Scottish Daily Mail

Here’s 10 radical policy plans we WON’T get from the SNP today...

- Grant GRAHAM

IN her first programme for government in 2014, Nicola Sturgeon promised to ‘lead by example’. She also spoke of the need to find new ways of harnessing the ‘energy’ supposedly generated by the independen­ce referendum.

But the intervenin­g years have seen her government locked in a state of relative paralysis, eschewing genuine radicalism in favour of continuing the push for the break-up of the UK.

Today, the First Minister will set out her agenda for 2017-18, and she deserves credit for heeding the Mail’s call to introduce a bottle deposit scheme.

But the omens for further meaningful reform of public services or the economy are far from promising.

This is an administra­tion content to continue with the Left-wing statism that has defined much of the last 20 years of devolution, and there is little sign of a fundamenta­l change in direction.

Here are ten key policies that should be in today’s programme – but which are guaranteed not to appear:

TAXATION

Finance Secretary Derek Mackay’s mastery of basic economics is about as robust as a trainee teacher’s knowledge of the ‘three Rs’.

His greatest accomplish­ment has been a tax raid on ‘rich’ higher rate taxpayers.

But with Scotland’s ‘net deficit’ now exceeding £13billion, a more radical vision is required.

Mr Mackay should remember that in 1961, John F Kennedy inherited a top rate of income tax of 91 per cent and faced Republican opposition in reducing it to 70 per cent.

But his policy change resulted in the US moving from deficit to a £2.4billion surplus by 1965.

LBTT

The Land and Buildings Transactio­n Tax (LBTT) replaced stamp duty in Scotland two years ago.

LBTT makes it significan­tly more expensive to buy a property costing more than £325,000, while those purchasing properties costing less than £145,000 no longer pay any tax. A recent survey revealed that those trying to sell homes at the top end of the property market are having to lower the asking price, or accept offers of up to 10 per cent lower than they first planned.

This has caused a logjam with repercussi­ons lower down the property market – it’s time to go back to the drawing board before further damage is done.

BUSINESS RATES

A row over a revaluatio­n of business rates earlier this year saw crippling rises of up to 400 per cent.

The Scottish Retail Consortium has warned that the ‘overall rates burden is too onerous’.

But a review by former Royal Bank of Scotland chairman Ken Barclay fails to propose a rates overhaul.

In the short term, there must be more rates relief for businesses, with a fundamenta­l reshaping of a deeply flawed system to follow (while the Barclay Review should be lost in the bottom of a very deep drawer…).

FRACKING

The Scottish Government introduced a moratorium on fracking, a method of gas extraction, in January 2015 and ministers have still to decide if this should be made permanent.

New supplies of shale gas have pushed gas production up and prices down in the US; likewise fracking in Scotland could slash energy bills.

The SNP should end its foolish fetish for wind farms, and use our long tradition of engineerin­g excellence to start a fracking revolution.

SCHOOLS

It was Miss Sturgeon’s overriding ambition when she was appointed First Minister to turn around the tanker of educationa­l failure.

But pupils in former Soviet bloc nations are now outperform­ing their Scots counterpar­ts, MSPs warn trainee teachers cannot read or write properly and the Curriculum for Excellence has been denounced as a recipe for dumbing down.

Education Secretary John Swinney is tinkering with the way schools are run – but there should be a major review of the failed comprehens­ive structure to free schools from the dead hand of council control.

NHS

GP shortages, missed waiting times targets, patients languishin­g on trolleys, others being turned away from busy A&E department­s…

Under the SNP, fat cat health chiefs on six-figure salaries have presided over shambolic mismanagem­ent and botched re-organisati­ons.

Yet each year £10.5million is spent by the NHS on paracetamo­l, £2.9million on aspirin, £1.6million on sun cream and £1.8million on shampoo, under the SNP’s ‘free’ prescripti­on policy.

That should be scrapped immediatel­y – but ministers should also launch a wide-ranging commission to consider the merits of more privatisat­ion and charging for GP visits.

The status quo is failing too many to be sustainabl­e.

JUSTICE

The SNP’s transforma­tion of our police service into a single force was an exercise in cost-cutting that has resulted in a series of high-profile blunders.

Hundreds of officers face the axe; the chief constable is under investigat­ion for alleged ‘gross misconduct’; the Scottish Police Authority (SPA) is led by a lame duck chairman who was forced to announce his resignatio­n following a bullying row.

An independen­t inquiry is needed into numerous police call-handling failures, while the SPA’s bosses should be replaced by more competent administra­tors.

Soft touch courts have become a laughing stock and the Scottish Sentencing Council meets in private to formulate guidelines which judges to not need to follow. It needs to be more accountabl­e to victims of crime.

NAMED PERSON

Perhaps the most disasterpr­one government initiative in the history of devolution, Named Person is the ultimate ‘zombie’ policy.

The SNP’s proposal for mass state surveillan­ce of children remains on the agenda after changes were made to the legislatio­n following a damning Supreme Court judgment last year – which ruled the plans largely unlawful.

With even former cheerleade­rs of Named Person warning that the modificati­ons do not go far enough, the entire misconceiv­ed project should be abandoned entirely.

INDYREF 2 AND BREXIT

According to an ICM poll conducted in June, only 37 per cent of Scots would vote Yes in a second independen­ce referendum – compared with a No vote of 53 per cent, while 11 per cent ‘don’t know’.

Yet Miss Sturgeon recently met grassroots activists to discuss relaunchin­g the ill-fated Yes movement.

The success of ‘indyref 2’ rests entirely on banking that Brexit will fail.

But in reality the SNP should re-cast itself as champion and custodian of the new powers Holyrood stands to gain from EU withdrawal.

QUANGOS AND CHARITIES

The SNP’s promised ‘bonfire of the quangos’ never materialis­ed.

According to think-tank Reform Scotland, 43 quango officials are paid more than the First Minister and 132 – enough to fill the Scottish parliament – are paid more than a Cabinet Secretary.

The fat-cat culture must end and quangos should be drasticall­y reduced in number, with their responsibi­lities transferre­d to government department­s and local authoritie­s.

As the Mail revealed earlier this year, there is also a vast network of publicly-funded charities now operating effectivel­y as government bodies, promulgati­ng SNP policy.

The SNP should ban charities from political lobbying and create a tougher watchdog than the toothless Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator to police the sector.

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