The Scottish
National Party. A Party that prides itself
on being strong for Scotland and standing up for Scotland. A party big on “Scottish solutions to Scottish issues”, even if it was Donald Dewar
who coined that phrase. But a party
who’s whole campaign has had the air of being fought in second gear.
It’s not just
that Sturgeon’s performances on the televised debates has not been as stellar
as either her performances in the run up to the referendum, or in last years so
called ‘Leaders debates’. The leaflets
I’ve received from the SNP have also tended to rely on what the SNP have done,
not what a first full term for Nicola Sturgeon will bring. For a party with as chequered five years in
government as the SNP have had, that’s not the problem it should be.
The leaflet from
the local MSP, George Adam, arrived first and bears no manifesto pledges
(delivered the day before the manifesto launch). It claims that the renovation of the Arnotts
site, the electrification of the Paisley Canal line, the renovation of the
iconic Russell Institute building and the rebuilding of St Fergus Primary can
be attributed to the SNP government. Yet
there is no pledge to keep open those rumoured wards stated for closure at the
RAH.
True, the SNP have
kept open Monkland’s Hospital and other hospitals in Scotland. It’s also true that the SNP have never
(directly) cut health services. But for
such an allegedly media savvy political party, the SNP are making a meal out of
an issue they could have closed straight away.
Instead of all the ‘scaremongering’ claims, Adam could simply have said
that there will be no closures at the RAH.
Better still would be a pledge to focus on the quality and management of
the RAH – still after 9 years of SNP government (and 8 of Labour led
government) possibly the worst run hospital in Scotland.
Instead, the SNP
leaflet gives us vague policy pledges which are all conservative to say the
least – and very reminiscent of New Labour’s 5 pledges from 1997. An aspiration to have world class education
and double free childcare by 2021, increase the health budget in each year and
build five new ‘flagship centres’ to reduce waiting times in key specialities,
build 50,000 affordable homes, 30,000 new apprenticeships and protect pension
benefits. All vaguely impressive, but
not really detailed enough. And
certainly not the radical prospectus that we all would have liked from a party
very much in the middle of their own ‘Imperial phase’.
It is not as if
there are things that the SNP could have genuinely radical policies on –
scrapping the Council Tax and replacing it with LIT or some form of
Land/Property tax akin to the Greens proposals for starters. Maybe the UKIP (yip, UKIP) policy on electing
people on to health boards could be looked at.
Certainly there needs to be a standards body for local authorities… there are policies out there that the SNP
could have looked at. Certainly I may
have mentioned one or two of the above last year when I pointed out that in
post referendum Scotland, the SNP would have to change up and not coast through
another five years, like they have done.
Intriguingly
there are two big policy areas not mentioned on the SNP’s literature. There’s no mention of another independence
referendum and if that is likely to come in the next parliament. More pressing for this election is the lack
of any mention of the SNP’s plans for taxation and how those pledges are to be
paid from. We know they favour tinkering
with the Council Tax rather than scrapping the thing and starting afresh. The conservative option. We also know that the SNP do not have plans
to raise the top rate of income tax to 50%.
Again the conservative option.
The last income tax pledge is not to raise (until the Smith Commission
powers become active) Income Tax rates – essentially to not bring in the Labour
policy of raising income tax by 1% (which under the new Calman powers would be
an across the board rise). Again we see
the SNP adopt the conservative option (but perhaps the correct one given the
powers available). That’s not to say the
SNP’s policy prospectus is radical free.
There is to be a conscious decoupling of education from local authority
control with the pledge to directly fund and provide more autonomy to schools. While the idea, imported from Finland, of “Baby
boxes” is a likable one.
With the polls
showing a strong SNP lead, you would have thought that now would have been precisely
the correct time to be bold and propose genuinely radical policies. Instead, rather like New Labour (and this
rather alarmingly looks like something from the New Labour playbook), the SNP
have chosen safe conservative policy positions at every opportunity. In pre-Referendum Scotland, only Scottish
Labour would have gotten away with such a palid set of policy proposals. Post referendum, the SNP can count on the
unwavering support of the so called ’45 (or whatever they’re called) to give
then largest party status. It still
doesn’t excuse a very conservative policy prospectus.
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