Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement

The hunt is On.
Sponsored by
Can you track down Scotland's wildest beastie?
 
 
Friday, 5th December 2008

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the Scotland On Sunday site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Kenny Farquharson - how bad was she?



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 29 June 2008
WENDY has been Wendied. The woman with the best mind in Scottish politics has been forced to resign because of a failure of concentration, compounded by a failure of judgment, prolonged by a failure to understand that the game was well and truly up.

Alexander's friends are spending this weekend blaming all and sundry for her demise – the press, the parliamentary authorities, the standards commissioner, the SNP. Yet, ultimately Alexander, has no one to blame but herself.

Let's put aside, for
a moment, the circumstances that led to her downfall, which are examined in depth elsewhere in this newspaper. When we look instead to the future it's clear we have reached a watershed moment in Scottish history. The decisions taken by the Labour Party in the coming days, weeks and months will have far-reaching effects on the Scottish political landscape and the shape of Scotland's constitutional future.

Cards on the table: Wendy Alexander was right to resign. Yet her demise is a terrible setback for Scotland. This might be considered a curious conclusion, given the near-unanimous verdict that her leadership has been a cack-handed disaster. But the direction Alexander was taking the Scottish Labour Party was the right one. Not just for the party itself, but for Scottish politics as a whole.

In many ways, of course, history's judgment on Alexander will be unkind. She will be remembered as the woman who bottled a contest with Jack McConnell for the Scottish Labour leadership in 2001, and who made a dog's breakfast of it when handed the job on a plate in 2007. But I suspect history may have something more to say: that she was the woman who, having played a key role in bringing about home rule in 1997, realised after a decade that the pact with the Scottish people needed renewed. Furthermore, her blueprint for taking Scotland into its next political era was more far-sighted and better thought-through than anyone else's at the time.

So what was this blueprint? And what will now happen to it as Scottish Labour ponders the choice of a new leader and a possible change in strategy? Alexander has left three legacies in her short time as a Scottish political leader, and the fate of each of these three legacies will have a profound effect in determining this country's future. It's worth examining each of them for clues as to what may be in store.

The first legacy is Labour's recent conversion to the cause of more powers for the Scottish Parliament. The party fought last year's Holyrood elections saying more powers were completely unnecessary – a foolish stance, ordered by Gordon Brown, that could have been the difference between winning and losing. When Alexander was elected leader, the first thing she did was to ditch this and embrace the view that it was time devolution moved on, and took on more responsibility.

To the dismay of some Labour colleagues she decided to find common cause with the Tories and Lib Dems and create a cross-party group to examine ways of giving Holyrood enhanced powers, while staying within the UK. And so the Calman Commission was born, headed by former chief medical officer, Sir Kenneth Calman. This was despite carping from indolent Labour MPs at Westminster (who are still resentful that MSPs, and not MPs, get all the attention from the Scottish electorate nowadays).

So, after yesterday's bombshell, what now for Labour's commitment to more powers for Holyrood? Even the most devo-sceptic new leader would struggle to ditch the Calman Commission, given that it already has Gordon Brown's public blessing. But both leading contenders to replace Alexander, Andy Kerr and Iain Gray, are thought to be less convinced of the logic of taking on Alex Salmond at his own game. Without Alexander as a spur, and without her commitment to new powers over the financial levers of the Scottish economy, Calman's eventual prescription risks being far less radical and far-reaching than it might have been. For those of us who believe in a much more powerful Scottish Parliament within the Union, that is a terrible shame.

The second Alexander legacy is her now-infamous decision to throw Labour's weight behind a referendum on Scottish independence. Her unveiling of this policy in May this year was comically clumsy. But seldom has a ground-breaking political strategy been so misrepresented and poorly understood.

In a nutshell, her thinking was this: she wanted more powers for the Parliament. But she knew this option couldn't be put to the people in a referendum without also giving them the option of full independence. What Scotland was heading towards, therefore, was a multi-option referendum on the country's future. She realised, however, that this was likely to be a disaster – how could you possibly decide a nation's fate on the basis of reallocated second preferences in a voting system that few people understood? The result of any such referendum would lack legitimacy. She therefore decided the only option was to give people the choice of a straight "yes" or "no" on independence. Only when that question had been settled – in her belief, in favour of a reformed Union – could Scotland move on and develop home rule within the UK. If Scotland said 'yes' to independence, then fair enough – who could argue against the verdict of the Scottish people?

Officially this still remains Scottish Labour policy – albeit now with the proviso that Labour's backing is provisional on what is in the actual referendum question. But it is an open secret that Labour is deeply divided about the wisdom of risking the integrity of the United Kingdom in this way. For many senior Labour figures, Alexander's resignation is the perfect opportunity to ditch the referendum pledge for good.

Any candidate who tries to backtrack on this, however, has some serious questions to answer. How do they intend to get public endorsement of any new changes to the way Scotland is governed? Do they really believe a multi-option referendum is credible? And how can you oppose an independence referendum without giving the impression that you don't trust the Scottish people to decide their own future? Alexander took the bold step of saying to the Scottish public: "I trust you. You decide." It will be a brave politician that reneges on that one.

Which brings us to Wendy Alexander's third legacy, which is this: she had the courage to consider Scottish Labour's future after Gordon Brown. She appreciated that her first loyalty was to Scottish Labour, not to a UK Labour leader in London. This she considered to be true regardless of who that UK Labour leader might be, even if he was a long-standing friend and Prime Minister. This was an historic break from the past. It explains why, when Brown rejected her referendum strategy she ignored him and went public anyway. Why should Middle England have a veto on what's best for Scotland?

With Brown heading for defeat at a UK general election, does it not make eminent sense for Scottish Labour to keep its distance from him? Does the Scottish Labour leader really have to throw him/herself on the pyre? Looking further ahead, is it really acceptable to have a Scottish Labour leader in government at Holyrood who is beholden to a UK Labour leader who is only in opposition at Westminster?

The logical consequence of this thinking has to be greater autonomy – perhaps complete autonomy – for the Scottish Labour Party. This should be an issue in any coming leadership contest. Unless, of course, it turns out to be a stitch-up cynically arranged by Brown as he tries to reassert his authority over the Scottish party.

Brown's track record here is not encouraging. After Donald Dewar's death he blocked Jack McConnell's ambitions and engineered the election of Henry McLeish. After McLeish's ignominious resignation Brown backed Alexander against McConnell, only for her to pull out after a crisis of confidence. The man just can't help himself.

It was intriguing, in the aftermath of the referendum internecine row, that Alexander quietly distanced herself from her presumed mentor. They were both children of the manse, she admitted, both viewed as policy "wonks", and both very "new" Scottish Labour, she admitted – but no one should assume she was in the Prime Minister's pocket. It didn't really wash, if nothing else because it was Brown's patronage that won her the job of Scottish leader unopposed.

The runners and riders are already being assessed, but a key question for every candidate this time around will be this: are you Gordon Brown's poodle? If Brown doesn't like the look of any of the possible options on the Labour benches at Holyrood then he might be tempted to parachute someone in from outside. By a curious quirk of coincidence, a Scottish Parliamentary by-election may soon arise in Motherwell & Wishaw caused by the expected resignation of McConnell to become British High Commissioner in Malawi. Now that would be a juicy political irony – McConnell inadvertently providing Brown with the means to fix a Scottish Labour leadership contest.

Will there be a candidate offering the same vision as Wendy Alexander? What are the chances of someone with the same radical blueprint for Scottish Labour and Scotland as a whole? I'm not sure there's an obvious candidate with the courage and conviction to pick up the torch. I hope I'm proved wrong, but if I'm right then Saturday, June 28, was a desperately bad day for Scotland.

Yesterday's resignation provides Labour with the opportunity for a clean break and a new start. But there will be those who want to use it to reinforce old loyalties and put Scottish Labour on a tighter leash. It remains to be seen whether Labour is capable of finally coming to terms with the reality that Scotland has a popular SNP First Minister and that voters show no sign of regretting last May's result and begging Labour to come back into power. For the foreseeable future the Nationalists are making the political weather, and Labour needs a response that doesn't sound like the same-old, same-old.

While we're looking to the future, what now for Wendy? Well, she's the mother of toddler twins, so she won't be short of things to do. Undoubtedly she could walk into a senior job at one of Scotland's big financial institutions or a management consultancy. Or she could follow her husband Brian Ashcroft into academia. With a restless and inquisitive mind, at the age of just 45, there's no doubt she still has a substantial contribution to make.

I, for one hope, it isn't long before she starts making her mark on Scottish politics once again, and doing what she does best: thinking the unthinkable.

Wendy's words and woes

After graduating from Glasgow University, Alexander became a researcher for George Galloway, then a Labour MP. He has claimed the first time Alexander saw a mobile phone she asked: "Where do you put the money in?"

• From 1999 to 2002 she was a minister in the Scottish Executive, first as Minister for Communities, then Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning, and as Minister for Enterprise, Transport and Lifelong Learning. She said: "I'm not going to lose sight of the fact that I'm here to change the world."

• In 2000, she announced her plan to scrap Section 2A laws restricting the "promotion" of homosexuality by local authorities and faced accusations that the change would "promote gay sex teaching" in schools.

• After Labour's defeat in the 2007 Holyrood elections, Jack McConnell, inset, stood down as leader and Alexander stood for the party's top job. At the launch of her campaign, she said: "Much has changed in my life since 1999. I'm now married and have two wonderful children. My life has changed and so has Scotland."

• On September 15, she was officially confirmed as Labour leader. She said on the day: "The SNP honeymoon seems over."

• In November 2007, It emerged that Alexander's campaign had received a donation of just under £1,000 from a tax exile in the Channel Islands.

• In an interview at the Scottish Labour Party conference on March 28 this year, Wendy Alexander was asked for a rating of her performance thus far as Leader of the Scottish Labour Party. She said: "Ten out of 10."

• In April, she stunned the chamber at Holyrood by declining to use all her allocated questions at First Minister's Question Time, instead sitting down and saying that she had asked what she needed. "I have no more questions," she said.

• In May, she shocked many in her party by urging the Nationalists to hold a snap independence referendum. Labour had previously long opposed such a vote. Prime Minister Gordon Brown conspicuously failed to support her publicly, although Alexander insisted she had his support.

"Bring it on," she said.





The full article contains 2162 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

IanfaeClerrie,

East Brunswick 29/06/2008 00:22:51
There was a time when these people held all the power in Scotland. It is so enlightening that they are increasingly being marginalized.
2

malcolmcean,

29/06/2008 00:33:36
Kenny,

do you remember that chat we have a few months ago? It concerned who we thought was responsible for the drip, drip, drip of leaks and attacks upon Wendy Alexander.

You stated quite clearly that you thought that it was someone from within the Labour party with a personal gripe against Wendy Alexander (I expressed surprise at this, to which you retorted that politics was a rough old game).

Can you, then, as assistant editor of this paper, explain to me why the editorial of this week's edition makes no mention of this, prefering to simply regurgitate the Simon Pia/Wendy narrative of her resignation?

Had it not been for the investigative journalism of a certain west-coast Sunday paper the general public would have had no idea that it was indeed a Labour party insider who started this all off and kept it going (the SNP researchers were kicking the ball into an empty net).

I am a little dismayed that senior journalists chose to sit on this ijnformation rather than fill in the missing gaps in the story.
3

malcolmcean,

29/06/2008 00:34:53
Sorry, that should be 'had' instead of 'have' in the first line
4

Hamish Scott,

29/06/2008 00:35:14
"Kenny Farquharson - how bad was she?"

Bad.
5

a proud doonhamer,

Dumfries 29/06/2008 01:43:06
EXPOSE THE MOLE
EXPOSE THE MOLE
EXPOSE THE MOLE
6

John PM,

Edinburgh 29/06/2008 03:38:57
'The woman with the best mind in Scottish politics'.

Aye right. Dry yer eyes.
7

donald,

glasgow 29/06/2008 04:59:30
"Let's put aside, for a moment, the circumstances that led to her downfall, which are examined in depth elsewhere in this newspaper."

Where? Show me.

I had to read the Sunday Herald. The Northbritperson would not even allow comments on their Labour hacks miseries.
8

Richardinho,

29/06/2008 09:02:01
After having watched her near tearful performances explaining here resignation since, it's hard to have much sympathy with Wendy· She is like a petulant child having a tantrum because her toys have been taken away from her for misbehaving, rather than an adult willing to take responsibility for their own actions.

If she genuinely feels she has done nothing wrong-then for Gods sake, she should stay and make her case.
The fact is that she HAS done something wrong. She is right to resign for it, but she should go with dignity rather than trying to point the finger at everyone else.
9

Peter Curran,

Kirkliston 29/06/2008 09:51:39
Wendy apologists still keep referring to her giant intellect, keen political brain and blazing integrity.

Why may we not judge the tree by its fruit?

The Labour Party made the wrong choices with Gordon Brown and Wendy Alexander, demonstrating conclusively what is proving to be their terminal alienation from the minds of the electorate. At times Kenny Farquharson seems to inhabit the same parallel universe.
10

Calum10,

29/06/2008 09:53:27
The only people crying this weekend are the Scottish political pundits like Kenny Farquharson. They completely missed this story, despite all the rumblings at Holyrood, about Wendy resigning. She was gone before Scottish editors realised what was happening. So much for having the their fingers on the political punch.

So why did this resignation catch them on the hop? It is the consequence of press-release journalism. No need for political journalists to type up stories, no need to investigate, no need to think, all you have to do is wait for Simon Pia to turn up with latest press release to inform the Scottish press what is happening in Labour's world of wonders.

Wendy going is a kick in the teeth for the Scottish press. They built her up, they have sustained her through all the controversy, they were all left in the dark when she resigned.

I have no sympathy for Kenny Farquharson, and his like, they maintained an editorial line of support for Wendy Alexander who clearly was not fit to lead a political party.

PS I suppose that Simon Pia will be wanting his old job back now!

11

Itchy,

29/06/2008 11:12:17
"The woman with the best mind in Scottish politics has been forced to resign"

In what way has she the best mind in Scottish politics? What intelligence has she demonstrated since becoming an MSP?
12

KWC,

Edinburgh 29/06/2008 11:21:13
Henry McLeish, Joke McConnell, Wendy Alexander.

What comes next in this series of mighty politicians? The world awaits.

Heaven help us.
13

Boaby,

Glasgow 29/06/2008 11:46:07
I would have thought after her disastrous performance over the last 9 months would have put an end to "The woman with the best mind in Scottish politics" nonsense. She has showed the very opposite and I cannot understand how the word intellectual always appears in any article about her.

Remember the hungry caterpiller speach?

I have heard drunks in the pub talk more sense than this "intellectual giant" has ever done!




14

Gill,

Blairgowrie 29/06/2008 12:34:15
Boaby - 13,

Couldn't agree more! In my view, Wendy's arrogance over her 'intellectual superiority' and the resulting lack of self-analysis has been her downfall and looked so from the start.

Oh wad some power the giftie gie us,
To see oursels as others see us!
15

Sanny,

29/06/2008 12:47:46
Your comment Mr. Farquharson: - Quote\ “But I suspect history may have something more to say: that she was the woman who, having played a key role in bringing about home rule in 1997”/Unqoute: Exposes you to a claim that either, you are an incompetent Journalist, or a barefaced liar! Home Rule or more properly Devolved Government was FORCED on the Westminster Government by the Council of Europe under threat of sanctions’.

The demand of the COE landed on the desk of John Major just as his tenure as PM was about to end and he, gratefully, passed it on the Tony Blair. The lying git that is Blair said this Scottish problem “was a damned nuisance” and tried hard to scupper it with a referendum. He failed! Being Tony he turned this defeat into a victory by claiming it was Labour policy. Lies come so easily to the mouth of that apology for a man.

So Kenny why not read the Scotland-UN Committee Papers, lodged with the Scottish National Library, for a little background research before perpetrating lies through this Newspaper. A chat With Dr. James Wilkie might also be very productive in enabling you to communicate the truth about the struggle to obtain our Independence.

Wendy Alexander has in truth been a disaster for the Scottish Branch of the Labour Party in particular and women in general.

On a final note: Go back to the origin of the Labour or Socialist Movement in Scotland, a founding Principle was Home Rule for Scotland. Like many other of the principles of this once great movement of the ordinary man, they have been discarded for the benefit, not of those they claimed to represent, but for those that had boarded the gravy train. It is true “All power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely”. After fifty years of Scottish Labour its representatives wouldn’t recognise a principle if it bit them on their ar$e.

Now go back Kenny, and try to write an HONEST and informative article.
16

Neil,

Glasgow 29/06/2008 13:13:51
"Best mind in Scottish politics"

I doubt that though she was head & shoulders above anybody else in Holyrood Labour. I would say Jim Mather. Any other nominations?
17

Strangelet,

Glesga 29/06/2008 15:32:10
I never said Foulkes was the mole - someone told me.
18

ptdoug,

29/06/2008 16:20:25
WHO IS THE TEAM WENDY MOLE?

The "Scottish" Press seem determined not to investigate this question... indeed to continue to spin in Labours favour... that it was a fiendish SNP black-op.

WHO IS THE TEAM WENDY MOLE?

Perhaps a loose knit team of cyber-sleuths could do the job that the Scottish Press, and Scottish Labour, are running scared of.

WHO IS THE TEAM WENDY MOLE???

Go to it kids.
19

ptdoug,

29/06/2008 16:23:07
If they wan to see a Nationalist Black-Op... lets give them one.

EXPOSE THE TEAM WENDY MOLE!!!

Then watch "Scottish" Labour implode.
20

ratzo,

29/06/2008 16:46:32

That was a slightly cringeworthy article. It reads like the 'ejaculations' of a student activist, and it makes the same mistaken assumption that Wendy did in her ludicrous (and no less immature) "change is what we do" essay, when it clearly identified the labour party and Scotland as synonymous, potentially and actually.

The travails of labour-in-scotland's constitutional arrangement with the grownups down south is not, in fact, a genuinely momentous issue for 'Scotland'. Its the equivalent merely of angels dancing on (labour) pinheads.
21

A big boy dun it an ran away,

29/06/2008 19:40:01
The politikin o the hie and michtie says nowt tae ordinary fowk anely efter the best fur Scotland’s bairns
22

Dr. James Wilkie,

Vienna 30/06/2008 09:04:15
I don't know who the mole was, and i don't care. I will never know how Wendy Alexander ever achieved a reputation as an intellectual. Nothing I ever heard or read from her would convince me that she had a grasp of the fundamental principles of statesmanship, let alone of what is actually happening in Scotland at the moment. She is a mouth on two legs, and her superficiality has long since been obvious. And she had absolutely nothing to do with the events that brought about the restoration of the Scottish Parliament.

#15 has his facts right. That is how it happened. I was present at the CoE European Summit in October 1993 (Lord Mackay, the then Lord Chancellor, may remember his conversation with me on that occasion) and I know from the best of all sources what happened when the CoE Monitoring Committee took up the case of Scotland from June 1996 onwards. Labour's slimiest tactics failed to sabotage devolution, but even they were overshadowed by its efforts to hijack the now unstoppable project in order to keep a grip on power in Scotland. That other slimy conspirator Donald Dewar was up to the neck in these efforts. There has been a total clamp-down on all this at government level, but the Scottish media have been well-informed for years, and have still not indulged in the appropriate investigative journalism that the situation calls for. See the Scotland-UN Story at www.realmofscotland.com

Lastly, could the media please stop referring to a "Scottish Labour Party". There ain't no such animal, as its own website and publications make clear, and it is now inexorably - and deservedly - heading for extinction as a political force in Scotland.

23

M.Corleone,

2nd Vatican State.....Coatbridge 30/06/2008 14:04:47
The woman with the best mind in Scottish politics ???? Obviously a lead from the straight man here..but which comedian is going to come in with a funny line ? Douglas Alexander perhaps

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.