As the new year begins there are reasons for the SNP to be in good heart. The haemorrhaging of support has arrested. The party in government is behaving with more of a sense of purpose than for some time. A discussion is planned on party organisation with a general acceptance that reform is needed.
2025 could be the year when the party really gets its act back together. Reorganised, replenished, reactivated. But in the room where that debate is taking place sits the biggest of elephants. Operation Branchform. And we can’t not talk about it for ever.
When I say talk about it, I don’t mean discuss the matters being investigated, nor comment on the evidence being considered, nor opine on the guilt or innocence of any individual. All of that is a matter for the courts and I have no desire to be in their contempt.
But that does not mean that it is impossible to comment on the process itself or on the political impact that it is having.
The investigation of allegations of misconduct by senior officers of the SNP has been going on for three and half years. And there is no indication by the agencies involved as to when it might conclude. This is having a corrosive effect on Scottish politics. At some point it has to end.
I fully accept that the allegations are serious ones, and I will not try to minimise their import. But as Jim Sillars observed before Christmas the SNP organisation is actually a pretty small one with an HQ staff of around 20. It’s not as if we are talking about a major complex international organisation here.
Police Scotland said some time ago they have interviewed everyone they need to. Presumably by now whatever evidence there is has been collected. Now someone has to decide on it.
That decision might be complicated, perhaps not clear cut. But making the judgement whether to prosecute on the evidence is exactly what prosecutors do. Decisions are not made any easier by delaying them.
At the most basic level the people facing accusations have the right to have them dealt with. In 1868 British Prime Minister William Gladstone said justice delayed is justice denied. As senior Scottish advocates have observed that dictum is now becoming relevant in this case. This cannot go on indefinitely.
The SNP has already changed its financial procedures as a result of concerns raised around this case, and of course, the people accused are no longer there. But until the outcome is known the party will not be able to deal with the issues it raises. It will not be able to move on.
In the meantime, Branchform hangs like a spectre over the nationalist side in the Scottish political divide. This puts the SNP at a great disadvantage, the subject of suspicion and investigation.
In many ways there’s a great unfairness to this. The allegations of wrongdoing were lodged against individuals, yet it is the wider party that suffers. After all, no one is suggesting that whatever happened came about as an act of deliberate policy agreed by SNP members. Quite the converse. The charge is precisely that senior officers of the party acted against policy and without the consent of the wider party.
Looked at this way the SNP is the victim not the perpetrator. If something bad happened, it was done to the party, not by it. Yet the press now universally describes the case as an investigation into the SNP’s finances, implying culpability for the party as a whole.
It is difficult to know the exact electoral effect that the Branchform investigation is having. Those who strongly support or strongly oppose the SNP probably won’t have their minds much altered by it. I doubt that it even has that much influence on whether people are minded to support independence.
It does though provide powerful ammunition to those whose strategy is not to attack independence but to portray the SNP as incapable of delivering it. No smoke without fire. Irrespective of the outcome, the existence of allegations of corruption undermines the party’s credibility.
But where it is having a political effect is in motivation. We know the SNP did so badly in last year’s election not because people switched to other parties, but because one-time supporters stayed at home. For many of these people Branchform is one ingredient in the mix of their disengagement. They are not coming back until it is dealt with.
The biggest challenge for the SNP is to rebuild itself as the political wing of the independence movement. That requires changes in how we organise. It requires personnel and money dedicated to recruiting and training new activists. It requires better communication with and mobilisation of members.
Central to all of that is confidence. We need to believe in ourselves before we can ask others to believe in us. Whatever the conclusion of Branchform we can deal with it. We can put things right, make changes, move on. But not until we know what it is.