Monday, December 23, 2024

54% for Yes on the standard independence question is more than enough - it's plenty enough

It's not the normal practice of our resident Brit Nat troll KC (who I recently found was self-identifying as a youthful Italian stallion on Twitter) to tell direct lies - he normally takes something with a very small grain of truth in it and spins it for all he's worth.  But he broke that habit today by lying through his teeth.  In two comments that I've since deleted, he falsely claimed that the recent 54% for independence in the Norstat poll was merely from another hypothetical, conditional question and was based on the idea that independence would lead to everyone in Scotland being given a large lump sum payment.  That's complete rubbish - it was the standard independence question 'Should Scotland be an independent country?' and there was no jiggery-pokery at all.  It will have been asked by Norstat at the start of the question sequence and so repondents will not have been affected in any way by the leading wording of the supplementary questions that were posed later in the sequence on behalf of Believe in Scotland.

However, I think this highlights one of the dangers of the hypothetical "would you vote for independence if condition X applied?" questions, because they've led people to start talking as if the 54% on the standard question somehow isn't good enough and that we instead need a "Yes supermajority".  In fact, Yes 54%, No 46% is an almost exact reversal of the 2014 referendum result - the winning margin of which BBC journalists repeatedly referred to at the time as "decisive" (almost as if they'd received an order from on high to call it that).

And yet we know John Swinney isn't remotely interested in pressing home for independence with anything that might look like a slender Yes majority - his plan seems to be to do nothing until there is overwhelming public backing for independence.  There are two ways of interpreting that stance - either a) he's the de facto devolutionist that his critics portray him as, or b) he's genuinely trying to achieve independence by the slow road, and has in mind the precedent of devolution finally being achieved when the majority in favour of it was so huge that it could be safely described as a "settled will".

But there's one huge problem with the devolution precedent.  It took a genuinely pro-devolution Labour government in London to actually give effect to Scotland's settled will in the late 1990s.  No matter how high the Yes vote goes, there is never going to be a pro-independence government in London, so sooner or later the SNP themselves will have to force the issue.  If Mr Swinney is serious about independence, he will eventually have to confront the "process" problem, whether he likes it or not.  Supermajorities in opinion polls are not somehow self-enacting, although you'd occasionally be forgiven for thinking some in the SNP's "slow boat" faction believe they are.  "The barriers will just melt away", etc, etc.

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Poll commissions, poll analysis, election analysis, podcasts, videos, truly independent political commentary - that's Scot Goes Pop, running since 2008 and currently the fifth most-read political blog in Scotland.  It's only been possible due to your incredibly generous support.  If you find the site useful and would like to help it to continue, donations by card payment are welcome HERE, or alternatively donations can be made direct by PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

HISTORIC BREAKTHROUGH as poll shows ALMOST EVERYONE would vote for independence if it's the LovelyThings version of independence with the LovelyThings pension - and there's a tantalising possibility of achieving TOTAL UNANIMITY if we chuck in a free wok

Yes, I'm being sarcastic, but where do you even start with a question like this?  It's a bit difficult to answer "no" to happiness, health and fairness, and in a way it's quite impressive that 39% of respondents actually did so.  The coup de grĂ¢ce is when they come back at you when you're still pinned to the wall and say "Really?  You don't want happiness, health and fairness?  OK, what if we chuck in an extra £72.30 a week for your granny?  Come on, you're not going to say no to that, SURELY?"

If an independent Scotland meant that Scotland would implement a Wellbeing Economic Approach (a plan that recognises that quality of life, equality, fairness, sustainability, happiness, and health were all economic outcomes that should be given equal weight to growth in economic planning) - how would you vote if there was a Scottish independence referendum tomorrow? (Norstat / Believe in Scotland):

Yes 61%
No 39%

If the Wellbeing Economics Approach (detailed above) also included a commitment to increase the basic state pension from £169.20 to a Wellbeing Pension of £241.50 per week, how would you vote if there was a Scottish independence referendum tomorrow?  

Yes 66%
No 34%

Gordon MacIntyre-Kemp clarifies in his breathless write-up that he's not actually proposing to alter the referendum question, which is something of a relief, because I think he might struggle to get the LovelyThings question format approved by the Electoral Commission.

To be serious for a moment, I suppose this is not a completely pointless polling exercise.  It doesn't, of course, demonstrate what Gordon claims it demonstrates, or anything even remotely close to what he claims it demonstrates - there would not be a 66% Yes vote with a "Wellbeing" package because you wouldn't be able to ask voters such an epic leading question.  However, it does perhaps show that there is no outright hostility to independence among a large majority of the population, and that if you offer them enough lovely things, they won't refuse to even think about it.  That does actually matter, because standard polling sometimes gives the impression of an impenetrable unionist bloc vote of 45%+ that is implacably opposed to independence under absolutely all circumstances.

It's also, in fairness, a bit more plausible that offering people a better quality of life could substantially increase the Yes vote than it is that promising to abolish the monarchy would do so. Nevetheless, I think we need to find a somewhat more honest and rigorous way of testing the potential benefit to the Yes campaign of specific policy proposals, because people are just going to start laughing at these novel-length leading questions producing ever-more fantastical Yes supermajorities.  I'm almost a bit scared to think of what the next question in this series is going to be.

Sunday, December 22, 2024

"Our Precious Union" could soon be tested to destruction as Opinium poll points to danger of Farage premiership

I'm fairly sure that the Techne poll last week showed Reform UK on an all-time high vote share, and it was undoubtedly the highest figure since the general election.  This week's poll from the same firm shows Reform dropping back a statistically insignificant one percentage point, which still leaves the party with more support than in the vast majority of Techne polls since July.

Meanwhile, this week's Opinium poll shows Reform on a new post-election high watermark of 22%.  Technically, this is not an all-time high, because Reform is legally a direct continuation of the Brexit Party, and Opinium was one of two polling firms (the other was YouGov) that showed an outright lead for the Brexit Party during the late spring and early summer of 2019, with a vote share hitting 26%.  However, 22% is certainly a new high for Reform since the party's rebrand.

GB-wide voting intentions (Opinium, 18th-20th December 2024):

Labour 29% (-)
Conservatives 23% (-2)
Reform UK 22% (+1)
Liberal Democrats 11% (-1)
Greens 10% (+1)
SNP 3% (-)
Plaid Cymru 1% (-)

The miniscule one-point gap between the Tories and Reform is the closest Reform have come to overtaking the Tories and moving into second place in any Opinium poll (or any since the Brexit Party days, I mean).

Labour's 29% may look not too bad compared to other recent polls, but in fact it's atrocious on a like-for-like comparison.  Opinium has settled in as the most Labour-friendly pollster since the election, and 29% is the joint-lowest figure so far.  It's only the second time a post-election Opinium poll has shown Labour below 30%.

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Poll commissions, poll analysis, election analysis, podcasts, videos, truly independent political commentary - that's Scot Goes Pop, running since 2008 and currently the fifth most-read political blog in Scotland.  It's only been possible due to your incredibly generous support.  If you find the site useful and would like to help it to continue, donations by card payment are welcome HERE, or alternatively donations can be made direct by PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Saturday, December 21, 2024

Your golden link to keep handy for whenever you encounter a true believer in "BBC impartiality"

I'd encourage everyone to read Owen Jones' remarkable investigative piece on Drop Site News about the sources of the BBC's pro-Israel bias during the ongoing genocide in Gaza.  And then I'd invite everyone to bookmark the page and make sure you always have it handy, because I think it will prove to be invaluable in the years to come.  Although it's primarily about why the BBC cannot be trusted in its reporting of Gaza, it also has the side-benefit of powerfully demonstrating why the BBC cannot be trusted in its reporting of domestic UK or Scottish politics either.  We all have people in our lives who still think the BBC is impartial in the way it covers the Scottish constitutional debate and that anyone who suggests otherwise is a tinfoil hat zoomer, so gently encouraging people like that to read Jones' piece with an open mind might be the first step for them on the road to enlightenment.

A particularly damning section is about Robbie Gibb, who hilariously is "charged with helping to define the BBC’s commitment to impartiality", even though - 

1) He is the brother of a former Tory government minister

2) He is the former chief of staff to a Tory MP

3) He is the former Director of Communications for the Tory Prime Minister Theresa May

4) He was knighted by Theresa May

5) He was described two years ago by former Newsnight presenter Emily Maitlis as an "active agent of the Conservative party"

6) Until only a few months ago, he was the 100% owner of the rabidly pro-Netanyahu, pro-genocide newspaper the Jewish Chronicle

It's the revelation about the Jewish Chronicle that made my jaw drop to the floor, because if the BBC's impartiality safeguards were functioning as they're supposed to, that should have been enough to lead to Gibb's instant dismissal from his BBC role.  

During my battles a year or two back with the press regulator IPSO, which is largely a sham regulator, I read up about the small minority of complaints that IPSO have upheld over the years and discovered that the Jewish Chronicle is by far the biggest offender.  If you read comments IPSO have published about the Jewish Chronicle, you'll find that they basically regard the paper as staffed by hyper-partisan amateurs who push an agenda without even bothering with the basics of journalism.

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Poll commissions, poll analysis, election analysis, podcasts, videos, truly independent political commentary - that's Scot Goes Pop, running since 2008 and currently the fifth most-read political blog in Scotland.  It's only been possible due to your incredibly generous support.  If you find the site useful and would like to help it to continue, donations by card payment are welcome HERE, or alternatively donations can be made direct by PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

A reply to Gordon MacIntyre-Kemp

Gordon MacIntyre-Kemp, who was ultimately responsible for commissioning the Norstat poll question about the monarchy and independence, left a series of irate comments on Scot Goes Pop yesterday.  Quite frankly I think he was bang out of order, and in any other circumstances I would just have deleted his comments.  But instead I replied to his "points", such as they were, and I will do so again in more detail here.

His first complaint was that I had not stated that his question had been a bolt-on to the same Norstat / Sunday Times poll that showed a Yes vote of 54% on the standard independence question.  The reason I did not state that is that I did not know, and there was no possible way I could have known for sure.  The data tables were not available on the Norstat website, so all I had to go on was Gordon's own tortuously-worded article on the Believe in Scotland website, which seemed to be going out of its way to make it as difficult as possible to work out whether a bolt-on question had been added to the Sunday Times poll or whether a wholly separate poll had been conducted.  So I accurately stated the position as it stood - that Gordon's wording had been ambiguous and it was therefore impossible to be sure, but my impression was that a separate poll had been conducted.

Gordon harrumphs that he had made the position "quite clear" in the first sentence of the second paragraph of his "announcement".  Er, no you didn't, Gordon.  That was the very sentence that led me to form the strong impression that you had commissioned a separate poll and not a bolt-on question, and any other reasonable person would have reached the same conclusion.  This is what you said in that sentence - 

"Believe in Scotland have always used Norstat as our polling provider and we had a poll of our own going at the same time with the same panel of respondents."

For future reference, Gordon, if you don't want to convey the false impression that you had commissioned a separate poll, it might be best to try not to use highly misleading words like "we had a poll of our own going at the same time". The bit about "the same panel of respondents" did not clear the mists, because by definition all Norstat polls use the same panel - that's the way online polling firms operate. If you had instead said "the same sample", that would have been of more help.  But you did not.

Frankly, my guess is that Gordon used ambiguous language quite deliberately, because he feared that directly admitting his question was a bolt-on or "piggy-back" to the Sunday Times poll would have somehow diminished the prestige of his exercise.  That in my view is an unwarranted concern, but I think that's probably what was going on.

The cherry on the cake of Gordon's rant was this concluding sentence - 

"James you could have just called me have we not always got on well enough?"

I mean, what?  Scot Goes Pop is a polling analysis blog that tries to get as much information out as possible, as quickly as possible. Am I supposed to put everything on hold for twelve hours every time there is a point of ambiguity in the way a poll is reported, in the forlorn hope that I might get a clarifying reply from the Scotsman or whatever?  I don't operate that way, and I don't plan to start operating that way.  

And as it happens, Gordon, I don't think I've got your phone number.  Having thought about it, the last time I spoke to you was way back in May 2021 when we appeared together on Independence Live's election results show. I doubt if that date is a coincidence, because I've formed the distinct impression that you and your organisations have quietly distanced yourselves from the likes of me since 2021 - not out of any personal animosity, but simply because you were hostile to the Alba project and were distancing yourselves from anyone associated with it.

But nevertheless it's true that before then we had always got on well enough, which is probably why I held back on Thursday from pointing out the elephant in the room, namely the downright dodgy wording of your poll question - 

If Scottish independence meant that Scotland would be a republic - meaning the King would no longer be the head of state, so Scotland’s governance would be fully democratic and not a monarchy - how would you vote if there were an independence referendum tomorrow?

The words "so Scotland's governance would be fully democratic" are insanely leading.  Even leaving aside the more general problems with hypothetical poll questions that I previously discussed, the use of such leading wording means the results of the poll are of very dubious worth.

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Poll commissions, poll analysis, election analysis, podcasts, videos, truly independent political commentary - that's Scot Goes Pop, running since 2008 and currently the fifth most-read political blog in Scotland.  It's only been possible due to your incredibly generous support.  If you find the site useful and would like to help it to continue, donations by card payment are welcome HERE, or alternatively donations can be made direct by PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Friday, December 20, 2024

What is the 1989 analogy here: is it Wenceslas Square, or a prelude to Tiananmen Square? Nobody can quite work out whether it's safe to topple the statues, as news breaks that the post of General Secretary of the Alba Party is to be sensationally ABOLISHED

I follow the Moskva
Down to Gorky Park
Listening to the wind of CHA-ANGE
An August summer night
Soldiers passing by
Listening to the wind of CHA-ANGE

Take me 
To the magic of the moment
On a glory night
Where the children of tomorrow dream away (dream away)
In the wind of CHANGE
Mmmmm

As has been well-rehearsed in recent weeks and months, Chris McEleny has sweeping powers over members of the Alba Party that would make many a dictator blush, even though on paper he is no more than a paid employee of the party.  It's rather akin to giving a civil servant powers to impose the death penalty on random passers-by.  To the best of my knowledge Mr McEleny holds no elected position within the party whatsoever.  So what happens if his paid job suddenly disappears?

We may find out in the relatively near future, because the weekly Alba email has dramatically revealed that the positions of General Secretary (held by Mr McEleny) and Deputy General Secretary (held by Corri Wilson) are likely to be abolished, although this will be dependent on constitutional amendments.  It's not clear whether the true underlying motivation for the decision is primarily cost-saving (as the email implies), or whether concerns over the way Mr McEleny has exercised his dictatorial powers, and the countless casualties he has left in his wake, are shared in the upper reaches of the party.

The email states that Mr McEleny's functions will be replaced by dedicated roles among party staff covering areas such as "media" and "campaigning".  But there's no word on what will happen to his regal powers allowing him to arbitrarily suspend party members at his whim and press for their expulsion.  One obvious possibility is that those powers will simply be transferred to the unelected party chair, Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh, which will not constitute any sort of improvement at all.  Or perhaps Mr McEleny will just carry on, and even double down on the purges, with a new job title.

Whatever the details turn out to be, the change is unlikely to save me from expulsion, because presumably Mr McEleny and Ms Wilson will still be in harness when my appeal is heard on 8th January.  But in the best case scenario, there may now be an unexpected glimmer of hope for those Alba members who have yet to be expelled or suspended or bullied out of the party (it was only ever a matter of time, guys).

More analysis of the Norstat poll suggesting 59% would vote for independence if it means abolishing the monarchy

Just a quick note to let you know I have a new analysis piece at The National about the new poll suggesting a commitment to republicanism would increase Yes support by five percentage points.  You can read it HERE.

Thursday, December 19, 2024

No, the Believe in Scotland poll does not mean promising a republic would boost Yes support (in fact the opposite is probably true)

As you may have seen by now, Believe in Scotland have commissioned a Norstat poll asking about support for independence in the hypothetical scenario that the Yes campaign promises that the monarchy will be abolished.  The write-up is slightly ambiguous on the context in which the question was asked, but the impression I get is that this was not a bolt-on question added to the Sunday Times poll that found 54% Yes support for independence on the standard referendum question.  In other words, the Believe in Scotland question was asked to a different sample of respondents.

If Scottish independence meant that Scotland would be a republic - meaning the King would no longer be the head of state, so Scotland’s governance would be fully democratic and not a monarchy - how would you vote if there were an independence referendum tomorrow?

Yes 59%
No 41%

This is a potentially quite dangerous result, because it could lead people down a very deep rabbit hole.  Believe in Scotland are arguing that it means promising a republic would instantly add five percentage points to Yes support, but it really, really doesn't mean that.  Quick fixes of that sort generally aren't available, but if anything this particular suggestion of a quick fix would be highly likely to backfire and reduce Yes support.

So why has the poll produced such a misleading result? It's well known that hypothetical questions, asking "if condition A applied, how would you vote in response to question B?" do not produce reliable numbers.  For example, in the run-up to the EU referendum, any number of polls purported to show that a Leave vote would result in big majority support for independence, but that didn't materialise when the event actually arose.

The reason is probably that respondents tend to focus on "condition A" much more than they do on the main meat of "question B".  If you oppose Brexit, or if you hate the monarchy, your natural reaction will be to demonstrate how strongly you feel about the subject, ie. "yeah, I'd do anything to stop Brexit, even vote for independence!", but when the question actually comes up in the real world, you focus on how you feel about independence itself, and Brexit or the monarchy fades into the background.  It may still affect your thinking but not to anything like the same degree.

The reason why tying a Yes vote to a republic would be unhelpful is that everyone knows that the UK will retain the monarchy.  So republicans have nowhere else to go - even if the pro-independence campaign is explicitly monarchist, there's no reason why republicans wouldn't vote Yes, because it would leave them no worse off.  By contrast, monarchist voters will always have an alternative if you push them too far - if the Yes campaign is overtly republican, that might just tip the balance and lead monarchists to vote No.

That said, the replacement of the former Queen with the less popular Charles may mean it's now safer for any future Yes campaign to adopt a position of neutrality on the monarchy, and say that the people will decide the issue later in a separate referendum.  That may well be the most sensible course, and I suspect that's what would happen.

If there is any significance to the Believe in Scotland poll, it may be that it implies that the 54% Yes vote in the Sunday Times poll was not a fluke, because it's hard to see how you'd get to 59% support on the hypothetical question unless baseline Yes support was also very high.

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Poll commissions, poll analysis, election analysis, podcasts, videos, truly independent political commentary - that's Scot Goes Pop, running since 2008 and currently the fifth most-read political blog in Scotland.  It's only been possible due to your incredibly generous support.  If you find the site useful and would like to help it to continue, donations by card payment are welcome HERE, or alternatively donations can be made direct by PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Wings is following the "OTHER STUFF" signpost

A typically jaw-dropping comment from Wings in his latest blogpost - 

"And to be honest, readers, living to see the truth finally come to light is the main driver that’s keeping this website going. There is no hope of Scottish independence under the current SNP."

The truth he's talking about is the truth about any conspiracy intended to put Alex Salmond in jail for crimes he did not commit.

For years now, Mr Campbell's fan club has screamed blue bloody murder at anyone who has dared to suggest that Wings is no longer a pro-independence blog, in spite of the fact that - a) Mr Campbell said he would abstain in any new referendum on independence, b) he urged his readers to vote Labour at the general election in July (which means, incidentally, that he is in no position to say anything at all about the betrayal of the WASPI women), c) he indicated at one point that he was planning to vote Conservative at the general election, d) he urged his readers to vote for unionist parties in certain constituency seats in the 2021 Holyrood election, and e) the vast bulk of his blogging and social media output for many years has been about the trans issue, and not about independence or anything even vaguely related to it.  If it's going to be argued that Wings is pro-indy in spite of all that, it would have to be assumed there's some kind of grand plan on Mr Campbell's behalf to use his site to break through the barriers and pursue independence by a radical alternative route.  But now we have it from the horse's mouth - there is no plan.  He has no alternative ideas to offer.  He's given up on independence, and Wings is now nothing more than a trans issues / Justice for Salmond / Vote Labour site.

There was a cartoon on Wings at the time of Nicola Sturgeon's resignation which showed her at a junction in a path, with one sign pointing to "INDEPENDENCE" and another sign pointing to "OTHER STUFF".  She, naturally, was finding her feet drawn to the "OTHER STUFF" path.  Mr Campbell is now eagerly following her down that road.  Establishing the truth of what happened in the run-up to the Salmond trial is an important matter, but it has got nothing to do with independence and is not going to get us to independence.  If it becomes the all-consuming focus of a part of (or rather a former part of) the independence movement, something has gone very seriously awry somewhere.

As readers will probably appreciate, I'm considerably more ambivalent about the planned legal action on behalf of Alex Salmond than I was a year ago, because I've since been trampled all over by the Alba Party without a shred of due process and seen the same thing happen to other good independence supporters, and I know (at least to some extent) which specific individuals played a direct role in that.  It's become clear that certain people's high-minded talk about "justice" is only really about "justice for the powerful" or "justice for the famous" or "justice for people I'm related to", and is not at all about justice as a general principle that everyone can and should benefit from equally.  Nevertheless, if there was a conspiracy to jail Mr Salmond for political reasons, that's disgraceful and it's entirely appropriate to use the courts to bring the facts to light.  But that's something Mr Salmond's family and friends can and will pursue.  For the rest of us, our laser-like focus must remain on the goal of independence.  I know there was some concern among Alba members two or three weeks ago about an appeal from the party leadership for funding that didn't really make clear whether the funds would be used for Alba's political campaigning, or for the Salmond justice campaign.  The two concepts seem to be getting muddled up in a really quite dangerous way.

One of the many reasons I was hoping Kate Forbes would defeat Humza Yousaf in the 2023 SNP leadership election is that it would finally have moved the independence movement away from the Salmond v Sturgeon faultline.  John Swinney can't provide such a decisive break because everyone knows he's more associated with Sturgeon, but nevertheless there have been some encouraging signs - Swinney has distanced himself from the Greens and de-emphasised gender ideology in a way that Sturgeon would never have done, and he made an important healing gesture by attending the Salmond memorial service.  Let's not squander that progress by trying to perpetuate an internal Cold War within the Yes camp that is now well past its sell-by date.  We have a country to win, so let's get back to doing that.

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Poll commissions, poll analysis, election analysis, podcasts, videos, truly independent political commentary - that's Scot Goes Pop, running since 2008 and currently the fifth most-read political blog in Scotland.  It's only been possible due to your incredibly generous support.  If you find the site useful and would like to help it to continue, donations by card payment are welcome HERE, or alternatively donations can be made direct by PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

It's incoherent to stand in constituency seats while still telling voters to game the system for a supermajority

This is something that genuinely puzzles me, and I know it's a point that has also been made by Colette Walker of ISP.  If the Alba Party are planning to take the (unwise, in my view) step of intervening in constituency seats in 2026, that would imply that they've moved away from the 2021 messaging of "get a pro-indy majority by gaming the voting system", because the latter only works if you advise people to vote SNP in the constituencies.  As long-term readers know, I think gaming the system is a dead-end idea once you start to consider the myriad ways in which it can totally backfire, but nevertheless to the extent that it can even theoretically work, it 100% depends on convincing people to vote for two different parties on the two ballots.  There is no planet on which "both votes Alba" is a recipe for a supermajority.

And yet, once again, leading Alba figures are regularly pushing the "game the system for a supermajority" narrative.  There seems to be a distinct lack of joined-up thinking.

Angus MacNeil understandably has the zeal of a convert at the moment, and perhaps hasn't realised yet that all Alba members with a mind of their own, of which is he is now one, are merely "expellees in waiting". This is what he had to say today on the supermajority subject - 

"Look at that poll  for the 2026 election. đŸ‘‡
What does 2nd vote SNP do ?

The answer is that it gives you Reform MSPs. Tory MSPs. And Labour MSPs.

2nd vote SNP helps anti independence parties. 
That will be the effect of 2nd vote SNP in 2026 as it was in 2021.
So Vote #Alba4Indy"

But does that logic actually make any sense?  Here are the seats projections for the Norstat poll from a prediction website -

Constituency seats:

SNP 58
Conservatives 7
Liberal Democrats 5
Labour 3

Regional list seats:

Labour 17
Reform UK 13
Conservatives 12
Greens 7
Liberal Democrats 6
SNP 1

The first thing you'd have to say about the above numbers is that they could be wildly misleading, because they're based on an enormous 16% SNP lead over Labour on the constituency ballot.  Many people think that scale of lead is highly implausible.  If the SNP aren't doing that well in the constituency seats, they stand to be compensated with far more list seats.

But even if you take the numbers at face value, the brutal truth is that they show that the wasted pro-indy votes on the list are both SNP and Alba votes.  The only pro-indy voters who are getting bang for their buck on the list are Green voters.  If you could move votes around like pieces on a chessboard (which in the real world you simply can't do) the obvious way to game the system would be to shift both the SNP's and Alba's list votes to the Greens, and then you'd have your supermajority.

In the Norstat poll Alba were on 5% of the list vote, but any serious analyst will tell you that Norstat regularly overstate Alba's support, which in truth is probably flatlining at 2% or 3% at most.  That means Alba would have to double or triple their current support to move into seat-winning territory.  That's not impossible, but the severe difficulty of the task contrasts with the fact that the Greens are already well into seat-winning territory, and that the SNP would win lots of list seats in the entirely plausible scenario that their constituency support drops back a bit.  So no matter which way you cut it, Alba is statistically not the most promising option for gaming the list vote.  Not even close.

Voters were totally unmoved by the supermajority pitch in 2021, and given that the case is even weaker this time, it's hard to see why Alba would suddenly start cutting through with it.  They'd be much better advised to try to win votes by the conventional method of persuading voters that they are a better party than the SNP and have better policies.  OK, I'm not sure the optimal way of doing that is with the current increasingly right-wing positioning of "it's not racist to take money away from asylum seekers / President-elect Donald Trump deserves greater respect from us / Elon Musk has saved the internet gonnae take me to Mars, hun / Andrew Doyle off GB News is just so goddamn fabulous is he not", but even that is probably preferable to the excruciating embarrassment of making your Party Election Broadcast a three-minute monologue on the d'Hondt formula.

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Poll commissions, poll analysis, election analysis, podcasts, videos, truly independent political commentary - that's Scot Goes Pop, running since 2008 and currently the fifth most-read political blog in Scotland.  It's only been possible due to your incredibly generous support.  If you find the site useful and would like to help it to continue, donations by card payment are welcome HERE, or alternatively donations can be made direct by PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk