SCOT goes POP!
A pro-independence blog by James Kelly - one of Scotland's three most-read political blogs.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
As "Self-determination Tuesday" dawns, is Andy Maciver right to say independence is now closer than it was on the day before the 2014 indyref?
Monday, May 25, 2026
Let's examine the evidence: does RevStew's "brave" Ba'athist propagandist comparison stack up, or has it hilariously backfired again?
The controversial far-right blogger "Stew" has done yet another of his tweets about me without mentioning me by name - he does this regularly so that he can later do his schtick of "look! search for his name on my Twitter or blog! not there is it? I never even mention the guy!" This time it's a pair of 'before' and 'after' screenshots, which purports to show me contradicting myself, and is interspersed with a photo of a certain Ba'athist propagandist to imply that the alleged contradiction is in the service of pro-SNP propaganda. That's quite a heroic implication on Stew's part, because the first screenshot in fact shows me openly criticising the chosen strategy of the SNP leadership - scarcely something that a real propagandist would do. However, let's take a look at the two quotes and see if Stew's point is as weak as it first appears.
19th August 2025:
"So the SNP remain the only game in town, and we just have to work from within to try to improve the situation somehow. If the rebel motion doesn't make the conference floor, the next best outcome is to radically amend the Swinney motion so that it closely resembles the rebel motion. If that's not possible, the next best outcome is to defeat the Swinney motion altogether. And if it's not realistic to do that, the very least that needs to happen is for the motion to be amended to remove the most harmful stuff from it. As I've said before, no plan at all would almost be better than the Swinney plan, which would leave us in a worse place than ever before by setting a precedent of the SNP going into an election essentially agreeing with the UK government that no referendum should occur until some sort of ludicrously unattainable threshold is reached. That could make it impossible to achieve independence for literally decades to come. The voting system simply isn't designed to produce single-party majorities."
Today:
"The way the SNP have recovered from this event has been truly remarkable. Our old friend Stew is trying to make out it has left the independence movement a "broken shell", which he obviously wants to be true, but the events of the last few weeks tell a completely different story. The SNP leadership under John Swinney have restored the trust of party members sufficiently that the pre-election fundraiser succeeded beyond all expectations - and make no mistake, without that restored trust and without the funds that flowed from it, we wouldn't be sitting here now with the highest number of pro-independence MSPs in history. Once we get past the negative headlines of today, which unfortunately we've known were coming for a long time, both the SNP and the wider independence movement will actually be in pretty good shape."
Those two comments are clearly about different subjects - they're not totally unrelated to each other but they're not about the same thing. I don't see how anyone can possibly interpret today's comment as meaning that the single-party majority strategy worked or that it has put the independence movement in a better place - that's not something I believe, and I've unambiguously said in at least two of my videos since election day that the strategy was an "unforced error". What I was talking about today was instead the way in which John Swinney has rebuilt trust with SNP members to the point that they are willing to take a leap of faith and donate substantial money to the party in spite of what happened with Peter Murrell - and I pointed out that without that process of gaining trust, the SNP wouldn't have been so successful in the election because they simply wouldn't have had the funds to compete. What does Stew think that's got to do with the single-party majority strategy? Answers on a postcard, folks, and send them to Bath.
It's quite true, however, that I'm hopeful that the majority strategy may not prove to have been as harmful as I feared last summer and autumn, and that's mainly because of the remedial work that John Swinney and other senior SNP figures have done since polling day by stressing that the combined SNP-Green majority is more than enough to constitute a mandate. I didn't necessarily expect them to be quite as proactive if these circumstances arose, and it's made all the difference.
I do want to express my admiration for Stew, though, because not many people would be brave enough to voluntarily bring a Ba'athist propagandist into the conversation (especially if they actually live in Bath) when only a month ago they were telling anyone who would listen that "Angus Robertson to win Edinburgh Central is FREE MONEY", only to then begin their first blogpost after Mr Robertson's defeat with the line "well, we told you so". There was also that unfortunate incident of announcing there was no chance of a pro-independence Holyrood majority in this year's election ("barring nuclear war or alien invasion"), followed by an announcement that a single-party SNP majority was a nailed-on certainty, followed by the unintentional comic genius of "well, we told you so" when neither of those hopelessly contradictory predictions actually came true. Being as wrong as that takes considerable talent, and it's why Stew is a national treasure in his own quasi-fascist sort of way.
* * *
a) you can donate by card HERE
b) you can make a direct PayPal donation to my PayPal email address, which is: jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk
Some thoughts on Peter Murrell's betrayal of SNP members
Ignore the Brit Nat propaganda: what was the REAL vote share for pro-independence parties at the 2026 Holyrood election?
a) you can donate by card HERE
b) you can make a direct PayPal donation to my PayPal email address, which is: jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk
Sunday, May 24, 2026
Another update on the Great Scot Goes Pop Video-Blogging Experiment
For two-and-a-half months between late February and early May, I was so wrapped up in writing the 73 daily constituency profiles for The National that a) I had much less time to make YouTube videos, so I did fewer, and b) I pretty much stopped keeping track of my progress in turning the videos into a sustainable alternative funding model. I've since been doing some catch-up on that, and the latest stats are fairly grim. The bottom line is that, as things stand, it's just not working. And there's no point in anyone saying "I told you so", because as I said at the outset last year, I went into this experiment with my eyes wide open - I had checked what the average earnings per 1000 views were in the UK, and at that average level it would have just about worked. However, I also knew that individual YouTube channels can fall anywhere on a very wide range on either side of that average, depending on their subject-matter and the demographics of their viewers, and the only way I was ever going to find out where my own channel would slot in was by giving it a proper go for a few months.
Yup, you've guessed it, it turns out that videos about Scottish politics slot in pretty much at the absolute lowest end of the earnings range. It's puzzling in a way, because my videos are disproportionately viewed by males over the age of 55, and if anything I'd have thought that would be a relatively higher-income group that advertisers would be only too keen to target, but apparently it doesn't work that way. So I'm now not entirely sure of the best way forward, and I'm going to have to mull it over a bit.
In theory, YouTube could still be made to work, but to do that I'd have to think big - on the current rate of return, I'd have to average 10,000-20,000 views per video. So far my most popular individual video has around 7000 views, and obviously the average is much lower than that. Is it even feasible to get up to the required level with a channel about Scottish politics? I genuinely don't know. I've found a small number of political channels that have pulled it off, including ones that just seem to be run by ordinary blokes like me rather than by celebrity commentators, but crucially they all have a UK-wide focus. If anyone knows of a specifically Scottish political YouTube channel that receives a large number of views, please do let me know, because that would be important information to factor in.
It's also theoretically possible to square the circle by making a YouTube income via sponsorships (which are generally much more lucrative than the regular earnings anyway), but in practice there's a Catch-22, because apparently channels require average views of at least 10,000 per video to attract sponsors in the first place. So it seems there's no way of getting around it - that's the daunting level of popularity my channel would need to reach.
Basically I'm going to have to decide whether to double down on the YouTube idea and go all-out in trying to make the channel go truly galactic, or whether I should declare it a failed experiment and try something radically different, such as Substack or a similar site. I'm reluctant to do the latter, because it would probably involve putting at least a minority of material behind a paywall, which I'd really rather not do. Or I could just try to keep this blog going in the way I've been doing over the last few years, but you've seen what that's involved - I've just barely stayed afloat, but only with near-constant, in-your-face fundraising, which I am so tired of having to do, and I know you must be equally tired of seeing the reminders of the fundraisers at the bottom of each blogpost.
For the time being, though, please bear with me because I simply have no choice but to keep plugging away at the fundraising for at least a few more weeks. As I've mentioned a few times, I've been due to receive a substantial payment for freelance work at some point in May or June, and once that comes in I should be able to take a much-needed complete break from fundraising for at least a few months, but as of today there's still no sign of it even being in the pipeline. So your patience is much appreciated as I continue to promote the fundraiser at the end of each post in the following manner...
a) you can donate by card HERE
b) you can make a direct PayPal donation to my PayPal email address, which is: jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk
Saturday, May 23, 2026
First Makerfield by-election poll shows Andy Burnham could be in TROUBLE
* * *
Catch up with last Wednesday's award-winning blogpost: "S*** just got real, lads. The famously always wrong blogger "Stew", who said there was "zero chance, barring nuclear war or an alien invasion" of the Holyrood election producing a pro-indy majority, and who said betting on Angus Robertson to win Edinburgh Central was "free money", has now said there is "NO chance" of victory in a 2029 de facto referendum. Looks like it's ON."
* * *
a) you can donate by card HERE
b) you can make a direct PayPal donation to my PayPal email address, which is: jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk
The biggest problem for British Nationalist propagandists like Fiona Bruce who triumphantly trot out the "once in a generation" excuse is that a generation has essentially *already passed*
* * *
Catch up with last Wednesday's 'critics' choice' blogpost: "S*** just got real, lads. The famously always wrong blogger "Stew", who said there was "zero chance, barring nuclear war or an alien invasion" of the Holyrood election producing a pro-indy majority, and who said betting on Angus Robertson to win Edinburgh Central was "free money", has now said there is "NO chance" of victory in a 2029 de facto referendum. Looks like it's ON."
* * *
a) you can donate by card HERE
b) you can make a direct PayPal donation to my PayPal email address, which is: jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk
Friday, May 22, 2026
A blogpost in which, in an act of sheer madness, I express a brief personal view on the Celtic v Hearts controversy
* * *
Catch up with last Wednesday's critically-acclaimed blogpost: "S*** just got real, lads. The famously always wrong blogger "Stew", who said there was "zero chance, barring nuclear war or an alien invasion" of the Holyrood election producing a pro-indy majority, and who said betting on Angus Robertson to win Edinburgh Central was "free money", has now said there is "NO chance" of victory in a 2029 de facto referendum. Looks like it's ON."
* * *
a) you can donate by card HERE
b) you can make a direct PayPal donation to my PayPal email address, which is: jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk
BOMBSHELL polling suggests Andy Burnham will NEVER be "King" of the UK's True North - Scotland
* * *
Catch up with last Wednesday's critically-acclaimed blogpost: "S*** just got real, lads. The famously always wrong blogger "Stew", who said there was "zero chance, barring nuclear war or an alien invasion" of the Holyrood election producing a pro-indy majority, and who said betting on Angus Robertson to win Edinburgh Central was "free money", has now said there is "NO chance" of victory in a 2029 de facto referendum. Looks like it's ON."
* * *
a) you can donate by card HERE
b) you can make a direct PayPal donation to my PayPal email address, which is: jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk


