SNP chaos is still a Salmond and Sturgeon soap
opera while hard-working families suffer
Mail Opinion says the Salmond v Sturgeon soap opera
will continue, but at what cost to millions of hard-working families who
deserve a functioning parliament?
OPINION
ByMail
Opinion
04:30, 28
APR 2024
https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/snp-chaos-still-salmond-sturgeon-32686776
Humza
Yousaf won the SNP leadership by promising to be the Nicola Sturgeon continuity
candidate.
A year
later her agenda is in tatters and the FM is being forced into a negotiation
with Alex Salmond to save his job. It is an incredible situation that shows how
large the shadows of Salmond and Sturgeon continue to loom over Scots politics.
Yousaf has
reluctantly dropped many Sturgeon era policies such as the GRR Bill and her
power-sharing deal with the Greens. The former leader has been arrested and
questioned by police in relation to an alleged fraud at SNP HQ and her husband
Peter Murrell has been charged.
Meanwhile
Salmond has emerged as a party power broker having been cleared of sexual
misconduct allegations he believes to have been the product of an internal plot
orchestrated by Sturgeon’s supporters. It is a melodrama that will continue for
many years to come and you wouldn’t bet against it ending up on the big screen.
Just what
the people of Scotland are getting out of it as the country struggles to get
through the worst cost of living crisis in living memory is however far from
clear. The NHS is on its knees, schools are in the doldrums and the economy is
on life support.
But the
Scottish Government has proven incapable of even building a couple of ferries
let alone tackling any of these major issues. As things stand Yousaf’s survival
could rely on convincing Alba’s only MSP Ash Regan to support him despite the
fact they despise each other.
If he is
forced to resign, the SNP’s chances of survival in government will rely on
finding a candidate for First Minister who is acceptable to the Greens. In
short therefore anyone hoping for the chaos to end any time soon is likely to
be sadly disappointed.
The Salmond
v Sturgeon soap opera will continue but at what cost to millions of
hard-working families who deserve a functioning parliament?
Someone who
definitely knows is NHS nurse Fiona Clark who spotted what she suspected was a
stroke while watching Friday night’s News at Ten. Newsreader Rageh Omaar was
struggling to read the autocue and appeared to be unwell so Fiona jumped
straight onto the phone to ITV to urge them to take him off air.
Omaar was
recovering at home yesterday and, while the cause of his episode has not be
revealed, it’s a timely reminder of how to recognise the signs of a stroke. The
NHS uses FAST symptoms – an acronym for Face, Arms, Speech, Time used to
quickly identify if someone is having a stroke. It worth everyone learning. You
might just save a life one day.
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