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Waking up the house

  • Brian Taylor
  • 27 Mar 07, 03:35 PM

A decidedly lively session of Scottish Questions in the Commons - the last before the Holyrood elections in May. Those two remarks are, of course, connected.

Habitually, questions to the Secretary of State for Scotland have tended to be sleep-inducing. The domestic stuff that exercises voters - like schools, health and crime - is run by Holyrood. MPs generally have to get round that by challenging the SofS to raise the topic with the First Minister which can sound intrinsically limp.

But today was rather different. Labour ran a sustained operation to challenge the SNP over its plans for Local Income Tax. Not really the function of Scottish Questions but there you go.

One after another, they piled in, gleefully encouraged by the front bench. Alex Salmond attempted a rebuttal, branding the council tax "hated" - but he was interrupted by the Speaker as his question threatened to turn into a speech.

Ironic cheers greeted David Mundell (aka, in some quarters, Fluffy) as he rose in his place as the Shadow Scottish Secretary. A majestic title rather devalued by the fact that he occupies the post by virtue of being the only Tory from a Scottish seat.

MPs were, of course, indulging in a collective chortle over the leaked memo in which Mr Mundell suggested that his Holyrood party colleagues were less than dynamic.

Fluffy fought back, rather well in fact. He noted, acerbically, that at least he knew the names of his Scottish comrades.

A glancing reference to Ms Patricia Hewitt, Health Secretary in England, who had repeatedly called the First Minister "Jack McDonnell" in an interview.

At the time, Mr McConnell was in Westminster stressing the relevance, strength and importance of cross-border Labour links. So that went well.

A passing thought to close. Now that power-sharing in Northern Ireland looks increasingly likely, might we see a revival of the plan to scrap the post of Scottish Secretary - and replace it with a single minister responsible for liaising with the devolved territories?

PS: Never got round to answering the respondent who quizzed me on the issue of neutrality. Neutral? Me? Always have been, am now, always will be. Strictly, strictly neutral. But neutral needn't mean nescient. Still allows me latitude to comment, analytically and logically, upon individual statements from individual parties, perhaps setting them in context, explaining their genesis or spotlighting contradictions.

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Am surprised the Labour MPs weren't queueing up to congratulate the SoS and McConnell for bringing in "youth conscription" for the army. A barmy idea if ever there was one.

Maybe today's poll in The Times showing a Labour meltdown as the SNP surges even further ahead will wipe the smug smiles off the front bench team at Westminster. Do you think Gordon Brown can save the Union in 36 days?

  • 3.
  • At 11:46 AM on 28 Mar 2007,
  • Mrs Jackson wrote:

Reading this just reminds me how out of touch Scottish Labour MPs really are. Busy chortling away down in Westminster, when at home (if they can remember where it is) their support is collapsing like snow of a dyke. Trident, Iraq and Cash for honours aren’t just reasons not to vote Labour, but indicators that the Scottish Parliament would serve Scotland much better if its full powers were returned. Scottish Question time is a complete joke. By supporting the horrendous council tax, the labour party are merely reinforcing the warped values they seem to have. And if they call a local income tax ‘Poll Tax II’ then they obviously have never lived in Scotland or had a lobotomy since 1997 (perhaps more likely).

  • 4.
  • At 12:17 PM on 02 Apr 2007,
  • Duncan wrote:

Jack McConnell's announcement that he intends to do something about Council Tax reported to be along the lines of creating two new bands will not influence my decision to switch from Labour after 40 years to the SNP who will replace this unfair tax with a local income tax - I would have preferred it to be part of the National Income Tax system but half a loaf is better than none at all.

Like a great many people in this country I am sick of paying through my nose whilst others who enjoy or at least use the Council services pay nothing towards the cost.

I would have considered the Lib Dems but their proposed Property tax combined with the local income tax would leave me much worse off than at present and it would be like turkeys voting for Xmas.

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