Rescuers searched for survivors among the ruins of Florida’s flooded homes from Hurricane Ian while authorities in South Carolina waited for daylight to assess damage from the storm’s second strike.
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  I N S I D E R  
     
  Oct 7, 2022  
     
 
Neil McIntosh
 
Neil McIntosh
Editor of The Scotsman

Dear reader,

 

You would correctly assume that journalists tend to be news junkies, and I'm no different. But the current news flow - which could most politely be described as "unrelenting" - is hard going, even for us.

 

Horrific global weather, a mass shooting in Thailand and Putin's nuclear sabre-rattling all bring us unease from overseas.

 

People clear debris in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian in Fort Myers Beach, Florida. Picture: Giogio Viera/AFP via Getty Images

And things are little better closer to home. It may seem a long time ago, but it was only the start of the week that Michael Gove announced he was leading the rebellion against the Conservative tax cuts package. Then we had the u-turn on that top rate tax cut, concerns about the NHS's staffing and the threat of 1970s-style three-hour blackouts this winter.

 

Perhaps unsurprisingly, our exclusive opinion poll midweek revealed the Conservatives will be entirely wiped out in Scotland at the next General Election, unless something changes. Dramatically.

 

Even if you are diametrically opposed to the Conservatives - and I appreciate many of our readers would, in more normal times, actually be quite supportive of them - there is a fundamental problem with this quite radical government. Governments - nations - work better when there's some kind of grudging respect for both the government of the day, and its mandate, from the bulk of the electorate. Liz Truss's government feels far from that, lacking its own direct mandate and now embarked on a range of policies, few apparently popular, which are very different to Boris Johnson's manifesto.

 

Scottish Conservative leader Douglas Ross is facing losing his seat at the next general election.

 

I'm not one of those who think Truss will be swept away quickly by the Conservatives - simply because it took so long to move on Boris Johnson. But that may mean we have a little more of this exhausting uncertainty to come. So, for our part, we will continue to offer a clear-eyed and honest view of what is going on, tightly packaged and leavened - we hope - with features that are a little more upbeat.

 

On that theme, then, and looking ahead to tomorrow, we hope to bring you news of whether Glasgow has landed hosting duties for next year's Eurovision - we're due to learn around 7pm tonight if the giant music party is headed for Clydeside. We'll also hear from the island community that's raised £150,000 to save its local pub. And we'll be looking forward to a full weekend's domestic football - after a difficult week in Europe, at least some of our teams will be getting back to winning ways, in what is a jam-packed month for sport.

 

In the magazine, Corina Contini offers us all exactly what we need - hearty one-pot cooking - alongside our usual brilliant package of arts, entertainment and lifestyle journalism. All of it offers you something a little brighter for the weekend. We hope you enjoy - and here's hoping for better news next week.

 

Best wishes,

 

Neil McIntosh

Editor, The Scotsman

 
     
 
Where is Hurricane Ian: Search for survivors in Florida goes on as storm surge hits South Carolina
 
Where is Hurricane Ian: Search for survivors in Florida goes on as storm surge hits South Carolina
 
Rescuers searched for survivors among the ruins of Florida’s flooded homes from Hurricane Ian while authorities in South Carolina waited for daylight to assess damage from the storm’s second strike.
 
Read more +
 
Flooding
 
Thailand mass shooting at nursery: Sleeping children among 31 people killed at day care centre
 
A gunman forced his way into a room where children were sleeping in a nursery in Thailand before opening fire, killing 31 people.
 
Read more +
 
     
 
Joe Biden: Nuclear ‘Armageddon’ risk highest since Cuban Missile Crisis
 
Joe Biden: Nuclear ‘Armageddon’ risk highest since Cuban Missile Crisis
 
US President Joe Biden has said his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin is “not joking” about tactical nuclear weapons and the “Armageddon” risk is at its highest level since the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962.
 
Read more +
 
Flooding
 
Michael Gove could lose Tory whip by voting against PM’s ‘profoundly concerning’ tax plans
 
Conservative former Cabinet minister Michael Gove said he is “profoundly” concerned about Liz Truss’s vast tax cuts as he suggested he could vote against the plans.
 
Read more +
 
     
  Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng U-turns on scrapping 45p tax rate  
     
  Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng U-turns on scrapping 45p tax rate  
     
  The government has performed a dramatic U-turn on plans to cut the 45p tax rate.  
     
  Read more +  
     
     
 
 
     
     
     
   
   
   
 
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