
EUAN McCOLM: Streeting's taken the gloves off over analogue John's neglect of Scots NHS - and the SNP don't like it up 'em, not one bit
This willingness to put The Project before the SNP's performance allowed the party to record a string of election victories despite its catalogue of catastrophe.
Falling standards in schools, terrifyingly high drug death numbers, the ongoing ferries scandal… all of these, and more, failed to shake the SNP's popularity during years when former First Minister Nicola Sturgeon was promising independence supporters a second referendum was just one last heave away.
These days, nobody thinks a sequel to 2014's vote is anywhere close to being imminent. The legal position - that the power to stage a constitutional referendum lies with the UK Government - is settled.
And, anyway, the last thing First Minister John Swinney wants, right now, is another grinding referendum campaign. The SNP is tired and fractured. Mr Swinney's focus is on trying to shore up support before next May's Holyrood election.
For a long time, it was understood within SNP circles that to criticise a political decision was to undermine the independence movement. Anyone daring to express disquiet over a policy was urged to 'Wheesht for Indy'. The main thing was to win independence then begin building a beautiful new nation. And if there were downsides, winning the prize was worth any amount of pain.
There is nobody more cynical than the idealist, is there?
Now, the SNP can no longer use the prospect of another referendum to deflect criticism. When John Swinney's opponents point to the things his government has got so badly wrong, he cannot - as Nicola Sturgeon so often did - dangle the shiny bauble of Indyref 2 in front of supporters.
It is customary for SNP health secretaries, when confronted with the failings of the NHS in Scotland, to point to greater problems in England. What poverty of ambition in the wail: 'At least we're not as bad as them.'
In fact, it is that bad. There are areas where NHS Scotland outperforms - or, more accurately, doesn't underperform as badly as - the service in England but there are others where it lags behind.
Anyway, comparisons with the NHS in England should be regarded as an irrelevance. Health is a fully devolved matter, the Scottish Government has the power to raise taxes and invest further in the service, should it choose to do so. The SNP - and the SNP, alone - is responsible for the parlous state of NHS Scotland.
This is a truth the UK's Labour Health Secretary Wes Streeting decided, this week, to highlight.
During an interview about an improved App for NHS patients in England and Wales, Mr Streeting pointed out that a promised NHS Scotland App is still years from launch. John Swinney was 'an analogue politician in a digital age', a smart line that pithily summed up the situation while also serving as a neat critique of the SNP's stewardship of the NHS since the party came to power at Holyrood in 2007.
Twenty years ago, Scotland's health service was undergoing a major process of reform under the guidance of internationally renowned oncologist and academic Professor David Kerr, who created a blueprint for a more efficient and effective NHS.
Professor Kerr began his work under a Labour-Liberal Democrat coalition at Holyrood but the SNP was quite happy with his ideas, which included the creation of centres of excellence for certain life saving procedures and the closure of failing facilities.
While Professor's Kerr's reforms were being put in place, the SNP spent a great deal of time and effort positioning itself as the natural guardian of the NHS.
In 2004, private polling commissioned by the SNP found that when the party attacked Labour over the NHS, Labour supporters took it personally. So emotionally connected were many voters to the NHS that to suggest the party they backed had neglected the health service was to accuse them of personally failing it.
The SNP adopted a new approach. Then health spokesperson Nicola Sturgeon spoke about what her party would do with the NHS rather than about Labour's failures.
Ms Sturgeon gave a series of impressive speeches in the years between 2004-07 in which she made a persuasive case for the SNP as natural heirs to the NHS.
In opposition the SNP carefully nurtured and grew the idea that only it could be trusted to look after the NHS. In power, the party has neglected it.
Beyond the extension of the provision of free prescriptions to include the wealthy and the gift of a 'baby box' to new parents, the nationalists have done next to nothing to address the health needs of an ever-growing elderly population and the demands of an NHS already failing to keep up with innovation.
Inaction is not passive. There are real consequences to the SNP's failure to address the needs of the health service.
Waiting time guarantees are so often broken as to be meaningless and stories of desperately ill patients forced to wait on trolleys in corridors while medics struggle to deal with intolerable workloads are routine.
So Wes Streeting was quite right, this week, to take the gloves off and start throwing punches.
More commonly, minister-on-minister attacks emanate from Edinburgh. The SNP is never more alive than when it is pointing out the stupidity and moral vacuity of the Unionist foe.
And it is never more brittle than when a nerve is struck. They don't like it up 'em. Not one bit.
The new NHS App stands to make life considerably easier for patients in England and Wales and it is certainly true that Scotland should not be lagging behind.
But the SNP's failure when it comes to NHS runs far deeper and wider.
While ministers preened and blustered about a second independence referendum, they neglected the health service.
In election campaign after election campaign, they promised waiting and treatment targets that could, and would, never be met.
And when these failures caught up with ministers, they created a new law, guaranteeing targets would be met (Laughably, no sanction was written into this law so it may be broken with impunity. Which, given the current state of the NHS, is just as well).
Over the past 18 years, the SNP has brought Scotland's NHS to its knees. Wes Streeting's criticisms were entirely justified.
But pointing out problems is not enough. If Scottish Labour is to win back voters' trust over the NHS, it will have to start - just as the SNP did two decades ago - telling a positive story of what it would do differently.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
37 minutes ago
- The Independent
Starmer and Macron to meet at No 10 amid push for French help on small boats
Sir Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron will hold talks at No 10 as the UK pushes for France to do more to stop migrant crossings. The French president arrived on Tuesday for the first state visit by an EU head of state since Brexit. It comes as the UK has been pressing for tougher action from the French authorities on the beaches along the Channel coast. The Prime Minister hopes to strike a 'one in, one out' deal to send small boat migrants back to the continent, in exchange for the UK accepting asylum seekers in Europe who have a British link. Alongside Downing Street talks, Sir Keir and Mr Macron are also expected to attend a reception with UK and French businesses and an event at the British Museum on Wednesday. Their spouses, Brigitte Macron and Lady Victoria Starmer, will have tea and a tour of Downing Street together, followed by all four having lunch. While they are being hosted by the King at Windsor, the Macrons will lay flowers on the tomb of Queen Elizabeth II and see Fabuleu de Maucour, a horse the French president gave Elizabeth in 2022 to mark her Platinum Jubilee. In a speech to MPs and peers on Tuesday, Mr Macron promised to deliver on measures to cut the number of migrants crossing the English Channel, describing the issue as a 'burden' to both countries. He said France and the UK have a 'shared responsibility to address irregular migration with humanity, solidarity and fairness'. Decisions at a Franco-British summit on Thursday will respond to 'our aims for co-operation and tangible results on these major issues', Mr Macron added. The French denied a Telegraph report that Mr Macron blames the UK for the crisis. A senior Elysee source said: 'The French president looks forward to working with the Prime Minister constructively on this shared priority.' Last week, the total number of people crossing the Channel in small boats this year passed 20,000. The total now stands at more than 21,000, a record for this point in the year. Sir Keir and the French president are also expected to co-host a meeting of the 'coalition of the willing', the peacekeeping mission proposed to be deployed to Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire with Russia.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Newspaper headlines: Horizon scandal's 'tragic toll' and 'sacked Gregg'
Horizon scandal's 'tragic toll' and 'sacked Gregg' Just now Share Save Share Save BBC The Post Office Horizon IT scandal dominates many of Wednesday's front pages, with the first report from the official inquiry finding it had a "disastrous" impact on those wrongly accused and prosecuted for criminal offences. Sir Wyn Williams' report found at least 59 people had contemplated suicide at various points, of whom 10 attempted to take their own lives, and more than 13 people may have killed themselves over the scandal. The Daily Mail leads on the reaction to Sir Wyn's report as campaigners say the Post Office has "blood on its hands". Catherine, Princess of Wales, also graces the front page as she attends the state banquet for French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte at Windsor Castle. The Post Office scandal is also splashed across the Daily Express, highlighting the impact it had on the lives of those caught up in it. And while Catherine is featured too, the paper is pointing out her "new look hairstyle" ahead of the state banquet. A tribute to the late Norman Tebbit, who served as a cabinet minister in Margaret Thatcher's government, is also featured at the bottom of the page. The Horizon scandal is covered on the front page of the Times, but it is the vote for strike action from resident doctors in England that is leading the paper. The government made clear a pay rise was off the table after the British Medical Association said 55% of its 48,000 resident doctor members had voted in the ballot with 90% supporting industrial action. The doctors were awarded a 5.4% pay rise for this financial year, following a 22% increase over the previous two years. The Prince and Princess of Wales are pictured together for the state banquet for Macron, who earlier warned that Britain and France were dangerously dependent on the US. The Metro also leads on the first volume of Sir Wyn's report on the Horizon scandal, which found victims had divorced, suffered serious mental health issues and alcohol addiction as a result of their ordeals. The Post Office apologised "unreservedly" and said it would carefully consider the findings. Macron's state visit to the UK and a proposed deal on the small boats crisis lead the Daily Telegraph. The paper reports that the French president is demanding Sir Keir Starmer make Britain less appealing to Channel migrants to secure a "one in, one out" agreement. Gregg Wallace's sacking from MasterChef is also covered on the front page. The presenter was fired as a result of an inquiry into alleged misconduct, BBC News understands. It comes as 50 more people have approached the BBC with fresh claims about the TV presenter. Wallace denies the claims. The Sun has splashed Wallace's sacking on the front page, with the presenter accusing BBC News of "uncorroborated tittle tattle" in its reporting. The inquiry into allegations against him, conducted by an independent law firm on behalf of MasterChef's production company Banijay, is expected to report back imminently. In a lengthy statement on Instagram on Tuesday, Wallace said he had been cleared by that report of "the most serious and sensational allegations" made against him. BBC News has not seen the Banijay report. Wallace insists he won't be "cancelled" after his sacking, the Daily Star reports on its front page. For 20 years, Wallace was one of the most high-profile presenters on British television and the face of the BBC One cooking show. But he stepped aside from the show in November after the BBC's initial investigation at the end of last year, when 13 people accused him of making inappropriate sexual comments. The Guardian is leading its front page with plans to be published on Wednesday designed to save the criminal justice system from total collapse. The paper reports that thousands of cases that would normally be heard in front of a jury should be decided by judges alone, according to recommendations made by a former senior judge. Sir Brian Leveson was asked by the Lord Chancellor to come up with a series of proposals to reduce the backlog of cases in the criminal courts. There are almost 77,000 cases waiting for trial in the Crown Court in England and Wales - meaning some defendants and victims are waiting years for justice. The Financial Times is leading with a debt warning from the independent budget watchdog, which says the UK faces "daunting" risks to the public finances. The OBR says the country's soaring debt load has led to "substantial erosion" of its capacity to respond to future shocks.


South Wales Guardian
an hour ago
- South Wales Guardian
SNP urge Reeves not to cut Isa tax-free allowance
Reports have suggested Rachel Reeves could announce the measure next week, dropping the threshold from £20,000 for cash individual savings accounts (Isas). Suggestions of the shift have raised concerns among banks, while consumer finance expert Martin Lewis claimed it could match up to other unpopular decisions taken by the Labour administration in the past year, including the cut to personal independence payments (Pip) and the winter fuel payment. SNP economy spokesman, Dave Doogan, said the move could 'clobber' 1.3 million people in Scotland who have cash Isas. 'Rachel Reeves seems determined to make this Labour Government one of the least popular in history with its austerity cuts and tax hikes hitting every part of society and leaving families worse off,' he said. 'First, the Labour Party went after pensioners and disabled people with their winter fuel and disability cuts, then they went after farmers and small businesses with their tax hikes, and now they are coming after millions of hard-pressed families who are simply doing their best to save for their futures. They are totally out of touch. 'People are sick to the back teeth of this Labour government making it harder for people to get by. 'Under Keir Starmer, Brexit Britain is already suffering from soaring living costs, poor wages and a personal savings crisis. 'The UK Government should be helping people not launching another Labour Party tax grab – and dipping their fingers into people's life savings. 'This blow to savers is already proving to be deeply unpopular with voters and, as consumer champions like Martin Lewis have warned, it could be another winter fuel and Pip level controversy for millions of families who are angry with this out-of-touch Labour Government.' Research commissioned by the SNP by the House of Commons Library on the issue found 30% of Scottish adults reported having a cash Isa. Those accounts, as of April 2022, have a total market value of £52.7 billion, an average of £32,917 per account. The UK Government has been contacted for comment.