Scottish election 2021: Iranian regime ‘peddling disinformation’ in attempt to swing Scottish election – The Scotsman

A new report has warned that Iran is ‘peddling disinformation’ via social media in an attempt to destabilise the UK by influencing the Scottish election in favour of pro-independence parties.

Reported by The Times, cyber specialists working on behalf of the Iranian regime are targeting Scottish voters by posing as pro-independence users on Twitter and Facebook.

The study by the Henry Jackson Society think tank reported that fake accounts encourage real users to share content and material of a pro-independence nature in the form of memes, graphics and cartoons with their friends and contact on the sites.

Fake websites have also been set up, designed to influence the campaign by tricking internet users as part of a wider disinformation campaign from Iran.

The society has said that the Iranian regime’s efforts are similar to that of Russia – designed to instil chaos, uncertainty and division to weaken their adversaries.

The report said that the increasing presence of Iranian disinformation was an attempt by the regime to “attack the constitutional integrity of the United Kingdom”.

It concluded: “Iran has shown itself to be a country which engages in Russian-style disinformation campaigns, repeatedly establishing fake websites and internet accounts in an effort to disrupt the political systems of liberal democracies.

“Judged within this context, Iran is almost certainly looking to disrupt our current elections, most likely those under way for the Scottish assembly.”

Scottish politics in the grip of a fact-denial epidemic – These Islands

A survey commissioned by These Islands has revealed widespread fact denial within the Scottish electorate and deep confusion over the SNP’s independence plans, particularly with respect to currency. Survation surveyed 1,047 people aged 16+ living in Scotland. Fieldwork was conducted 21st – 23rd April 2021.

Fact Denial

  • 57% of Scottish independence supporters agree with the statement “The figures used to calculate Scotland’s deficit (the GERS figures) are made up by Westminster to hide Scotland’s true wealth” and 90% of those considered the statement to be “important” or “very important” to their opinion on Scottish independence.

The reality of Scotland’s deficit position is shown in the Government Expenditure and Revenue Scotland (GERS) figures published by the Scottish Government. These figures qualify as National Statistics and are compiled by the Scottish Government’s own statisticians and economists. It should be deeply shocking that most independence supporters agree with the statement above – the figures are demonstrably not “made up by Westminster” and it is fantastical to believe that an SNP Government would choose to publish figures which “hide Scotland’s true wealth”. The First Minister is a gifted communicator, but is strangely reluctant to nail this corrosive myth.

The survey also found that most independence supporters agreed with other demonstrably false statements relating to official Scottish Government figures (myths which are widely shared on social media):

  • 54% of independence supporters agree “Scottish tax revenues are understated because of Scottish exports leaving via English ports”1
  • 66% of independence supporters agree “Scottish tax revenues are understated because taxes generated by the whisky industry are not properly allocated to Scotland”2
  • 55% of independence supporters agree “Scotland is only seen to be running a deficit because some costs outside of Scotland, like HS2 and infrastructure spending in the South East, are charged to Scotland”3

Edinburgh needs more police after attacks on Lothian Buses and trams so why is SNP-led council not banging the table? – Edinburgh Evening News

From February into April, Edinburgh has witnessed a series of appalling attacks on Lothian Buses, endangering staff and passengers and halting many services in the evenings.

Last week the council finally got round to discussing the situation thanks to a Conservative motion calling for action. While the SNP-run council has condemned the actions of the vandals, they’ve done little else.

The answer to these issues is proper local policing that engages with the young people in our communities, works in partnership with other agencies like the council’s youth services, diverts young people away from crime and anti-social behaviour, and targets hotspot areas where attacks take place to catch the perpetrators. It effectively prevents the problem at source.

This is precisely what we had until 2013 under the former Lothian and Borders Police. It was driven by a much larger network of community-based officers who knew their areas and worked with the residents on problems.

I have every respect for the work our local police have done to resolve the attacks on our transport system. But there are not enough officers. The number of locally-based police officers in Edinburgh has fallen since the creation of Police Scotland while the population has risen inexorably. When averaged out per thousand residents, the local officers in Greater Glasgow outnumber ours by three to two.

Under Police Scotland, the focus and accountability of the service has centralised. Smaller numbers of local officers are unable to work on prevention as they chase around the endless stream of incidents. Through no fault of their own, their contacts with community councils and other local groups are limited.

The council doesn’t give enough time to scrutinise local policing, burying it in lengthy committee agendas. And previous attempts to argue for more local police resources have obviously fallen on deaf ears.

The council’s youth and community services have been slow to return from lockdown. I’m pleased that one SNP councillor, Kate Campbell, has highlighted the bureaucratic restrictions that have caused this. She seemed slightly embarrassed when I praised her actions at the council meeting. I hope she’ll carry on until she gets a result.

The bottom line is Edinburgh needs its fair share of local police officers so we can return to a preventative approach. The police focus on the task usually galvanises the partnership with other agencies too.

I know from my time on the Scottish Police Authority Board that the Police Scotland top-brass recognise the disparity between local police numbers in Edinburgh and elsewhere. I even agree with them that it will take time to sort.

However, the figures haven’t improved. And the soflty, softly approach of the SNP council’s lobbying has achieved nothing.

It’s high time the council stood up for Edinburgh and its needs as a capital city. Police Scotland and the Scottish government should show us a workable plan to give us a fair share of police resources. If they don’t, we should kick up a political stink until they do.

Nine hospital centres pledged by SNP five years ago still not open – The Times

Nine hospital treatment centres which the SNP promised to deliver by 2021 are yet to open, including four intended to provide rapid care for cancer patients.

Nicola Sturgeon vowed in 2016 to launch five new surgery suites providing common operations such as hip and knee replacements during the next parliament. Not one is seeing patients yet and plans for two are under review.

That same year the Scottish government published a cancer strategy which said six new cancer centres would be launched, offering faster diagnoses and treatment. Insiders say just two — a “rejig” of existing services planned under a previous Scottish Labour coalition government — are operational.

Opening three new fast-track cancer diagnosis centres is now part of the SNP’s current election campaign.

Take the issue of independence out of Scotland’s election and the SNP would be struggling – Yahoo News

The Holyrood elections will be the “most important in Scotland’s history”, according to Nicola Sturgeon. She hopes to repeat the SNP’s 2011 performance and win an overall majority to claim a mandate for a second independence referendum. But the SNP is often coy about that mandate, preferring the more anodyne “choice about the future”, and it surrounds the commitment with caveats designed to reassure voters.

A referendum will only happen after the Covid crisis has passed and a citizens’ assembly has considered “the kind of country we want Scotland to be”. That leaves plenty of wriggle room, and is wide open to interpretation. It allows the SNP to appeal to supporters of independence without scaring away potential SNP voters who have reservations about it. It also gives the SNP some freedom to choose the time to push for a referendum.

The pandemic has also helped the SNP in other ways. Voters have rallied around the saltire, not the union jack, during the crisis. It has created numerous opportunities to highlight Sturgeon’s incumbency as first minister, her communication skills and ability to master a detailed brief, as well as encouraging comparisons with Boris Johnston. Failings in the handling of the pandemic, most obvious in discharging vulnerable elderly people into care homes at considerable cost to life, have had little impact on the SNP’s popularity. The pandemic also shifts the focus away from the Scottish government’s wider record during its time in office.

Oppositions, it is often asserted, don’t win elections but governments lose them. The SNP’s record ought to put it on the defensive. But the party presents itself as being in government and opposition at the same time. It governs in Edinburgh and uses this base to oppose London rule. Blame games are made easier in multi-level systems, and it never takes much to convince many Scots that the Tories in London are to blame for Scotland’s woes. The SNP will always win the battle to be the party most willing to stand up for Scotland against Westminster. Take independence and the pandemic out of the election, and the SNP would be struggling.

At the start of her premiership, Nicola Sturgeon promised to “close the [educational] attainment gap completely”, but the most recent independent evaluation by Audit Scotland concluded that progress had been “limited”, falling short of the government’s aims. Public Health Scotland, launched a year ago, warned that health inequalities had worsened over the previous decade. People living in Scotland’s most deprived areas could expect on average 48.2 years of good health, compared with 72.3 in the least deprived areas. Drug deaths have increased by 160% during the SNP’s time in office.

The Scottish government has siphoned off local government money to try to address such deficiencies, leaving local government to face increasing demands with fewer resources. Local public services have been cut across Scotland, including Sturgeon’s own back yard in Glasgow. The SNP approach to policymaking is reflected in its manifesto, which proposes to sprinkle goodies around, enough to create a headline or appease groups of voters, but not enough to have much impact on outcomes. Outcomes have limped lamely behind the SNP’s soaring rhetoric. The weaker the record, the greater the renewed promise.

But a party may still be returned to power with a poor record if there is no credible alternative. And the SNP has been blessed with very weak opposition. The Tories became Scotland’s second party in 2016 by presenting themselves as the true party of the union, casting Labour and Liberal Democrats as weak and untrustworthy on independence, making them the alternative party of government. Over the last five years, they have focused almost exclusively on opposition to an independence referendum, helping to narrow the political agenda and polarise debate.

So long as the union is centre stage, the SNP and Tories will benefit so long as Labour fails to articulate a clear alternative. Labour is damned for being insufficiently unionist by the Tories and too unionist by the SNP. The SNP never fails to point out that Labour worked with the Tories in Better Together during the 2014 Scottish independence referendum, in much the same way as an earlier generation of Labour politicians constantly reminded voters that the SNP brought down the Labour government in 1979 and let Margaret Thatcher into Downing Street. Labour has been unable to situate itself in the debate with a distinct position on the constitution.

Related: Scottish election 2021: a visual guide on what to expect

The pandemic has created an opportunity that Anas Sarwar, its new leader, has exploited skilfully by stressing the importance of “recovery”. Sarwar’s significantly improved poll ratings suggest he has been the star of the election, but rising leadership ratings have not been matched with rising levels of support for Labour. If Labour did push the Tories into third place, this would have significant implications for a prospective referendum. The SNP would much rather go into a referendum in which the Tories were the main opposition; a Labour revival would create problems for the SNP, especially if Labour were to offer an alternative to the current binary divide. This would open up debate with an option Labour could comfortably get behind, command broad public support by drawing votes from both independence and the status quo, and avoid the binary pit that would force the party into bed with the Tories again.

Devolution’s promise of “new politics” based on pluralism, compromise and consensus was always unlikely. The electoral system may have produced more Holyrood parties than Scotland returns to the Commons, but Holyrood is now more adversarial and polarised than ever. The narrow prism through which this election is viewed makes it very difficult to see that changing after this election.

Arran ferry woes costs island businesses thousands – BBC news

Tourism businesses on Arran have said they are losing tens of thousands of pounds after one of two ferries serving the isle was diverted to another route.

The ferry is being used to support freight services between Stornoway and Ullapool following the breakdown of that route’s Loch Seaforth last month.

Holiday accommodation providers on Arran said the move had led to booking cancellations.

Ferry operator CalMac said it was endeavouring to maintain services.

The Loch Seaforth – the largest and fastest ship in CalMac’s fleet – had to be removed from its route between Stornoway on Lewis and Ullapool in the Highlands because of an engine problem.

It has been undergoing repairs at a yard in Greenock and the work is not expected to be finished until 17 May at the earliest.

CalMac has had to move ferries from other routes to help maintain services to the Western Isles.

This has included using one of Arran’s two regular summer season vessels, leading to a temporary reduction in sailings between Ardrossan in North Ayrshire and Brodick on Arran.

CalMac said it had made extra provision available at the north end of Arran between Lochranza and Claonaig on the Kintyre peninsula in Argyll and Bute.

But Arran businesses bosses said accessing those sailings involved longer journey times, and would not suit visitors planning short stays on the island