The Heathrow connection was so blatant even party members complained. An APD cut (former staffers being the airport’s lobbyists) was defended well after it was clear it made no sense.

Abellio appears able to resist all sanctions for poor performance and appears to have weakened further already weak commitments to public ownership of Scotland’s railways. The commitment has now receded to be no stronger than to use the same process via which Northlink Ferries were recently privatised to Serco.

The expansion of Serco’s role in Scottish public services over the last five years alone is too extensive to list here but is indicative of how closely this administration has followed the outsourcing agenda that lobbyists promote.

This is only a small selection of examples of the impact of lobbying – lobbyists even lobbied successfully to remove the teeth from the lobbying register so they’re not properly scrutinised.

Good ideas gone bad

The legacy of this administration should have been the childcare expansion. The reason you’ve heard little about it of late is that it’s roll-out is a mess. The reasons for this are many and there’s not space here to explain them all.

But basically there were a number of difficult and potentially controversial issues that had to be tackled but were ducked, and there needed to be substantial secondary investment (in buildings and particularly in workforce development) which wasn’t taken seriously.

And quite a lot of time internally was wasted by efforts to persuade Sturgeon to abandon her desire to introduce a kind of ‘voucher system’ which was almost identical to Tory policy. This is a very rare case of her colleagues and officials putting their foot down (it would have resulted in a bitter dispute with local authorities).

Another example is baby boxes. This policy was extracted from a much wider Finnish initiative and the Finns themselves consider it to be the least important part. In an attempt to modernise parenting skills they put in place a two-year process of supporting prospective and new parents with extensive training and agency support.

But they didn’t want to make it compulsory so they offered ‘baby boxes’ as an incentive for people to sign up. I know from the Finnish side that, when Scottish Government staffers did a fact-finding trip the Finns kept saying ‘no, you’re completely and utterly missing the point’. The Scots kept saying ‘we’re not interested, we only want to know what’s in the boxes’.

One more example; Scotland should of course be looking at gender recognition issues in light of current debates – but no-one benefits from consultations (as on the GRA) which appear to almost everyone to be deliberately manipulated.

Bad policies gone predictably badly

The SNP’s education policy was sketched out by Sturgeon herself after a one-day trip to an academy school in London and without (initially) the input of her own education team. It was a mix of ‘entrepreneurial leadership’, compulsory testing and other policy approaches traditionally associated with the right.

Everyone told the government this would be fail – parents, teachers, trade unions, her own officials, academics, everyone. But having made the big announcement they were pushed ahead anyway.

So bad has been this mess that when pressed to name a single expert who supported the policy the Scottish Government falsely named two US academics who, when they discovered, reacted furiously and condemned the government for dishonesty.

Suffice to say this whole agenda has either fallen apart completely and been binned or has been altered out of all recognition to prevent further harm. It is probably fair to say that this stands with the procurement of the Scottish Parliament as one of the biggest failures of the devolution era.

The issues that have simply been ducked

This is a long list; Council Tax reform, land reform, land taxes, proper planning reform, the struggle to get a Good Food Nation Bill moving, public rental house-building, rent controls, action on plastic and packaging, local democracy (though here the team is doing a decent job in the face of leadership disinterest), proper action on poverty, the decentralisation of power, tax reform, prison reform…

This list just keeps stretching onwards and in each case action has been non-existent or as limited and small-scale as it has been possible to get away with.

I want to raise one particular sore point for me – procurement and especially PFI. The NDP model was simply PFI-lite and after a strong Common Weal campaign SNP conference voted to end the model altogether via a Scottish National Infrastructure Company.

What has actually happened is that the Scottish Government has doubled-down with a new ‘Mutual Investment Model’ which is even more profit-, corporation- and private finance-driven than the NDP system. This was slipped out with almost no publicity – for a very good reason.

Poor delivery

Again, this is a fairly long list. Since this piece is now dragging on I’ll just mention the new welfare system (way over-schedule), the new Sick Kids hospital (a total mess, but with Charlotte Street Partners in the background again) and the Named Person Scheme (a proposal with merit where poor communication and implementation resulted in its collapse).

Things going well

These are quite hard to identify. Ironically, the one which is genuinely going well is the Scottish National Investment Bank, another Common Weal policy the Scottish Government resisted until we won through a long campaign. The positive progress is mainly due to a good job done by Benny Higgins and the quality and commitment of the delivery team.

There have been a few small-but-worthy steps – decreasing the drink drive limit, lower speed limits in built up areas. Some half-hearted but better than the alternative like the nationalisation of Prestwick Airport. And some minimalist steps which are better than nothing like small tax rises and the toothless Lobbying Register. But they don’t make for much of a legacy.

Other things will probably be claimed as part of the legacy – like LGBT education moves or the smacking ban. But these are the work of others, not government.

Conclusion

My first conclusion is this is absolutely symptomatic of the administration – I started collecting examples for this piece a while ago and I’ve only used a small proportion of them. For almost any example here I could give you another five.

This is not a few mistakes; this is an systemic problem with how Nicola Sturgeon runs government and it is difficult to find much which bucks the trend of poor performance.

A second conclusion; partly by design (Sturgeon’s stated desire to govern from what she considers ‘the centre’ but which is often centre-right) and partly by accident (policy vacuums filled by lobbyists), SNP members should be concerned about where on the political spectrum the Scottish Government operates. It’s clearly not left wing; let me just add that it’s not centre left either and leave it at that for now.

The third is to question the oft-stated assumption that this administration has been about ‘competence’. This is really hard to stand up; education alone has been as much the opposite as it is possible to get – an ill-informed idea incompetently delivered against all the advice and which simply fell apart.

The final conclusion is to note the sheer gap between rhetoric and reality. There is a current international comparator for this; Justin Trudeau in Canada. Also a darling of centrist commentators, his image and electability collapsed when the reality of the gap between his ‘new politics’ image-making and his ‘grubby politics as usual’ track record became unmissable.

Sturgeon is at real risk of a very similar re-evaluation of her track record, and it could be equally brutal. The independence movement desperately needs this not to happen at what will be crucial moments ahead. And frankly Scotland needs better government.

I see little evidence of change at the top; I urge the wider party to look more closely at what is happening and, at the very least, to take steps to rebalance the unbalanced decision-making structures currently in place.
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