It's been far too long since I irritated "Carlotta Vance" by reporting the results of a Scottish subsample from a GB-wide poll, so I thought you might enjoy this one from ComRes...
Westminster voting intention:
SNP 36%
Labour 33%
Conservatives 17%
Liberal Democrats 6%
Greens 4%
UKIP 4%
European Parliament voting intention:
SNP 39%
Labour 19%
Conservatives 17%
Liberal Democrats 10%
UKIP 9%
Greens 7%
Of course these figures carry the usual huge health warning, because they're not properly weighted and are based on responses from less than a hundred people. Nevertheless, the fact that Labour's vote appears to drop sharply when voters turn their attention to Europe, while the SNP's vote creeps up, is highly encouraging given the potential significance of next year's European elections, which will take place just three months before the independence referendum.
A pro-independence blog by James Kelly - voted one of Scotland's top 10 political websites.
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Monday, May 27, 2013
Question Time for Scotland's 'Popular Front'
The SNP website has today isolated a number of specific questions for the No campaign from Jim McColl's interview in the Scotsman -
1. How will a No vote rebalance the UK economy away from its London-centric focus?
2. What options will a non-independent Scotland have other than UK-driven austerity?
3. What further incentives will there be for business in a non-independent Scotland?
4. How can the UK's one-size-fits-all approach to welfare be tackled in a non-independent Scotland?
These are all fantastic, because they get to the heart of objectives that most people in Scotland share, and challenge the No campaign to specify their plan for realising those objectives - if, of course, such a plan exists. In reality, their answers would be...
1) The UK economy does not have a London-centric focus, because all parts of the UK are equally precious to the London government and Bank of England (aye, right).
2) There is no alternative to UK-driven austerity.
3) No current plans.
4) We're not going to tackle the UK's one-size-fits-all approach to welfare, because we don't see it as a problem.
Doesn't strike me as a winning manifesto. But the Yes campaign shouldn't stop there - it should produce its own version of the ludicrous '500 questions' document, which ought to go down exactly the same road of demanding answers to specific policy questions. If the No campaign think it's perfectly reasonable to ask what the rates of income tax will be in an independent Scotland (even though we don't have a clue which party will be governing an independent Scotland), let's see if Scotland's 'Popular Front' of Tory, Labour and Lib Dem can come up with a joint position on what the rates of income tax will be in a non-independent Scotland over the coming decades. It seems only fair.
But the questions I'd really like some answers to are these -
1) By what date can we expect these non-specific "new powers" to be transferred to the Scottish Parliament in the event of a No vote?
2) If substantial new powers are not delivered by the date you have just specified, will you undertake to immediately resign from public office, or to issue a public apology if you are no longer in public office?
3) Would you agree that a second independence referendum will become a moral imperative if new powers are not delivered with the speed and on the scale currently being hinted at by the No campaign?
1. How will a No vote rebalance the UK economy away from its London-centric focus?
2. What options will a non-independent Scotland have other than UK-driven austerity?
3. What further incentives will there be for business in a non-independent Scotland?
4. How can the UK's one-size-fits-all approach to welfare be tackled in a non-independent Scotland?
These are all fantastic, because they get to the heart of objectives that most people in Scotland share, and challenge the No campaign to specify their plan for realising those objectives - if, of course, such a plan exists. In reality, their answers would be...
1) The UK economy does not have a London-centric focus, because all parts of the UK are equally precious to the London government and Bank of England (aye, right).
2) There is no alternative to UK-driven austerity.
3) No current plans.
4) We're not going to tackle the UK's one-size-fits-all approach to welfare, because we don't see it as a problem.
Doesn't strike me as a winning manifesto. But the Yes campaign shouldn't stop there - it should produce its own version of the ludicrous '500 questions' document, which ought to go down exactly the same road of demanding answers to specific policy questions. If the No campaign think it's perfectly reasonable to ask what the rates of income tax will be in an independent Scotland (even though we don't have a clue which party will be governing an independent Scotland), let's see if Scotland's 'Popular Front' of Tory, Labour and Lib Dem can come up with a joint position on what the rates of income tax will be in a non-independent Scotland over the coming decades. It seems only fair.
But the questions I'd really like some answers to are these -
1) By what date can we expect these non-specific "new powers" to be transferred to the Scottish Parliament in the event of a No vote?
2) If substantial new powers are not delivered by the date you have just specified, will you undertake to immediately resign from public office, or to issue a public apology if you are no longer in public office?
3) Would you agree that a second independence referendum will become a moral imperative if new powers are not delivered with the speed and on the scale currently being hinted at by the No campaign?