I must admit to
being amused by “Scottish” Labour’s very own pussycat in a cardigan Simon
Pia. He does have this shtick of being
laid back and yet does catch people out.
His (and Scottish Labour’s) bone of contention is that the SNP aren’t
really as left of centre as they make out.
This is all rather pertinent given the air of nostalgia enveloping the, not quite out the door yet, former First Minister Alex Salmond.
And just to show I don't have the power to point and tax things like glasses of water... |
The tributes have
flowed, and that’s before we get to Saturday’s conference appearance where he
(unintentionally) nearly upstaged his successor Nicola Sturgeon and the
gathering outside the conference venue to give thanks. All of which has left me rather underwhelmed.
Yes, under Salmond
there is free prescriptions, a council tax freeze, no tuition fees, a stop to
the hospital closures proposed by the McConnell administration and an
investment in renewable energy. All of
which delivered in the teeth of a rapidly contracting funding settlement from
Westminster. At the end of Salmond’s
first term, I made the point that Salmond has been the effective “steady hand on the tiller” rather than a reforming character.
However, Salmond
has relied on this in his second term as this period has become all about the
referendum. Maybe it is unfair, after
all there’s been the amalgamation of all of Scotland’s constabularies into the
single “Police Scotland” (though to be honest, this did appear in the Labour
& Tory Holyrood manifestos too in 2011, with the Lib Dems the only party to voice legitimate concerns).
It does feel as if the decks have been cleared for the referendum. In the light of the no vote, does this leave
Salmond without a legacy?
Certainly there
have been opportunities among Salmond’s list of achievements to fashion a
lasting legacy. From the council tax
freeze, we were supposed to be getting Local Income Tax. When the sums were shown not to add up, there
should really have been a debate on how to replace the Council Tax. Instead the freeze continued. Instead of upping the money flowing into the
NHS, the Salmond administration could look at reforms (particularly in the
field of middle management) to the NHS.
Maybe, the move from Standard Grades to CFE will be seen as a legacy in
years to come – a successful attempt to bring the standard of education up –
but at the moment there are still many teething problems to be ironed out.
Whatever else
Salmond does though, front & centre of his time in Bute House will be that
referendum. Maybe that’s the thing
though. Salmond’s legacy might not be a
policy initiative but more the comparative radicalisation of the Scottish
electorate. Not in terms of a shift to
the left (it remains to be seen if this is the case, though we will know next
May) but in the increased politicization of the Scottish electorate. It’s this increased political awareness that
spells bad news for a Labour party desperate to make up some red water on the
Tories. That dawning realization that
the Tories spending plans will be aped by Labour will not go down well among
the Scottish electorate, that realization can be attributed to the referendum
effect.
If Salmond’s
achievements are not as much as they could have been, his supposed black marks
are not the ones you might think. For
me, the biggest disappointment was that the scandal surrounding the continuing
of the First Scotrail franchise was swept under the carpet by all and
sundry. Mind you, maybe this did play a
part in the recent award to Abellio of the Scotrail contract. There was also his government’s part in Trump-town. Then again, like with Salmond’s cheerleading
regarding RBS takeover of the Dutch bank ABN Amro, politicians of all parties
were all too keen on showing that Scotland was a good place for business. It just makes Salmond’s involvement in Trump’s
development more of a harbinger that things hadn’t really changed.
The much higher
profile black marks don’t really stack up.
The release of “the biggest mass murderer in Scottish legal history” on
compassionate grounds doesn’t stack up because, as I’ve always argued, Megrahi
rather than the biggest murderer is more the victim of the biggest miscarriage of justice in Scottish legal history.
Meanwhile Scottish Labour’s favourite stick was that the SNP was anti-Glasgow,
the ammunition for this was the cancellation of the proposed Glasgow Airport Rail
Link. While there is a case for some
sort of rail link between Glasgow and it’s Airport, the cack handed way it was
put together was nothing more than a vanity project for Glasgow Labour.
Even more distasteful
was the bandwagon jumping of Renfrewshire Labour politicians claiming that the
GARL was a good thing, that the construction of a link destroying football
pitches was a good thing, that a rail link that took visitors away from Paisley
was a good thing. Salmond & Swinney
were right to scrap the project, though maybe should have looked as cost
effective alternatives. That
Renfrewshire Labour activists still cling to GARL as all that is wrong with the
SNP shows that they’re not learning.
In some respects,
Salmond has been fortunate that his opponents in Scottish Labour were still in
a sulk about 2007 and all that to be a truly effective opposition. It’s possible that Wendy Alexander would have
been much more effective at bringing Salmond to account than Gray and
Lamont. On the other hand, an effective
Labour opposition may well have pushed the SNP to go further with regard to
legislating through Holyrood. If there’s
that sense that Salmond’s second term was all about the referendum, well it’s
because they could afford to. A poor
opposition at Holyrood meant that Salmond’s government has essentially been in
cruse control since May 2011.
With the Salmond
years now over, only the Inverdale question remains. To paraphrase. “In the pantheon of great first ministers,
where does he stand?” I’ve long said
that he has set the standard for Scottish First Minister and nothing has really
changed my mind. Singularly the most
accomplished & effective occupant of Bute House, Salmond has been the one
man advertisement for the big jobs being filled by experienced people that have
served their apprentice. Especially pertinent
given the inexperience at the top of the Westminster parties (Cameron has been
an MP for only 13 years, Milliband & Clegg for 9). Them’s big shoes to fill for Sturgeon, and as
I’ve already said that brings it’s own pressures.