There are now two
polling companies that put the pro-Indy Yes Scotland within a 3% swing of
victory. Before the television debates
between Salmond & Darling, Yes were in a bit of trouble. So what has happened?
It’s not as if
there are issues surrounding the independence argument. Currency and their stance on the European
Union are the biggies. Except that
Labour are still largely pro-European Union so therefore have restricted their
attacks on Salmond taking Scotland out of the EU. Given that Cameron has pledged an in/out
referendum on the EU should he win the next Westminster election, this argument
has been sidelined. Not that this was
the correct question anyway as we should be questioning the wisdom of joining a
bigger union where we would have less influence than the one we (if the votes
stack up) would just have left. Ah, the
Winton Paradox once again.
All of which
leaves the issue over currency. It is a
valid argument, and it is an argument that the SNP certainly have got
themselves into a hole into. Their way
out of this cul-de-sac is to stick their fingers in their ears and proclaim
that the pound is ours. Now repeat after
me...
IT’S OOR POUND AND WE’RE USING
IT!!!!
Except that
firstly, we’re voting to leave the UK, Sterling and all, so therefore our use
of sterling would be subject to the same sort of negociations that normaly
result in the splitting of the CD collection.
And really, the SNP should really know better than to deliberately mix
up Sterlingzone (their preferred option, which WM and the Whitehall mandarins have ruled
out) and Sterlingization (which would be my preferred short/medium term
option). What the smoke and mirrors of
Sterling do show is that this has obscured the question about what exactly is
the SNP’s preference if Sterlingzone does not appear. Salmond claims there is plan B, Plan C and
plan D – all like busses. The truth is
that Salmond has adapted John Major’s old policy on entry to the Euro – wait and
see.
Yet “Wait and See”
seems to have staived off the electorate.
Darling’s success with currency in the first debate saw him return to
the issue again, thus he overplayed his hand in the second debate and thus
failed in his role defending the union, that of someone who plants reasonable
doubt in the minds of the electorate.
Salmond was incorrect when he stated that Darling was a one trick pony. He has at least two, but he only knows how
one of them work. There are other issues with regard to currency as well – unforeseen
ones.
With the rise on
people registering to vote, we look as if we will be seeing a high turnout. I think an awful lot of those people are
people who were put off voting by the New Labour years. Remember the turnout for the 2001 Westminster
Election fell by 13.1% from those voting in 1997, while the fall between the
first two Holyrood elections was 10%.
That’s not a rise in voter satisfaction as some wag’s tried to spin it,
more like the scunner factor. It’s also
people who are more immune to the currency arguments because if you’ve not got
very much currency, then the currency you use takes a back seat to other
factors. Factors that Yes Scotland’s
ground troops are adept at putting across.
With Yes Scotland
pressing the social & democracy arguments, they have left the economic field
clear for Better Together… to flunk the
arguments. Indeed this is a theme all
over with Better Together. EU flunked,
NHS flunked thanks to TIPP and austerity (but again not the EU), too wee too
poor flunked by the figures & austerity leaving only Sterlingzone… Project Fear would have worked as part of a
balanced campaign, not as front and centre of a 2 year long campaign. Their only spearhead. Is it any wonder that since the second
debate, the referendum campaign has felt like the chickens coming home to roost
for Better Togethers deeply flawed and badly undermined campaign.
Great reading yourr blog post
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