Readers' Letters: SNP leadership has done precious little meaningful listening

'Listening, campaigning, persuading' are Humza Yousaf's watchwords on winning Scottish Independence  (Picture: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)'Listening, campaigning, persuading' are Humza Yousaf's watchwords on winning Scottish Independence  (Picture: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
'Listening, campaigning, persuading' are Humza Yousaf's watchwords on winning Scottish Independence (Picture: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
In his speech at the SNP conference, Humza Yousaf said that to achieve independence there would be a need for “listening, campaigning, persuading” (“Yousaf sees off independence strategy rebellion”, 16 October). His predecessor Nicola Sturgeon said similar things at previous conferences. Yet the reality is that over the last decade the SNP leadership has done precious little meaningful listening, preferring to only hear those who agree with them, and when it comes to persuading, their style on all manner of issues has been to seek to impose their dogmatic views and policies on the rest of us.

That just leaves campaigning, and sadly that is the one thing that the SNP has majored on, so often prioritising political point scoring and posturing over effective government.

There is little reason to think that the continuity First Minister, or “First Activist”, to use his own suggested alternate persona, will be any more interested in responding to the opinions of the majority of Scots, or any more successful in winning them over.

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