SCOT goes POP!
A pro-independence blog by James Kelly - one of Scotland's three most-read political blogs.
Thursday, July 3, 2025
Was Rachel Reeves weeping for the failure of her political project, or for the shame of knowing it was never worth fighting for in the first place?
Wednesday, July 2, 2025
Ipsos poll confirms that the end is nigh for Alba
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
More analysis of the Ipsos poll showing a pro-independence majority
Just a quick note to let you know that I have an analysis piece at The National about the new Ipsos poll, which shows Yes in the lead by 52% to 48%, and a substantial SNP lead in both Westminster and Holyrood voting intentions. You can read the article HERE.
Ipsos abandon a decades-long tradition of phone polling in Scotland - but continue to show a Yes lead on the independence question
Monday, June 30, 2025
A question for Mandy Rhodes: who has killed the most women over the last year, Iran or Israel?
Sunday, June 29, 2025
A gentle hint to the non-Sovereignty contingent within Liberate Scotland: the tactic of "slinging a deefie" at any questions about the electoral pact with a far-right nativist party is not going to work for a whole year, and especially not when the mainstream media start asking the questions
As I understand it, Liberate Scotland view the SNP as an anti-independence party, hence the decision to split the vote on the constituency ballot. Until they break out of that mindset (and I doubt if they will) it can only be a destructive exercise.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) June 29, 2025
Who is going to provide the credible plan?
— eva comrie (@mickbrick54) June 29, 2025
Certainly not Liberate Scotland. I'm astonished that you're standing for an alliance that includes a nativist party like Sovereignty. You were Alba's Equalities Convener - surely the most fundamental equality of all is equal citizenship rights?
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) June 29, 2025
Diversion James. It doesn’t work with me. Who’s providing the credible plan? #IndependenceNothingLess. BTW you don’t need to remind me of the content of my own CV.
— eva comrie (@mickbrick54) June 29, 2025
Great, you remember. So what the hell are you doing in alliance with Sovereignty? Do you have any red line? Would you go into alliance with the BNP if they were pro-indy? This is not diversion - this is fundamental. I have no interest in ushering in fascism in the name of indy.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) June 29, 2025
As I said your attempts at diversion don’t work. Who’s producing the credible plan?
— eva comrie (@mickbrick54) June 29, 2025
Barrhead Boy, presumably. #sarcasm
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) June 29, 2025
You *seriously* have no answer to what you're doing in alliance with the far right? You really think that just refusing point blank to answer is going to work for the next *year*? Good luck with that.
I asked you who’s providing the credible plan because I genuinely want to see one. I cannot help if you cannot answer.
— eva comrie (@mickbrick54) June 29, 2025
But not only do you not have an answer to my question about what you're doing in an electoral pact with fascists, neither do you have an answer to *your own* question either. If you demand a "credible plan", who in Liberate Scotland is providing it? Barrhead Boy?
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) June 29, 2025
I understand that you desire independence and that’s why you rejoined the SNP. I’d really like to know how you think they can achieve independence. However I respect Gil’s view and wonder if you think there’s a credible plan up John Swinney’s sleeve ?
— eva comrie (@mickbrick54) June 29, 2025
If you're asking me whether I think John Swinney has a more credible plan than Barrhead Boy or the far right nativists of Sovereignty, which is the only relevant question given who you've thrown in your lot with, the answer is yes. An extremely low bar, admittedly, but yes.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) June 29, 2025
As you know, I'm far from content with the SNP leadership's current approach to independence, but the point is that pretty much any plan is superior to the Barrhead / Barcelona brew of a) uniting 0.2% of the independence movement under a "big tent", b) demonising the other 99.8% of the independence movement as "saboteurs", c) fiddling the franchise so English people living in Scotland can't vote, d) strolling effortlessly to a landslide election triumph, and e) marching on the UN to beg them to decolonise us.
This is the first time I've had any contact with Eva since she made what I can only describe as the dreadful error of joining Liberate Scotland. If she had stayed as a genuine independent candidate and stood on the list only, I think she would have had a small outside chance of becoming an MSP, but she's blown it by associating with a brand that is likely to become as toxic as Alba (if not more so). But as I hadn't previously spoken to her about her decision, I expected she'd have some kind of thoughtful answer to the question of what on earth had possessed her to enter into an electoral pact with Sovereignty. Her refusal to even acknowledge the question, let alone answer it, stunned me.
I was on the Alba NEC with Eva for a year in 2021-22, and two things stood out for me about her. One was her absolute commitment to the equalities role - she was extremely passionate about aspects of it that have been neglected by others, most notably justice for Scotland's Travellers community, which is an issue that has been in the news very recently. It's hard to believe that someone who feels so strongly about equality for one of the most marginalised segments of our society would have much truck with the idea that some residents of Scotland should be denied citizenship after independence on arbitrary ethnic grounds, but that appears to be the Sovereignty position.
The second thing that stood out was Eva's hardheaded realism about electoral strategy. When she was concerned about the deficiencies in Alba's preparations for the 2022 local elections, she spoke up volubly and identified exactly what she thought the shortcomings were. She was nobody's yes-woman - she cared about independence and about the party above all else, and if she thought that Alex Salmond and Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh needed a forceful dose of reality, she was more than willing to provide it. I find it very hard to believe that she's naive enough to think that the questions about Sovereignty and its nativist policies will go away if they're just studiously ignored. It's one thing fobbing off fellow independence supporters on social media, but when the mainstream media start asking the same questions, Liberate Scotland are going to be absolutely crucified if they can't find a more convincing and respectful way of answering. (That's assuming the mainstream media pay them any attention at all - and if not, all of this becomes totally academic because Liberate will be lucky to get 0.1% of the vote.)
To me, the obstinacy of just repeatedly ignoring the questions has more of a "made in Barrhead" or "made in Barcelona" feel to it than "made in Clackmannanshire". Barrhead Boy is by all accounts the de facto leader of Liberate, and Eva may be reluctantly going along with the dubious wisdom of a "just sling a deefie" directive imposed by HQ in sunny Catalonia.
Saturday, June 28, 2025
Now we've established that Stew doesn't want Holyrood to have any say on foreign affairs (meaning by definition that he opposes independence), can he clarify whether he agrees with his own retweet that Israel's 1967 invasion and conquest of the Arab town of Bethlehem was "the liberation of Bethlehem"?
As mentioned in the previous post, my devoted Somerset stalker "Stew" has been continuing to fire off tweets about me over recent days, faster than I can really keep up with, even though in some cases he has been directly demanding responses from me. And this is the guy who just a few months ago innocently claimed to mention me on Twitter only a couple of times a year at most. One might almost be tempted to say that he's finally dropped the pretence, although actually that's not true, because in most cases he's still doing his usual thing of making clear by indirect means that he's referring to me but without mentioning me by name. He repeatedly does the same thing on his blog - the idea being that in a few months' time he can successfully shove what he's been doing down the memory hole by inviting his readers to search Wings or his Twitter account for my name, and say "You see? I've barely even mentioned the guy!"
While I have a few spare moments, I may as well work my way through a few 'highlights' of his tweets about me from the last week or so, although frankly there aren't enough hours in the day to deal with all of them. First up, there's a multi-tweet thread in which he critiques the question I asked of Anas Sarwar the other night. You'll be dumbfounded to hear that he's not a fan of it.
Leaving aside my blasphemy in neglecting the Sacred Topic, however, I'm rather surprised that Stew was so unhappy with my question, because I saw him earlier in the week imploring anyone who attended the Swinney/Sarwar event in Edinburgh to ask the two leaders whether there were any policy areas that divided them apart from independence. I had already submitted my question by then, but I was confident that what I had put forward fulfilled a very similar function, because Gaza has been one of the points of difference between the SNP and Labour. "Give us points of difference, but not THAT one" seems to be Stew's message. "Don't even mention that one, because Bibi must be allowed to get on with the genocide in civilised peace and quiet."
So here's the remarkable thing. I asked Anas Sarwar whether he thought the Scottish Government should think small, "get back to the day job", and stop talking about foreign affairs. His answer on all three of those points was essentially "no", and he promised to speak out about foreign affairs if he becomes First Minister, because he said his social justice values do not end at the Scottish border. So having set out to find a dividing line between Mr Swinney and Mr Sarwar, the irony is that I ended up finding a dividing line between Mr Sarwar and Stew instead. Despite opposing independence, Mr Sarwar believes, or at least claims to, that the Scottish Government should not be restricted to concerning themselves with the limited number of devolved powers imposed on them by Westminster. Whereas Stew absolutely thinks they should be restricted in that way, and that they should stop getting ideas above their station, which is an extraordinary worldview for any self-styled 'independence supporter' to hold. But there again, it's a statement of the obvious that if you don't think foreign affairs should be the province of the Scottish Government, you don't actually support independence at all.
Let's stop pretending black is white, shall we? Stew probably was a genuine independence supporter eleven years ago, but he no longer is. He's a unionist now, and a devo-sceptic unionist at that, albeit one who ties himself up in knots trying to convince people that he still supports independence in some sort of convoluted, upside-down manner - because he knows he would lose readers otherwise.
Aw, bless. You gotta love Stew, he's apparently convinced himself that his latest cosplay "psephologist" blogpost was some sort of killer effort that has left everyone totally stunned and that no-one can think of a response to. Stew, I don't know how to break the news to you, dear heart, but apart from the first few sentences I haven't even read your precious blogpost yet. I deliberately didn't read it, because I knew I might not have time to respond for a few days and I didn't want my mind cluttered up with gibberish while I was getting on with other things. But rest assured I will find the time to read it and respond at length. A little patience, if you please. Although I do love the fact that you've clearly been frantically hitting the refresh button over the last week in the hope of seeing my reply. A proper stalker badge is on its way to YOU, my friend.
This one isn't a Stew tweet about me, but instead a Stew retweet of a Stephen Daisley tweet about an anonymous comment on this blog. What's deeply disturbing about it is that Daisley presents screenshots of a Spectator article he wrote about Winnie Ewing's supposed ties to Israel, and in which he describes Israel's 1967 invasion and conquest of Bethlehem as "the liberation of Bethlehem".
Long-term readers of Scot Goes Pop will know I've made numerous references to an extraordinary article that Daisley wrote many years ago, long before he was even employed by STV, in which he similarly said the 1967 invasion and conquest of East Jerusalem was "the liberation". But to talk of the liberation of Bethlehem is even more offensive, because throughout modern history Bethlehem hasn't been a Jewish town at all. The censuses in the 1920s and 1930s found literally just two Jewish people in the whole town. Traditionally the population was overwhelmingly Arab Christian, and more recently has been overwhelmingly Arab Muslim, ie. Palestinian. The vast majority of countries in the world regard Bethlehem as part of the sovereign (but illegally occupied) territory of the State of Palestine, and the minority that don't recognise the State of Palestine instead regard Bethlehem as part of the 'Occupied Palestinian Territories'.
The only way of making sense of Daisley's barmy claim that Bethlehem was liberated in 1967 is that he means it was promised to Israel in the Bible thousands of years ago, and therefore it needed to be annexed and its population expelled or exterminated, so that the rightful ethnoreligious owners could take over. Now, we all know the standard disclaimer that "retweets are not necessarily endorsements", but if I was retweeting content that contained such an outrageous claim, I would go out of my way to make clear I disagreed with it. Stew very noticeably did not do so, and I think we could do with some clarity from him about whether he agrees with Daisley about Bethlehem or not. Even if he read Daisley's words and didn't think they were controversial, that speaks volumes too.
Elsewhere, Stew's newest obsession seems to be retweeting derogatory comment about Zohran Mamdani, the progressive and rather wonderful Democratic nominee for Mayor of New York...
Friday, June 27, 2025
Crossbreak cornucopia as SNP stun rivals with epochal lead in Scottish subsample from Find Out Now
Thursday, June 26, 2025
Scot Goes Pop puts Anas Sarwar ON THE SPOT
Well, sort of. I had a little cameo last night at the Holyrood Sources podcast recording in Edinburgh where both John Swinney and Anas Sarwar were questioned at length - albeit separately, they didn't debate each other directly. Audience members were invited to submit questions in advance, and I was lucky enough to have my question for Anas Sarwar selected. I just read it out exactly as I had submitted it a few nights ago, and it was this -
"The Scottish Government, especially under Humza Yousaf but also under Mr Swinney, has taken a principled stance against Israel's actions in Gaza. That stance differs sharply from the UK Government and has given a voice to countless people throughout Scotland and the UK who feel that Keir Starmer and David Lammy do not speak for them on this issue. Wouldn't something precious be lost if Mr Sarwar wins the election and the new Scottish Government thereafter just parrots the UK Government line on Israel and Gaza? Would Mr Sarwar even accept that the Scottish Government should be speaking out on foreign affairs, or does he think small like so many other Scottish Labour politicians before him by insisting that devolved governments should 'get on with the day job' and not concern themselves with reserved matters at all?"
You can watch both the question and answer HERE or on the embedded YouTube player below, starting at around 5 minutes in.
In reality it didn't put Mr Sarwar on the spot to any great extent, because what I didn't anticipate was that in the seconds before I read the question out, he made an extremely strong statement that "Benjamin Netanyahu is out of control", which lent him greater credibility in answering my question by saying he would "continue" to speak out on foreign affairs. Where he was on much weaker ground, though, was in arguing that I had unfairly characterised the UK Government's position, when in fact all I had actually said was that the Scottish Government's stance had differed sharply from the UK Government's - which is pretty much unarguable, given the contrast between Humza Yousaf's strong condemnation of Israel as First Minister and Keir Starmer's repeated insistence that "Israel has every right to defend herself". If you listen to Mr Sarwar, you'd think the Starmer government has been fearless from day one in standing up to Israel - and that, I'm afraid, is the depiction of events in a parallel universe. I also remain unconvinced that Mr Sarwar, in the unlikely event that he ever becomes First Minister, would be given the latitude by London Labour to use the type of language about Israel that he did last night. If he can just about get away with it now, it's only because no-one thinks he is important and no-one is paying much attention to what he says.
Geoff Aberdein said at the start of the event that, barring miracles, one of the two men we'd be hearing from would be elected First Minister next year. I think that gives a slightly misleading impression - it would be more accurate to say that, barring miracles, John Swinney will be re-elected First Minister next year. To the extent that Anas Sarwar does still have a small percentage chance, it's probably comparable to the small chance of Reform being elected to lead the Scottish Government next year - although in fairness, it would have been very difficult to devise a three-way event incorporating Reform, because no-one seems to have a scooby who Reform's candidate for First Minister is going to be.
Andy Maciver channeled his inner Stuart Campbell by spending much of the evening talking up the chances of an SNP-Labour coalition government. His basic argument is that the current relationship between the SNP and Labour is analogous to the previous relationship between the CDU and SPD in Germany, and to the previous relationship between Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil in Ireland - ie. they agree on most policy areas apart from independence but can't imagine going into government with each other because of supposed historical baggage. Mr Maciver points out that in both Germany and Ireland, the historical baggage was pretty easily dispensed with when grand coalitions were required to freeze out the Left Party and Sinn Féin respectively. But the operative words are that there is broad agreement between the SNP and Labour except on independence - which is not exactly a trivial matter, and as far as I am aware there was no equivalent massive dividing line between the CDU and SPD, or between Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil. My guess is that in Mr Maciver's case, the expectation of an SNP-Labour deal is coming from the centre-right perspective that the SNP's prioritising of independence is a bit of nonsense that can and will be set aside as part of a sort of 'maturing' process. In reality, the SNP's support base is highly unlikely to allow that to ever happen.
Incidentally, there is at least one other extremely weighty point of division between the SNP and Labour which has nothing to do with independence, and which Mr Sarwar touched on briefly last night - namely new-build nuclear power. Labour are in favour of it, and the SNP are viscerally opposed to it (quite rightly).
Mr Swinney did not explicitly rule out an SNP-Labour coalition, but Mr Sarwar did, saying it was going to be a parliament of minorities and that the only way he'd be going into power was as head of a Labour minority government. The hosts instantly picked up on that and pointed out that it meant he was giving up on any chance of winning a Labour majority, but perhaps more interesting is that it also seems to exclude any possibility of a Labour-led unionist coalition government. When Labour have been in power in Holyrood in the past, it's always been in coalition with the Lib Dems, so it seemed a bit odd to take that possibility off the table, given that any narrow path to power left open to Mr Sarwar is almost certain to involve the Lib Dems (and indeed the Tories) in some shape or form.
I think last night was the first time I've seen Professor John Curtice in the flesh, and the one thing that doesn't come across on TV is just how remarkably tall he is. He has quite a commanding presence when he walks into a room. As for Anas Sarwar, I saw him pressing the flesh with the people sitting close to me during a break in the recording, some of whom he seemed to know and others he didn't, and it's fair to say that he has an easy-going charm about him that I don't think you really see on TV when he is trying to look all slick and polished.
My off-peak return train ticket from Cumbernauld to Edinburgh for some reason specified that travel via Glasgow is not valid, which is a complete nonsense because there are times at night when the quickest way back is via Glasgow, and by that time obviously the trains are all off-peak anyway. So I had to wait an extra hour for a train to Falkirk, but that gave me a chance to enjoy walking around Edinburgh only a few nights after the Summer Solstice in what I believe is known in Shetland as 'the simmer dim'.