In an election
campaign where time is now very much of the essence (thanks, Wahabists! Mind and enjoy the silence from your so
called god now) I’ve had to roll the last two election leaflets into the one
post. Though, in all honestly both the
Lib Dem’s and the independent candidate Paul Mack will probably be fight it out
to not finish last. Steven and Gillian
from New Order, they aren’t.
Once again Eileen
McCartin is the Lib Dem’s candidate for this constituency, having stood in the
Holyrood election in 2011, last time around two years ago and I think at last
years Holyrood election too. This time
the Lib Dem’s are running on backing a second European Referendum whilst
blocking a second Independence Referendum.
The worst of both worlds you could say.
Like Labour and
the Tories, there are no real arguments for blocking a second Independence
referendum in McCartin’s leaflet. Though
interestingly, McCartin’s leaflet claims that “we took the lead in the campaign against Independence across large
parts of Scotland at the last referendum” somehow isn’t stimulating the
grey cells. Sure there were prominent
Lib Dems, the late Charles Kennedy springs to mind, who were making a decent
argument for a no vote but there were others who were prominent members of the
Tory led coalition government ( Danny Alexander among others) reminding us how
useless they were. On the whole though,
this was a Tory funded exercise with Labour faces prominent in the campaign.
The big problem
with this leaflet is the argument being portrayed, that Brexit and Independence
are extreme positions. Given the
failures in this country of centralist politics pursued by Blair and McCartin’s
own Orange Book colleagues, it is disingenuous to attack parties and voters for
looking for different solutions. It is
also extraordinarily hypocritical for the Lib Dems to call for investment in
public services given they sold their souls to the Tories for ministerial
limo’s.
The last
contender, and the spoiler in Paisley’s stab at being the UK’s second all woman
election (which makes Glasgow Central the only constituency with all women
candidates) is the independent Paul Mack.
One of the last local councillors to appear in the ‘Rotten Boroughs’
column in Private Eye – Mack was a frequent name in those pages during the mid
1990’s alongside Hugh Henry and the SNP’s Bruce Fee as the old Renfrew District
Council featured rather frequently.
Mack’s leaflet
centres on the big issue in Paisley, much more than Labour’s – the proposed
closure of the Children’s ward at the RAH.
Like Labour, Mack aims both barrels at the SNP calling the consultation
process “An old fashioned stitch up”.
Quite where Renfrewshire Council’s former, Labour, leader Mr McMillan
fits in with Mack’s conspiracy theory I’m not actually sure. Stooge? SNP Patsy?
Mack doesn’t say.
As befits a
candidate very much against politician largesse, Mack’s other pledges centre
around transparency and public service.
There is, in all honesty, not an awful lot I can argue against, but it
does raise questions about Mack’s conscience “(I) will be answerable and
accountable only to the people of Paisley, not party interests in Edinburgh or
London and still act in the best interests of my conscience, my constituency
and my country”.
If we were being
entirely honest, both of these candidates do not have a cat in hells chance of
victory at some point on Friday morning.
The likely outcome here in Paisley is an SNP hold with a very much
reduced majority – Labour do not look as if they will pull off the swing
required to win here in Paisley. That’s
not to say Mack and the Lib Dem’s are irrelevant but in a truncated campaign
like this, the temptation is there to squeeze the minority parties out in
favour of the mainstream message.
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