We are now
nearing the end of the election campaign, with the battle for votes heating
up. Endlessly on the media, I hear talk
about what is said on the doorsteps, which is strange as all I’ve ever had on
my doorstep are political leaflets. Not
one canvasser whatsoever at all.
From the polls,
the battle here for the Paisley & Renfrewshire South seat is going to be a close one and
one the SNP would be very happy to take.
Yet I’ve not had one single leaflet from them (hence the nil in the
title of this blog). In sharp contrast I’ve
been bombarded with leaflets and ‘personal letters’ from Labour. So from that point of view, it was
interesting to hear the thoughts of our SNP candidate Mhari Black on the BBC's Good Morning Scotland on Monday morning. I had heard good things, yet the interview
itself was somewhat underwhelming. Her
defence of the SNP’s fiscal policy wasn’t as polished as it could have been but
she was caught off guard by a question about “gullible no voters”.
Inexperience
perhaps but she really didn’t handle that question very well at all, and maybe
that betrays something within the SNP’s thinking – that it’s not our fault we lost. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news but it’s
precisely your fault. You didn’t win the economic argument and then
there’s Sterlingzone. Recognize your
faults, learn from them and move on, like…
um… no… It’ll come to me… there
is an example of recognising how you failed in the Scottish political
landscape, it’s just not coming to me.
Certainly not Labour who seem to be making the same mistake with every interview & leaflet. Alexander used to be the future, on Monday he was utterly soulless and robotic. The thing that Alexander & Murphy don’t quite get is that banning zero hours, putting the minimum wage up to £8.00 by 2020 and the other, heavily caveated stuff, just isn’t good enough.
Certainly not Labour who seem to be making the same mistake with every interview & leaflet. Alexander used to be the future, on Monday he was utterly soulless and robotic. The thing that Alexander & Murphy don’t quite get is that banning zero hours, putting the minimum wage up to £8.00 by 2020 and the other, heavily caveated stuff, just isn’t good enough.
This being the
election campaign, there are other candidates and we can’t obsess about
desperate Dougie (nine leaflets… and 3
of those after my post on the first ‘personal’ letter) and Mhari Black. Sadly there’s no Scottish Green leaflet
because, sadly, there’s no Scottish Green candidate. There are three leaflets from the SSP
though. Their biggest selling point is a
policy to raise the minimum wage to £10.00 per hour while there are others
there that are eye catching. The scrapping of the Council tax, replacing it
with an income based Service Tax being the one gagging to be picked up by
either of the big two. The SSP have also
mentioned the plugging of “tax loopholes and £120 bn a year tax dodging”. Not exactly the so called ‘tax gap’ by name,
and about £30bn out, but it is the direction that the SNP & Labour (as
progressive parties) should be moving towards.
The two leaflets
remaining came from the governing parties.
Very long term readers will know that I voted Lib Dem five years ago and
will suspect it’s not an outcome I’m likely to recreate next Thursday. True, I can’t complain about the raising of
the tax threshold but I’m sure that the deficit has not been cut in half (when
the plan was to have cut). The buzzword
for the Lib Dem’s leaflet appears to be ‘fairer’, yet this phrase seemed to be
absent when they were making cuts to public services and removing consumer
protection by scrapping Consumer Focus and by removing powers from the Food
Standards Agency.
While the Lib Dem’s
have spent the last 5 years as the Tories doormat, the Tories are not flagging
up their ‘achievements’ but their aspirations.
This approach is markedly different from the Lib Dem’s leaflet which
sets out their policy contributions to the coalition. Interestingly as well, those policy
aspirations are aspirations which most people would agree with. “Reduce the deficit”, Cut Income Tax, Create
More Jobs, all laudable aims. It’s just
that with the Conservatives the means to those aims are where the devil lives. There’s a nice picture of Ruth there
too. Not on her tank mind but with the
local candidate, who sounds like he should be a DJ on one of the hideously
middle of the road local radio stations.
Apparently I’m
not alone in not being 100% committed on who I’m voting for next week, there is
supposedly 40% of the electorate who are undecided. While the election coverage rolls along, my
doorstep is still awaiting it’s first visit from a canvasser.