Of course it all
depends on what the result is. Should
Scotland vote “Yes”, then apparently we will glide seamlessly towards
Independence, taking our place in the world as an independent country, while we
would be looking to joint the EU.
Apparently.
What prompted this
post was an article in the Fail on Sunday which claimed that Cameron would
block entry to the EU for an Independent Scotland. Yes, I know the Mail on
Sunday, a publication, which if you look at the Tabloid Watch blog in my blog
post has a record for accuracy and reasoned argument. Ahem….
It was enough to get me thinking that whatever happens, the United Kingdom
will not be the same again.
So according to the
SNP supporters in the Macblogosphere, once we vote “yes”, we will glide
serenely towards Independence. So much so we will not notice what all the
fuss was about, except I think that things will be rather more fractious. I also think that the SNP supporters in the
Macblogosphere have seriously underestimated “Flashman” Cameron & “Darth
Gideon” Osborne. I suspect that if the
Mail on Sunday story is true, that entry to the EU will be the least of the
SNP’s problems while negotiating Scotland’s
exit from the Union. Assuming, of course, that
the SNP don’t take the hint and make joining the EU subject to a referendum.
The main sticking
points will be over oil, and the share of the deficit, while the SNP’s policy
of adopting Sterling (as opposed to setting up a Scottish Pound tacked to
Sterling) and keeping the Bank of England as the bank of last resort (as
opposed to setting a timetable for the setting up of a Scottish Central Bank –
not called the Bank of Scotland) will not go down well with the unionist negotiating
team. All of these area’s are
difficulties, and I am sure that Cameron & Osborne will try and gain some
sort of revenge for a yes vote through the independence negotiations.
Maybe the biggest
change post Independence
will be the fate of the SNP itself.
Since Salmond returned to the leadership of the SNP in 2004, they have invented
a cool tartan version of New Labour – which has been much more successful electorially
than “Scottish” Labour. Partly this
calculation is down to aping the success of Blair, but partly this is driven by
the same motive for Blair, Brown et all creating New Labour – pragmatism. Salmond’s pragmatism comes from selling the
SNP to a left of centre audience, while retaining a lot of natural supporters
of Independence
who believe in Neo-liberal policies like low Corporation Tax rates. The question is, will there be a split, or
will the good ship SNP stay together holding a centre/left position.
So if there is a
yes vote, things will be difficult. So
will things be easier with a no vote?
Well, no.
There are already
rumblings about the demise of the Barnet Formula coming from the back
benches. The consensus from Westminster (and
by the way, that includes Labour members too) is that the current Scotland Act
(based on Calman) should be the final word (for the time being) on any further
powers coming north. There have even
been mutterings about repatriating powers to Westminster by certain “Scottish” Labour
politicians. The consensus here in Scotland is
that Calman does not go remotely far enough with the majority of voters
favouring “Devo Max” (essentially Fiscal Autonomy with powers stopping just
short of full independence) at the very least.
This fact does not appear to have entered the consciousness of our
pro-unionist elected representatives. If
it has, it is dismissed patronisingly as some sort of safety net for the SNP to
fall back on
While the questions
about what will happen to the SNP will begin after a referendum loss, what
would be a more pertinent question would be where now for “Scottish”
Labour. They have set their face against
the settled will of the Scottish people so much, in depriving us of Fiscal
Autonomy, that to see off Independence
from centre stage would expose the policy vacuum that lies at the heart of “Scottish”
Labour. A “no” vote in effect would be a
pyrrhic victory for “Scottish” Labour, coming so soon before a crushing Cameron
victory at the next UK General Election.
While the next two
and a half years will be dominated by the plebiscite, it will be what happens
after that event that may see a shaking up of the kaleidoscope, at a time when
the country as a whole is still taking George’s not so marvellous Medicine.
3 comments:
Cameron vetoing EU membership isn't going to happen. To do that would be an invite to the Tory backbenches to revolt. Not only would he have lost Scotland, he'd have given the Scots what many of those backbenchers would like: a way out of the EU. Political suicide surely.
Scotland isn't so important that Cameron would throw away his political career over us.
Angus.
The point of part of the post is that there are other things that Cameron & Osborne can do to make things difficult during the Independence negociations. In any case, it should be up to the Scottish People if Scotland wants to join the EU.
Well whichever way things go I suspect you both have a point in that it's all going to get very messy for all concerned.
Post a Comment