Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Japanese soldiers, not recognising they had already lost the Second World War, fought on for years. It would be unfortunate if gender critical Yessers repeat the mistake by not recognising they've already *won*.

Welcome along to the latest in what is becoming a series of "the GRR war is over, or ought to be" posts.  I've already pointed out that any chance of self-ID being introduced in Scotland is essentially dead this side of the next Westminster general election.  Although Alister Jack's veto will be reviewed in court, I know of no legal expert who seriously believes that he will be overruled - not because his decision was in any way justified, but simply because Westminster wrote the constitutional rule-book to suit itself and the courts are required to enforce it.

But it now looks increasingly clear that the effect of recent events will go beyond the general election, and that's for one key reason - there is now a quiet, sullen acceptance in the SNP that they were on the wrong side of public opinion on this issue.  The polling evidence has at long last become too compelling for them to ignore.  Yes, of course, they're still paying lip-service to the idea that there is a democratic mandate for the GRR Bill, but you can see in their eyes that they no longer truly believe it.  It wasn't that long ago that the likes of Mark McGeoghegan could claim with a straight face that Alba "transphobia" and "bigotry" was holding Yes back in the opinion polls and people would nod along as if that was a credible suggestion.  It would only provoke a hollow laugh now.  It's still highly debatable whether the GRR controversy has had much of a detrimental effect on independence support, but if any harm has indeed been caused, it's beyond dispute that the main problem was the SNP leadership attempting to introduce full-fat self-ID against the public's wishes.

That belated realisation will have concrete effects.  However passionate the leadership are about trans rights, they're not knowingly in the self-harm business and they're quite capable of kicking gender reform into the long grass if that's necessary to head off any threat to their electoral chances.  And Alister Jack has, ironically, made it far easier for them to do that, because his imperial veto has essentially released the SNP from their obligations to the Greens.  They can effectively now afford to do absolutely nothing about the GRR while still not jeopardising Green participation in government.  I suspect after any Starmer win at the general election, the public rationale for SNP inaction will be that Labour would simply repeat the exercise of the veto if a GRR Bill Mark II is passed - Starmer did not, after all, oppose the Tory veto, and since then he's made clear that gender reform will now be decided on a UK-wide basis.

Which brings me to my next point - Labour will be just as terrified of the recent opinion poll evidence as the SNP are, and will reach the same quiet conclusion.  They'll remain nominally committed to self-ID but will deprioritise it and soft-pedal it and water it down as much as humanly possible.  In any case it'll definitely be London Labour making the final call, which leaves any continued haranguing of the SNP looking a bit redundant.

Meanwhile, although the decision to house trans prisoners in line with their birth sex is only provisional, it now seems almost inconceivable that the result of the review will not uphold that new practice.

In a nutshell, the gender critical side of the debate have basically won on all of the important points for the foreseeable future.  The veto wasn't the 'right' way to win, but that wasn't their fault and it doesn't change the facts on the ground.  There's now simply no longer any point in them continuing the war or opening up new fronts in it when the cause of independence is so clearly at risk of being caught in the crossfire.

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11 comments:

  1. I agree with all your points on GRRB, the war is essentially won ... but there's no glory in it. Its likely that damage has been done to Scotland's Cause but, hopefully, it will be a temporary dip - as with the seemingly temporary spike in YES support after the UK SUpreme Cour ruling in November - and people will decide that we are not too stupid to run our own affairs despite the monumental misjudgment of the Holyrood parliament in passing the legislation. My only concern is that a legal challenge will be mounted and the open sore will continue to be poked at in the press by politicians and columnists on all sides.

    It's better if we try to re-focus on the SNP's "Special Democracy Conference" on 19th March and, in particular, to get behind the AB MacNeil amendment to consider forcing an early Holyrood election this year.

    Even if the amendment does fail it might encourage those in the SNP to start thinking (again) tactically if not strategically about Scotland's Cause and how we might realistically bring about the restoration of our full self-government and independent statehood.

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  2. I'm no SNP loyalist, and I quit the party years back over their anti woman policies, but it feels to me like people have started to switch from their misogyny to attacking the deposit scheme. They know they have won, so now they need a new SNPBad...

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    1. Could be the civil service wants to undermine greens and the politically naive, could be they want legislation that provokes the S35 intervention in order that authority of SoS can be fully tested in supreme court before dotting i's and crossing t' on indyref bill.

      On face of it, putting recycling machines on council property is easy to finance directly and should invite no corporate kickback whatsoever - so the unnecessary complexity being complained about is probably deliberate either way.

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  3. True it has been won, the majority of scots don't support it, it's failed to galvanise the yes movement when being blocked, and the UK blocked it, so it's dead in the water, all true. Now people in the movement might what to spend less time on twitter and get on with living in the real word, the best way forward is a yes alliance as was recently muted by an SNP politician, free thinking should be encouraged.

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  4. Nicolas Sturgeon just resigned

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    1. Oh god, here we go.

      Be careful what you wish for...!

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    2. Definitely time to move on now. For the love of Scotland.

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  5. yeah i think it's time for everyone to move on the old guard of Alex and Nichola have gone, I don't think Alex will be able to make a comeback either, but many of the policies Alba shares with the ISP who were first on the bloke and there through conviction not opportunism are worth while, I think Angus MacNeil would be a great choice to lead a renewed independence campaign under a yes banner not just the SNP to move past the impasse and get people excited again.

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  6. Quite clearly, the gender stramash was of no interest to anyone other than a small, politically active majority. In a winter in which a sizeable proportion of the population struggling to make ends meet, this was not doing the “day job”. Independence arguably is, if it is a route to tackling the bread-and-butter issues that people worry about. But if independence is really about gender rights (as recent SG activities imply), most people will lose interest.
    I think NS was a good leader, not least confirmed in her decision to step down at the right time having recognised that she has become too contentious to be useful. We now have to hope that the right person picks up the baton and focuses on the right issues to make a coherent, compelling and muscular case for independence.

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