There are two things consistent about the Independence referendum campaign. The poll lead for staying in the Union and the constant use by the commentariat that the pro-Independence camp need a “gamechanger”. This is not something I’ve ever thought, preferring to think of the “yes” camp as badly behind and needing snookers to get back into the campaign. On the face of it, Nick Watt’s story in Saturday’s Guardian has delivered that desired snooker.
Oliver Letwin:As cops would say, he has form... |
The story goes
that a member of the Coalition government - the prime suspect being the person pictured to the right - has essentially said that “Of course, there would be a currency union”
in the event of a Yes vote. Deepthroat
went on, speculating that the quid pro quo could well be the SNP’s policy
regarding nuclear submarines, currently deployed at the Faslaine base in the
Holy Loch – “you can see the outlines of
a deal”. At a stroke, the argument
that Better Together have been prosecuting, that there will be no
“Sterlingzone”, has been demolished.
What has been worse for Better Together has been attempt to rebut this
story from the key figures in Better Together.
The sight of these figures trying to cover up their collapsing policy is
akin to cheating husbands being found out.
It seems though
that Better Together are suffering from collective wobbles, which seems to have
destabilised their campaign. This
incident seems to be the latest and most serious setback to their campaign that
really should be straightforward. The
Better Together campaign really should be based around flagging up the holes in
“The Salmond Plan” (and there are holes…), consistently referencing & reinforcing
the shared tied and cultural identity that we have as part of the UK (or
endlessly repeat the opening ceremony from the London Olympics) and also
putting forward the Devolution 2.0 proposals (fiscal autonomy) that really
should have been put forward five years ago – when we wound up with the pig in
a poke that was Calman instead.
Instead Better
Together has fallen into the trap of endlessly rubbishing anything that Yes
Scotland puts forward, before reading the small print.
Sterlingzone is
the ideal example of what has gone wrong with Better Together. From the outset, Swinney’s proposals had more
than the whiff of being a hasty compromise after the Eurozone crisis made
adopting the Euro electorally toxic.
Modern currency unions demand an element of there being a sharing of
economic & monetary policy – it was the difficulty in this area that Mark
Carney flagged up that made Sterlingzone difficult (but not impossible). Indeed, if anything Carney while not
torpedoing Sterlingzone did torpedo the other SNP flagship policy – the
lowering of Corporation Tax rates (initially to 3% lower than the r-UK
rate). Yet the response from Better
Together was a complete misreading of what Carney actually said. And this heavy handedness continued.
It could be
argued that Better Together’s troubles started with Osborne’s declaration on
Sterling. Michael Portillo on the BBC’s This Week programme described Osborne’s
speech as “economically correct… but bad
politics”. The heavy handed declaration
that there will be no Sterlingzone has played into the hands of the pro-Indy
Yes Scotland, as well as having the effect of backing themselves into a corner. It has been a gamechanger, but in terms of
reinforcing the trend rather than reversing the (at that point) nascent
trend. As I mused on Twitter, I wondered
if Darling’s opposition to currency unions extended as far back as when he was
Chief Secretary to the Treasury in Blair’s first Cabinet way back when Blair
was keen on UK entry to the Euro.
Instead of the
heavy handed approach, the UK government might have called Yes Scotland’s bluff
and issued their initial negotiating terms regarding Sterlingzone, rather than
blunder into the bear trap like a Wookie into an Ewok trap. Not only has this heavy handedness
fundamentally undermined Better Together’s arguments regarding being better
together, it has changed and harmed the Union itself. With Balls quite happy to stand shoulder to
shoulder with Osborne & Alexander on Sterlingzone, what other issues (apart
from the continuation of Austerity – which Balls has already signed up to) will
they find common ground with? If the
heavy handed nature of the dismissal of Sterlingzone does not have critical
enough consequences for Better Together, Deepthroat’s revelation has destroyed
the credibility of the Better Together parties.
As a (now former) Chancellor once said to his boss, the Prime Minister “How can I ever trust anything you say ever
again?”.
Whether this is
the supposed “Gamechanger” that nationalists apparently need remains to be
seen. What is true is that the anger
among “Scottish” Labour types at Deepthroat is palpable. Whoever it is, they have delivered the mother
& father of own goals to Yes Scotland at a time when there is creeping
momentum towards Yes Scotland. This will
do anything but check that momentum.
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