Donald Dewar MP (1937-2000), a stalwart of the Scottish Labour Party, is regarded as the architect of Scottish devolution, and was described by some on his death as 'the Father of the Scottish Nation' - a description greeted with muted dissent by Alex Salmond. On the morning after Dewar's death, a former Moderator of the Church of Scotland lamented his passing, saying 'we were blessed that he walked among us'. Hair-raising hyperbolic comments such as this are common on the deaths Scottish public figures. Later, when his will showed that he had lots of money and owned property, we became not so blessed that he had walked among us - he was now proclaimed to be a phony and a miser. As Carol Craig observed, both views said more about how Scots perceive themselves than about Dewar. Dewar was also - rather ludicrously - described on his death as 'a Man of the People'. In fact, it would be hard to find a modern politican who was less a man of the people. Once, when visiting a pretty council house, he sardonically quipped 'Very Hansel and Gretel'. Dewar was a scholar, a dedicated politician, and couldn't be arsed pretending that he shared the tastes of most Scots - he just wanted to improve their lives. What he would have made, of, say, Gordon Brown claiming he watched the X Factor, can be imagined. We shall not see his like again. See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Dewar
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