Scottish Labour is putting forward good policy ideas to fix broken public services, says Record View.
The latest revelations in the Peter Mandelson scandal are deeply damaging for the Prime Minister.
His appointment of the disgraced former Labour figure as the UK’s ambassador to the US was a terrible error of judgment.
But for the Government to push ahead with the hire after Mandelson failed vetting is unforgivable.
Keir Starmer said he did not know Mandelson failed vetting and that he is “furious” with a top civil servant for not telling him.
But the PM’s position makes him look like a leader who does not know what is going on in his own Government.
He also comes across as someone unwilling to ask basic questions about an obviously sensitive appointment.
SNP leader John Swinney is correct to say the UK Government has been “asleep at the wheel”.
The scandal is proving to be a major distraction in the Holyrood election campaign, which should be about schools, hospitals and the cost of living.
But the PM’s blunders are making it about him – even though Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar has tried to distance himself from Starmer.
Labour candidate Monica Lennon has said Starmer should quit immediately as the row refuses to die down.
Her perspective is sensible and the PM should consider the damage he is doing to Scottish Labour’s election chances.
Labour have put forward good policy ideas to fix Scotland’s broken public services. But their message is being drowned out by the noise around Starmer and the Mandelson scandal.
That’s a problem for Scottish Labour.
But, more importantly, it’s a disaster for voters in Scotland who need to make an informed choice on May 7 on who runs the country.
Time to axe tax
The council tax system is so old it was drawn up by Thatcher-era dinosaurs serving under John Major in the early 90s.
It was a response to the hated poll tax and came at a different time in terms of council funding and house prices.
It’s scarcely credible that homes are still paying council tax according to valuations carried out in 1991.
The SNP may have tinkered around the edges of the system since first winning power in 2007, but reneged on a manifesto pledge to scrap the tax.
Some tried to push for reform or abolition but it remains one of these thorny issues that successive leaders would rather brush under the carpet.
In today’s Daily Record, trade union chief Roz Foyer says enough is enough.
She has offered to host a cross-party summit on the issue.
We hope she succeeds. The council tax needs to be scrapped – and doing nothing is no longer an option.
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