Dear Sane,
Good at their job, willing to serve and give up normal life because as you so rightfully say Being an MP, MSP, and others is if you do it right a brutally hard job if they do it right!
You cannot have a normal life if you choose to be a MP/MSP, it is not possible, once again, not a job, not a career, not a profession a vocation
To end Sane auld son! anyone can be a MSP/MP but kiss goodbye any normal life especially in this modern world where even if you cough wrongly someone is watching.
Gonnagle.
I agree - and any person considering becoming an MP/MSP will need to consider the impact it will have on normal life and would presumably consider that the upsides of being and MP/MSP outweigh the impact of normal life. And for a person considering not just being a back bencher, but in an executive role then the impact will be greater still.
And here is my issue with Forbes. So just a couple of years ago (when her child was even younger) she has comfortably enough to stand for leader which would have impacted normal life even greater. Since then what has changed - well not impacts on family life, so it is hard not to conclude that the key determinative here isn't the downside of impact on normal life (which hasn't changed and she was prepared to take an ever greater hit as she wanted to be leader).
Rather what has changed is that she has hit a road-block in her ambitions, recognising that the 'greasy pole' is perhaps greasier than she'd previously thought. So the balance between her political ambitions and the impact on normal life has become tipped, due to her ambitions not being able to be met rather than any change in impact on normal life.
And of course a person's priorities between professional ambition and a focus on family life will often change over time. Now I'm not saying this isn't unreasonable and it is of course her choice, but I feel there is a lack of honesty here. But it is hard to accept that someone prepared just a couple of years ago to take an even greater hit on family life to become leader (and then agreed to become deputy) now considers the hit (which hasn't changed) to be too great to even be involved in politics at all without considering that a change in perspective on her professional ambitions is a key determinative here.