Scotland's sanitised campaign masks the highest election stakespublished at 16:53 British Summer Time 5 May 2021
Glenn Campbell
BBC Scotland Political Editor
The pandemic has produced a more sanitised election - less eventful, even a little dull at times.
There have been some memorable moments. Alex Salmond setting up the Alba party. Nicola Sturgeon conceding she took her "eye off the ball", external over drug deaths. Anas Sarwar's dance moves, external.
In some ways, what has not happened is more notable.
For the first time in Holyrood's short history, the UK prime minister has not appeared on the Scottish campaign trail.
Boris Johnson's unpopularity in Scotland may go some way to explaining his absence. The controversy surrounding his administration has ensured he's featured in the campaign anyway.
None of that is to suggest the Scottish election does not matter. It absolutely does. Big time.
Voters are choosing who will run the Scottish government for the next five years and lead Scotland's recovery from coronavirus.
They are also deciding whether or not there will be a big push for another independence referendum in the next parliament - something that affects the whole UK.
If a majority of those elected to Holyrood back indyref2, a major political wrangle between the Scottish and UK governments is likely to follow.
However low energy this election might be, the political stakes are extremely high.