Is it not more the signalling of such a move ?
We spent X gazillion on rolling stock 5 years ago with a 30 year life.
We spent Y gazillion trying to make it work.
We have the most stringent climate goals of the UK nations and are the only part of the UK where the Greens are in government.
But hey, let’s park up some new electric trains and let Michael O’Leary give Boeing a ring.
Logically, for example, the cost of running libraries per book borrowed - you’d just give an Amazon voucher for a couple of quid each time someone wanted one. But the signalling of removing community services would be hugely damaging.
None of that means that the Scottish Govt wouldn’t try it though. The Greens would just go into their bunker or start talking about active travel instead of transport. It’s what they did when ScotRail services got cut and still haven’t been reinstated.
A Green Party Scottish Government minister took a private boat to one of the isles instead of using the public ferry services - Scottish government owned as well. They’re pretty shameless.
Again, who are you signalling anything to? How many people actually know the sleeper exists? How many are aware of the fact that it has to be effectively subsidised at 100%?
In fairness, a lot of people in Scotland know it exists. Especially along the lines of route the further north you go. Stopping the sleeper wouldn’t go unnoticed. No matter how cynical I am about the Scottish government, they’d need a strategy to make the issue go away and not cause huge political waves.
That it’s subsidised at 100% (if it indeed is) wouldn’t necessarily be an issue. Most ferry services and almost all internal Scottish flights are heavily subsidised as well. That in itself wouldn’t be a controversy nor would it add to demands for its withdrawal.
A lot of Scotland is quite sparsely populated, and heavily subsidised public transport is a necessity here.