In recent months,
the SNP have apparently been engaging in a listening exercise. There have apparently been events with
members of the SNP listening and engaging with non SNP members in an attempt to
argue the case for Independence. There
has also been an online survey as well, one where there has been speculation
about the results ever seeing the light of day.
Both the survey and the concurrent listening exercise come to mind in a
week where two poll’s were published showing that support for Independence has
dropped to below the ‘hallowed’45% achieved in the September 2014
referendum.
The First Minister with the EU's chief negotiator, Guy Verhofstadt |
Whilst pro-Union
supporters like Hague and company would like to think that this is the result
of pro-Independence supporters coming to their senses and understanding that an
Independent Scotland would be bankrupt thanks to the huge deficit (and for fans
of that kind of fiction, there’s another piece of that ilk in the Spectator
this week), I suspect that there’s something else going on. I think that people have not taken kindly to
the First Minister’s interpretation of ‘material change’ and application of
that to a result where only 62% voted to remain.
Why pro-Unionist
supporters are wrong in that it’s the economy at play here is two fold. Firstly, anyone who believes in Independence
will understand that the deficit will be there but that we Scot’s will decide
in the maiden Scottish General Election how our economic affairs are to be
managed, deficit or not. Whilst Hague
does us all a service in flagging up the state of the Scottish economy, the
conclusion I take is not that we can’t but that we should and that radical
surgery is required. Surgery that some
shirk from. The second reason is that
the pro-Union parties haven’t changed their tactics regarding the
constitution. Their tactics are to flag
up the cons with Independence, relentlessly and in an utterly negative
fashion. ‘Project Fear’ is still alive
and well and has kind of mutated into ‘SNP Bad’. Of course, there are criticisms that you can
make of the current SNP administration, most of them surrounding their timid
and conservative policy prospectus. But to criticise for the sake of it, with
no thought to any constructive form is politically dumb. The sort of political dumbness that Scottish
Labour have attempted to make into an art form, which explains why they’ve been
eclipsed by the shameless bandwagon jumping Ruth Davidson Party. If I could turn back time indeed… The only set of tactics that have changed
since the Holyrood elections have been those of the SNP.
While the SNP did
have a good EU Referendum, and history has shown how wise it was for them not
to take part in the official ‘Remain’ campaign, they have since June somewhat
overplayed their hand. As I’ve said
before, when you consider how embarrassingly poor and offensive the official
Leave campaign was, then 62% seems rather low.
At the time I thought that the pro-EU vote needed to be at the very least
65% for the SNP to have any credibility when it came to claiming a material
change. I think that 62% is made up of genuine EU enthusiasts and also people
who voted against both the Leave vision of ‘Brexit’ as well as the campaign
itself. Those people may be Eurosceptic
but unable to vote for such a right wing campaign – hardly “being ripped out of
the EU against our will”. If anyone
wonders why Eurosceptic’s would vote to remain, have a look at both Owen Jones
and Paul Mason’s pieces this year – both are opposed to the European Union’s current
direction of travel and both advocated hold your nose and vote remain.
While the SNP
have continued to talk up the likely prospect of a second Independence
referendum, the pretext for that shows that they have failed to learn their
lessons from the first Independence referendum.
Up till Osborne gave us the infamous “Sermon on the Pound” (© Iain
McWhirter), the SNP and Yes Scotland were being battered over those currency
plans and their plans to ‘retain Scotland’s membership of the EU’. Those two policy pronouncements from the SNP
led to people like myself wondering what the point of Independence was then if
we would be handing power back to the Bank of England and the EU. The pro-Independence supporters that are
vocal about wanting rid of Westminster rule appear ignorant of the by-product
of Salmond & Swinney’s ‘back of a fag packet’ Sterlingzone proposals. A Fiscal Pact would have ensued with the Bank
of England having a degree of control over an Independent Scotland with the
core aim ensuring the value of Sterling and making sure an Independent Scotland
kept within spending and borrowing targets.
Not that the EU
were showing signs of being interested in bringing us straight into the EU,
with both Barroso and Rompuy both parroting the line that Scotland would have
to wait in line to apply for EU membership and that being good little Europeans
would not be sufficient. At the time I’d though that there would have been
three countries that would have blocked I-Scotland’s application. Had we voted for Independence, we would have
left the EU, having just voted to split from a country with its name on the
various treaties with the EU. In this
respect, the Better Together campaign were entirely correct in their synopsis
of Yes Scotland’s arguments – it’s just that the form of works they choose has
now become a hostage to fortune thanks to that EU referendum result.
There are some
pro-Independence supporters though for whom exit from the EU was an attractive
prospect. If Independence could be
though of as ‘Taking back control’, then doing so outside of the sphere of
influence of the EU would be Independence Max – with full control over policy
areas such as agriculture, fisheries, and the economy. Let’s not forget that
the Michael Ashcroft post EU Referendum poll showed that 35% of SNP voters
voted against their parties’ line by voting to leave the EU. Maybe some of those voters did it tactically
to sabotage the Union. The voters that
genuinely are Eurosceptic must be exasperated at the SNP’s constant cheerleading
of a project increasingly pro-Thatcherite in it’s policymaking. It was the EU (alongside the ECB) which
forced Greece to sell off it’s publicly owned assets at knock down price. Alternatively known as ‘making Greece TTIP
compliant’. It’s also the EU, through
the Lisbon Treaty, which seeks liberalisation of markets previously closed off
to publicly owned companies. The SNP
seem content to toe the party line when it comes to outsourcing, but go quiet
when re-nationalisation comes up. Like
with the current hot topic, Scotland’s railways.
In looking at
what has happened to both sides of the constitutional debate, it is only the post
EU Referendum tactical change from the SNP which can account for the drop in
support for Independence. Sturgeon’s misguided belief that only pro-Union
Little Englanders back Brexit looks more and more like beliefs that have
clouded her judgment at best, and at worst forced a tactical blunder that
pleases only the pro-Unionists. By tying
the question of Independence to membership of the EU, the SNP have backed into
a cul-de-sac on an issue that only the one eyed pro-Indy supporters back
wholeheartedly. The SNP hierarchy have unnecessarily
caused a split in the ranks of pro-Independence supporters and with the use
straight away of the threat to hold a second referendum, the SNP have unnecessarily
played their only card too early and in the face of a democratic result that
has gone against the SNP’s own wishes.
If a second Independence referendum is lost, Sturgeon’s reaction to the
Brexit vote might be seen as the moment that kept Scotland in the Great British
bosom.
1 comment:
It seems to me that the so called drop is notable and well without the standard margin of error but given that any future campaign would be expected to increase that percentage with Yes2 (busy gearing up for the fray across the board) as the driving force and the SNP/Greens as the political vehicle for implementing the outcome of the referendum there is cause for optimism. See Wings over Scotland for an interesting commentary on the relevant survey and its, possibly substantial, shortcomings.
The key is to a large extent related to those willing to vote for independence tomorrow and those who have previously voted for independence but moved to NO. The latter probably may return to the fold once they see some indication of the problems raised by Brexit and the policies likely to be implemented by May's government and their impact on Scots. I don't think as yet we have any real indication of how these are going to work out. Problematical policies are unlikely to attract anyone other than died in the wool Unionists.
The main 'battleground' will be the over 65's. If they can be reassured regarding their pensions and ability to pass on an inheritance (if any) to their children and be convinced that a Westminster led country is 'going to the dogs' then, again, a sizeable proportion may prefer an independent Scotland.
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