Showing posts with label Yes Scotland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yes Scotland. Show all posts

Sunday, June 28, 2015

WHAT WERE MISTAKES IN YES 2014 CAMPAIGN?

I was reading Alex Salmond’s book The Dream Will Never Die today. It’s an excellent enjoyable read (you can buy it on Kindle) and I would highly recommend it. Alex has always been a clever and witty communicator and this book is a moving and detailed account of the last 100 days of the referendum campaign.

Salmond blames the infamous ‘vow’ (which totally went against the spirit of ‘Purdah’ rules) and the last minute intervention of Gordon Brown ultimately for the loss of the campaign as well as the gap closing in opinion polls slightly too early.

There is no doubt that Yes fought a superb campaign from intensive grassroots traditional campaigning through extensive use of social media. I thought we had done enough to win and I thought we would and no doubt like many others I was shocked and dismayed to see the negative results flow in from across the country.

Post referendum the Yes campaign’s zeal has pushed the SNP into extraordinary political dominance at this year’s General Election with the unionists all but wiped out and the stage set for a similar thumping for them by the SNP in the next Scottish parliament elections.

Now that some time has passed and the dust has settled I think it is appropriate to look back at the 2014 referendum and consider whether there were any tactical mistakes which we can avoid in the future.

I would say there are a number of areas of concern which need to be addressed.

The main reason for achieving independence would be that it would give Scotland the chance to set out our own stall internationally. We would also be able to control all tax and spending decisions and be able to set our own welfare and defence policy.

The point that we could cancel Trident and spend the money better elsewhere was made during the campaign. The point that we could not prevent future Tory Governments was also made and we pointed out that a squeeze on spending on the NHS in England could adversely affect our block grant in Scotland.

I’m not sure however that any distinctive international policy was articulated. What we did say was that we would remain in NATO and contribute to it’s efforts around the world.

This raises problems not least the fact that recent NATO actions have been unpopular in Scotland and in fact one of the reasons for becoming independent would be presumably to avoid the quagmire of Iraq and Afganistan and the ‘war for oil’.

Simultaneously the idea we could join an international organisation under a nuclear umbrella while at the same time taking a unilateral position on nuclear defence was a mixed one at best. It may be that this is technically possible but the political reality is that it is extremely unlikely. 

It also meant that our policy internationally in terms of military intervention would probably be roughly similar to the current one pursued by the British Government! In which case why become independent?

I have noticed a disturbing tendency amongst senior pro-independence politicians that when international questions come up they seem to slip into ‘British MP mode’ they say things like ‘this country’ when they mean the UK and talk as if the imperialist position is the only game in town.

The UK is not a country and we need to point it out at every opportunity. The policy of world imperialism is not in Scotland’s interests and it never has been yet it seems that people think it might be impolite to raise such an objection on Question Time and that it might not go down too well in England.

The problem is that it doesn’t help us in Scotland. When Alan Cumming and Alex Neil at different times said that they were comfortable with Britishness and the British flag they inadvertently handed the moral high ground to the likes of Michael Forsyth who had to point out that independence would actually end the British state.

Cumming is a fine actor but this intervention made us look quite absurd as did the time Alex Neil claimed to be proud to be British. (He was a lot more honest when he was calling George Robertson Lord Haw Haw!) I suspect that both of these efforts were intended to try and position the Yes campaign to gather No supporters to our ranks but I don’t think it helped our credibility one iota.

As Britain’s third party the SNP will be constantly appearing on Question Time. While it might be nice to be highly regarded in England it is not the purpose of the party. No-one joined the SNP because they liked Britishness and it’s not what I have campaigned for since 1987!

At every debate in the Scottish parliament and at the UK parliament independence supporting representatives need to point out that Scotland is a separate country with separate political objectives. If we don’t do that then people will simply not see a requirement for independence even if the economic arguments are all in our favour.

We should always mention the United Nations but more importantly we need to craft a defence policy and international policy which suits our status as a small country in the north of Europe and then argue for that.

While I understand that Alex Salmond is a supporter of the monarchy I also feel that the rigidity of the Yes campaign on this and the EU potentially lost us more votes than it gained.

I’m sure the Queen is a decent woman and I must admit that I wouldn’t particularly like to live in a museum or attend interminable official functions or live in a goldfish bowl existence so I don’t envy her either her existence or her huge financial fortune (I’d prefer to just win Euro Millions!).

My problem isn’t with the personages of the royal family (Charles also seems like a decent man) it is with the fact that republican views are constitutionally barred from representation. Most republicans would I’m sure mumble the words of the oath and think of it as a compromise worth taking if it means they can represent their constituents. I can understand the pressures and if I was ever elected as an MSP no doubt I would feel forced into doing the same thing.

The problem is that it’s simply morally wrong to start of any MSP’s career on a lie and a humiliating ragman’s roll type experience. They should declare an oath to serve the people of Scotland and if they choose to add a declaration of support for the monarchy that should be entirely optional. If not we aren’t a functional democracy just like Westminster which uses the House of Lords to subvert the electoral process as well as provide a cushy retirement package to every MP that reaches cabinet level rank.    

While I have never been overly concerned about the European Union the facts are that it quite obviously represents some level of threat to the sovereignty of all states. Is it worth sacrificing some power to gain influence in the EU? It may be but there is a legitimate argument to be had about it. Simply imagining that all of Scotland is happy to join the EU doesn’t recognise the diversity of our country’s opinions.

We need to make a grown up choice on both the EU and the monarchy and we could only make those choices if we have a referendum on them post-independence. It doesn’t have to be immediate but the principle should be there just as the oath should be removed as a democratic principle whether the present Queen remains our head of state or not.

I think we need to seriously consider all these points if we want to win a future referendum on independence and the first thing is that we should never, ever think like a British MP. We might be in the place, but it’s on a temporary basis until we’re somewhere better. Similarly being British is a choice not a geographical quirk. The word British itself comes from the ancient Roman term for England and if the English are offended on occasion by the fact that we want to leave their fond embrace that is a price worth paying for our freedom from a political state which has never represented our views properly as Scots and never will.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Scots 'got' Thatcherism but we didn't vote for it!

Thatcher: What does reaction say about Scotland?
Article in Scotsman by David Torrance

Given that David Torrance actually used to work for the Tory party at Westminster is he really the best person to look at 'both sides' of this?

I recently saw him on TV deliberately kniving the SNP during a discussion on class, he has a political agenda and I think like many others he is trying to re-write history to justify the 'Good old Maggie, she was just mis-understood in Scotland' myth.

"Of course anti-Thatcher hostility is not a specifically Scottish phenomenon, ­although here it has a curiously personal edge. Thatcher closed Ravenscraig; she shut down the coalmines, as if as Prime Minister she had personally – and by implication vindictively – directed the demise of heavy industry without reference to economic winds or management desire."

That anyone could blythly dismiss the Ravenscraig/Gartcosh closure like this suggests that David Torrance has read the books but he doesn't understand the reality on a gut level. He's perhaps just a few years too young as he was born in '77. That means he's only seven years younger than me but I have a vivid memory of '87 which is when Thatcher was first wholly rejected by Scots and was an election I was actually involved in, my first political action as a Scottish nationalist and I was interested in politics for some years before.

The Scots 'got' Thatcherism (in both senses, we were given it whether we wanted it or not, and we understood it), but we didn't vote for her and if Britain had provided devolution (something the Conservative's had promised us) we would have avoided much of the destruction of our industrial base during the Thatcher years. We certainly would never have had the Poll tax!

The recent film about Mrs Thatcher the Iron Lady was actually quite a clever film but it sheared away from the controversy of her legacy and in fact it seemed to be an attempt to humanise Thatcher, using her dementia as a device to show her love for her husband Dennis. That's not a bad thing, Mrs Thatcher was a human being after all, but despite the fantastic central performance by Meryl Streep it really did not serously touch on her politics at all! I don't think there was one mention of Scotland in it but that is probably not surprising.

We Scots definitely did understand her politics and we didn't like them in much the same way as we don't support the actions of David Cameron right now. 

Let's not forget that the Tories recently used the murder of six small children to justify their benefits reforms. That puts a few hundred people in George Square holding a flash demo on the day of Mrs Thatcher's death in perspective!

Harry Reid wrote these comments about Mrs Thatcher on the Scottish review of books:

"The fact is that by the mid 1980s Thatcher had lost Scotland. This was a disaster for such an enthusiastically Unionist politician, a leader who grandly claimed that the Tory party was a “national party or nothing”. This was a quote from Disraeli, which Thatcher duly delivered to an audience of Scots Tories. In this context, national meant British. So, in Scotland anyway, the Tory party became, by her own admission, nothing.

Thatcher could never really grasp that Scotland itself was a nation, and a proud one; that was part of the problem. For her, much as she tried to respect and to understand Scotland, the country was just a component part of the UK. In losing Scotland, she grievously diminished her party’s unionist credentials, and she helped to pave the way for the fragmentation of the Union she cherished.

Thus the most successful and controversial British leader of modern times, and the most politically talented Unionist, could not maintain the unity of the UK. That is, in essence, her legacy in Scotland. It could be argued that she, more than anyone, paved the way for eventual Scottish independence."

What we can say about Mrs Thatcher is that she clarified the relative status of Scotland and England within the British union. England elects a Government, we get the results, and our opinions can be utterly ignored by Westminster.

In private Mrs Thatcher actually claimed to be an English nationalist and her action in denying Scotland devolution (a reversal in policy which caused Malcolm Rifkind to resign) and making sure North Sea Oil stayed in 'British' hands were certainly not in our interests but a case could be argued that these two actions allowed her to keep British imperial delusions alive, something which is central to English state interests.

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PS: I recommend reading this article by Mike Small on Bella Caledonia:

http://bellacaledonia.org.uk/2013/04/11/ding-dong/

Monday, April 08, 2013

Bitter Together are fuming as they can't find famous Scots to back No campaign

"A lot of people think we’re all going to fall flat on our face if we do this. We’re too feisty a people to let things turn bad if we went and tried it. Why not? Why not try at least?"

Kevin McKidd
















 
Kevin is a talented Scots actor from Elgin who appeared in Irvine Welsh's Trainspotting and currently stars in US TV series Gray's Anatomy.

Bitter Together are fuming, they can't find anyone famous to back their campaign!

All they can come up with is English people who have a tenuous link to Scotland like J K Rowling who once lived here while writing a kids book or Emma Thomson who can do an almost passable Scottish accent.  Oh and of course there's the famous bra manufacturer and a fitba manager who plies his trade in England and soup and teacake makers. Oh and a millionaire Tory donor (based in London, what a shock) who is funding most of their campaign!

Against this parcel of minor level and irrelevant rogues we have:

Author and Booker Prize Winner: James Kelman

A large number of genuine Scots actors including the patriotic Mr Kidd above and the most famous Scotsman ever Sean Connery (who has backed indy since endorsing Winnie Ewing in Hamilton at the height of his fame as James Bond)

Alasdair Gray, our greatest living writer

Joseph Stiglitz a Noble Prize Winner

Iain Banks one of Scotland's most brilliant and successful authors

Blair Jenkins a former head of the BBC

Michael Fry a leading historian

Dougie MacLean writer of Caledonia

Dick Gaughan, perhaps our most famous folk singer

Various TV actors

Irvine Welsh, writer

Brian Cox, famous Scots actor

Frankie Boyle, comedian who has 1.4M followers on Twitter!

Plus top Scots singers like Karine Polwart, Eddi Reader, Pat Kane, The Proclaimers and Deacon Blue

and many others...

In fact almost everyone who has actually made a significant impact on Scots culture in the last few decades is backing normal status for Scotland.

Also from outside Scotland:

Adrian Dunbar - Irish Actor and Director

Ken Loach - English Director

Peter Tatchell - English Civil Rights Activist and Equality campaigner

John C Reilly - American Actor

All of whom back Scots indy

and from the past the greatest figures in Scottish History!

Robert Burns

William Wallace

Robert Bruce

Sir Walter Scott

Robert Louis Stevenson

John MacLean

James Connolly

Hugh MacDiarmid

The signers of the Declaration of Arbroath also ring out from history

"It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom – for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself."

Given that the Yes campaign can boast all the above and also the direct support of our elected SNP Scottish Government it's no wonder the little Britons of BT are so bitter about Mr McKidd, and they are very bitter indeed as can be seen on the comments on this article in the Scotsman:

http://www.scotsman.com/news/celebrity/scottish-independence-kevin-mckidd-would-say-yes-1-2882132


He says he's a patriot and I believe it. I don't believe the various non-entities on the Bitter Together site who claim to be patriotic about absolutely everything apart from actually wanting Scotland to rule our own affairs!