Friday was of
course the first anniversary of that referendum. In the run up to it, we have had all manner
of reminiscences about what happened last year.
Fine if you are seriously nostalgic about events from the near past, but
tiresome if like me you’d prefer your history programmes to have some sort of
distance. The referendum is still to raw
for people to really get some perspective.
For me, the day itself was about getting away from it all, so I voted
early then took myself off to the pictures.
One of the things
that has been raised is the prospect of a second Independence referendum, the
whys and why not has been looked at here.
I’ve previously said that a second referendum was pretty much inevitable,
given the result and also Cameron’s ‘business as usual but we’ll look at
English Votes for English laws’ speech barely an hour after the final result
was announced (pictured above). That’s not to say that it should be straight away. However one of the reasons for not having a
second referendum within the lifetime of the next parliament is the distinct
lack of a post mortem from the SNP regarding their failure to carry the country
last September. It’s this lesson that
the SNP are showing no signs of learning from.
Over the last
month or so, the reasons given by the SNP for the loss have ranged from railing
against the media bias against Independence to the now notorious “The Vow”. The former First Minister, Alex Salmond, has
been most vociferous in attempting to pin the blame on the media and the Vow,
all of which ignores the fact that Salmond himself had a decidedly mixed
referendum campaign. It was Salmond who
championed the millstone around the pro-Independence campaign – Sterlingzone –
and became more dogmatic about that policy the more criticism was heaped upon
it. It was also Salmond who spoke the
most about the behaviour of the BBC, whether it was Nick Robinson’s strop at a
press conference or the BBC report about RBS.
It was however a collective SNP leadership failure to successfully rebut
The Vow. It may have been the stories
about companies leaving Scotland if we voted no that set the template, but the
SNP’s retreat into “scaremongering” betrayed a tiredness and an irritability.
So if there is to
be a second referendum, the SNP really should be looking at what went wrong for
them as well as the things that went right.
Sterlingzone killed them in so many ways, not least because it blocked
the SNP from even discussing their vision on how an independent Scotland could
be economically viable. Smack, brick
wall right there. I’m also probably
alone in thinking this, but the SNP’s spin operation I thought came up short in
those crucial final days as Salmond, Sturgeon & co tended to overuse the
word “scaremongering”. Concise, clever rebuttals
were needed and were not forthcoming.
All this is something
for a future where the UK Government and pro-Union politicians here in Scotland
ignore the lessons that they need to learn from last September. Chef amongst those being that the final
result of 55% to 45% (rounding up/down) does not represent the overwhelming
vote of confidence in the Union that those politicians blithely assert. Had the referendum been won by the figures
suggested by the polling when Yes Scotland launched its campaign in May 2012,
then the 70%-30% victory would have settled the debate for generations. Instead, the people of Scotland have decided
to stay within the union but this is firmly on a trial basis. To extend Douglas Alexander’s “divorce is an expensive
business” analogy, both sides would be at marriage counselling trying to keep a
failing relationship from complete collapse.
Yet Cameron, Mundell, the Westminster parties and the pro-Unionist politicians
are behaving as if it was business as usual and that the union has been saved.
Nowhere is this
more evident than in the perception of the new powers being offered to
Scotland. Social Security powers have
not been proposed to be transferred en bloc.
There will be no Full Fiscal Autonomy.
If anything, Smith looks more of a fudge than Calman. So far, so predictable after Gordon Brown’s
casual referencing of touchstone Scottish Dates. St Andrews Day, Burns Night were all used as
deadlines, presumably March 1st was given a bit of a steer. It all sounded too slick and too well
designed to push the buttons of waivers that I smelled rotting fish straight
away. In spite of SNP orthodoxy though,
the next referendum won’t be caused by Brown or the notorious ‘Vow’ but by the
current occupant of Downing Street.
As long ago as
the Edinburgh Agreement, Cameron could have stiffed the Nationalist’s short
term ambitions by agreeing to that second question. Had he done that, Devo Max would have won and
independence would have been off the table for a generation, perhaps more. I’d
suspect as well that Cameron’s cowardice in not making any meaningful
contribution to the pro-Unionist cause harmed the union as well. After all, if the leader of your country can’t
be bothered to defend the existence of your country, well…
Cameron’s biggest
mistake though has been his reaction to the referendum result, believing that a
win is a win and the green light to carry on as if nothing has happened and
that there is no consensus-building to be done.
His speech minutes after the official referendum result reopened the
door to independence that had been closed pretty much since Clackmannanshire
declared at about quarter to 2 in the morning.
Cameron’s latest bout of treating us like his forefathers would treat
the colonies was the announcement that there will be amendments to the Smith inspired
Scotland Bill – one of which being an amendment making Holyrood a permanent fixture
in the UK government architecture… three
months after his party voted down the same amendment from the SNP.
Labour are all
very quiet about this, but then again they have lessons of their own to ponder
and learn from. Their own conduct during
and in the immediate aftermath of the referendum, where their hierarchy were
too cosy in working with the conservatives and too happy to parrot conservative
attack lines at the SNP/Yes Scotland, provided a realization for many Scottish
people of how close to the Tories New Labour have become. Better Together has in essence become
Scottish Labour’s own Poll Tax moment.
Not the finest moment to hand the reigns to the most inexperienced figure
ever to be anointed the figurehead of Labour in Scotland.
A year on from
the referendum, there are reasons why both sides have not come to terms with
the result and it’s aftermath. For the
SNP they need to come to terms quickly if the dream is not to die. For the pro union parties, they need to learn
the lessons to ensure that there is not an unstoppable demand for
Independence. Both sides though are
showing every sign of carrying on as normal.