With us now into
the final full week of this election campaign, it is strange that the SNP had
not been able to unveil their election manifesto until now. It is arguable whether this has been a
hindrance or not as the election leaflet received so far by them is not a list
of priorities but a list of “greatest hits”. Akin somewhat to a band who put out one good
album before their label released them from their contract and subsequently
putting out said singles collection package.
That the SNP
member seeking re-election in this case is one Ms Black kind of typifies the
SNP’s approach to this election – face leftwards at Westminster whilst ignoring
the (pragmatism driven) New Labour agenda being pursued by their Holyrood
colleagues. Hence at Tuesday’s manifesto
launch we have seen the SNP pledge to protect all manner of benefits and to
propose various tax policies – policies which the SNP government seem to be
unwilling to pursue.
We can understand
the rationale for wishing to protect benefits, after all not every inch of the
DWP has been cloned and transplanted northwards. DLA and it successor PIP will
still be Westminster (mis)run. However
there is some issue surrounding what the SNP can and can’t do regarding the
powers that have been transplanted northwards with the Tories and Scottish
Labour claiming Tax Credits (including Child Tax credits – centre of the
controversy surrounding the so called “Rape Clause”) is under Holyrood
jurisdiction (the government website states that Holyrood can “top up” Universal
& Tax Credits but presumably not amend or scrap those UK wide benefits). Surprisingly the SNP aren’t playing the “we
were blocked from devolving all Benefits powers” card yet, though if this row
develops, it’ll be a matter of time.
On the leaflet,
Ms Black highlights her work fighting against the various benefits cuts and the
WASPI campaign (fighting for equal pension rights). Whilst this is very admirable and a plus
point (and I’m sorry if that sounds patronising, it’s not meant to be), I
wonder if this experience could (and perhaps should) be of further use to the
SNP. Last year’s Holyrood prospectus was
a bland, conservative affair given the imminent powers transfer. It should not be beyond the wit and wisdom of
the SNP to use Black’s findings and Freedman’s experience to fashion a benefits
system robust enough to take Scotland into the first years of
Independence. Maybe I digress, but it is
a moot point worthy of consideration ahead of the next Holyrood elections.
Similarly, the
SNP have said that they would like a 50% tax rate across all of the UK, but
have currently no plans to bring this in here in Scotland. The reasons given seem wooly – related to
being a green light for people to leave Scotland and head south. Coupled with their plan for the 50% rate to
kick in at £150,000 (rather than Labour’s policy of it kicking in at about
£130,000 – still above where i think it should be) leaves me to thing that the
SNP are still wedded to Laffer thinking, that low taxation rates bring
prosperity.
There is two
points that came to mind with the SNP launch however. The first is that the ambition shown and
policy depth and reach espoused by Sturgeon... am I alone in thinking that we
should have heard similar noises last year?
I don’t remember very much last year about what the SNP wanted to do
with a third term – second referendum apart. There were baby boxes – a fine idea so simple
that you wonder why no one else thought about it. But that’s it. And that’s maybe my complaint as a whole
about the SNP.
There are many
small things that the SNP propose and have done, but there is not one ‘legacy’
policy among them. Think Free Care for
the Elderly (McLeish), scrapping Clause 28 (Dewar) and the smoking ban in pubs
(McConnell). I’ve said before that
reform of the NHS and other public services (democratisation of the health
boards and a standards body for local authorities being two ideas I think are
worth pursuing) should be on the table and that the SNP, more than Scottish
Labour, were in a position to pursue those policies. It’s very strange to see
the SNP willing to think outside the box for Westminster elections but be
resolutely conservative in their approach to Holyrood.
The other point
is that those referendums are never far from the surface, and it was again with
Sturgeon pursuing the line about Tory Brexit and being dragged out of the EU
against ‘our’ wishes. That the person
who said that “there is no such thing as
soft Brexit, just hard Brexit or no Brexit” was the president of the
European Council, Donald Tusk, seems to have bypassed the SNP. The desire to hand the UK a punishment
beating from Tusk, Junker and Verhoffstadt (though interestingly, the European
Parliament is thought to want to reign in Verhoffstadt) has also bypassed the
SNP. It once again reinforces the SNP’s
worldview that Westminster Thatcherism is bad, but EU sourced Thatcherism is
good (even if Verhoffstadt is from the Belgian left), which is a simplistic and
incorrect way of seeing things.
Interestingly,
and wisely, Sturgeon does appear to be making babysteps away from a referendum
in the Autumn of 2018 by saying one could be held after the negotiations have been
completed. I’ve already said a second
referendum is unwinnable this side of divorce proceedings from the EU and my
view is unaltered, I wonder if that is permeating SNP thinking hence the small,
strategic, retreat (though not enough to scare the fundamentalists). If this
were the case, it does not seem to be in tandem with any learning of lessons
from 2014. Certainly I do not think an
Independence referendum can be won without a promise of a debate on whether we
should join the EU (bearing in mind that last years referendum was dominated by
a UKIP agenda, so a proper debate on the merits and democratic pitfalls of
joining should be given exposure, alongside acknowledgment that free movement
is a good thing which doesn’t work here because of social mobility issues) in
the future. 38% of the SNP’s 2015 voters voted for Brexit, put off by the
calamities of the CAP and the common fisheries policies, so any Independence campaign
needs to bring those people back onside first.
Whilst the SNP
can claim that Labour have borrowed (back) some of their policies under Corbyn,
the SNP seem less keen on it being pointed out the debt they owe to the New
Labour playbook. Yip it is true (thanks
to Labour’s... er... identity issues) that the SNP have been the only
opposition at Westminster, but looking at Black’s leaflet a lot of the work
undertaken by the SNP have been below the radar, on select committees and
private member bills. If the narrative of this election so far has been the
choice being between flawed candidates and flawed policy positions, the SNP’s
prospectus may be less flawed than the others but still has serious issues –
depending on which side you stood on in any of those two referendums.
For all that the
SNP talk of being progressive, they’ve continued the mistake of airbrushing the
(just under)2 fifths of Scottish voters who voted for Brexit out of the
equation. It’s a mistake that looks more
and more costly the closer we get to election day. It is a mistake that could eventually put a
second independence referendum off the table.