Thursday, June 22, 2023

The Winnie Ewing effect

Many of the tributes to Winnie Ewing, who died yesterday, will rightly focus on her victory as the SNP candidate in Hamilton in 1967, which literally changed Scottish politics forever.   Apart from a few weeks at the end of the Second World War, the SNP had never held representation in Westminster prior to that landmark moment, but they've held it continuously ever since.

But for my money her biggest electoral achievement of all was single-handedly transforming the European Parliament constituency of Highlands & Islands from a three-way SNP-Liberal-Conservative marginal into an SNP fortress over the course of a decade and a half.  She was the SNP candidate on all four occasions that the enormous constituency, covering roughly one-eighth of the population of Scotland, was contested.

Highlands and Islands results in European Parliament elections:

1979:

SNP 34.0%
Liberals 30.7%
Conservatives 26.1%
Labour 9.2%

1984:

SNP 41.8% (+7.8)
Liberal-SDP Alliance 28.1% (-2.6)
Conservatives 16.0% (-10.1)
Labour 14.1% (+4.9)

1989:

SNP 51.5% (+9.7)
Conservatives 16.8% (+0.8)
Labour 13.9% (-0.2)
Greens 9.5% (n/a)
Social and Liberal Democrats 8.3% (-19.8)

1994:

SNP 58.4% (+6.9)
Labour 15.6% (+1.7)
Conservatives 12.3% (-4.5)
Liberal Democrats 10.1% (+1.8)
Greens 2.4% (-7.1)
UKIP 0.8% (n/a)
Natural Law Party 0.4% (n/a)

Make no mistake - a big part of those increases was the ever-growing personal vote for Winnie Ewing.  Not all of it, admittedly, because the SNP made big advances nationally in both 1989 and 1994, with the latter being at the time the highest national share of the vote (32.6%) the party had ever received in any type of election, even eclipsing October 1974.  Nevertheless, the bulk of the Westminster constituencies that overlapped with Highlands & Islands remained firmly in Liberal Democrat hands until as late as 2015, which gives you a guide as to the extent to which Winnie Ewing was denying gravity with her own results.

At around the time she left the European Parliament in 1999, she became one of Holyrood's inaugural MSPs, and famously chaired the first session, taking the opportunity to utter a line that caught the popular imagination so much that BBC Scotland even integrated it into their title sequence for the official opening of the Parliament a couple of months later: "The Scottish Parliament, adjourned on the 25th day of March, in the year 1707, is hereby reconvened."  To this day her children Fergus Ewing and Annabelle Ewing carry on the family tradition as MSPs, with the latter serving as a current Deputy Presiding Officer of the Parliament.  Another famous member of the Ewing clan was Fergus's late wife Margaret, who was leader of the SNP group at Westminster between 1987 and 1999.

It's thus horribly ironic that stories started surfacing this week that the Yousaf leadership plans to withdraw the SNP whip from Fergus Ewing.  The blogger Paul Kavanagh even used his column in The National yesterday to call for the SNP to give Mr Ewing the boot.  The timing is of course just a tragic coincidence, and I'm sure Paul will be mortified about it.  Nevertheless, out of common decency it's surely now unthinkable that the SNP will go ahead with their plan of expelling Mr Ewing in the short-term, and hopefully they'll now have the space to reflect and forget the whole thing in the longer-term.  The Kavanagh column implied, as the controversial journalist David Leask might put it, that Mr Ewing is somehow not "real SNP".  But as SNP members look back on his mother's legacy, they'll surely ask themselves the simple question: "if the Ewings aren't real SNP, who actually is?"  

Paul Kavanagh branded Mr Ewing a Tory, and said the only thing that separates him from "yer actual Tories" was his belief in Scottish independence.  I doubt if that's true, actually, but even if it is, and with all due respect to Paul, it's belief in independence that is supposed to separate SNP politicians from unionist parties.  Fergus Ewing might have been a Tory if he hadn't believed in independence.  Margo MacDonald might have been Labour.  Kate Forbes might have been a Lib Dem.  But they all joined the same party because it was independence they had in common.  But now?  Why would it seem so obvious to Paul Kavanagh that independence-supporting Fergus Ewing belongs outside the SNP and the (effectively) opponent of independence Ben Macpherson belongs within it?  What does that tell us about the core principle of the SNP in 2023 - the one that defines who is inside the tribe and who is outside?  Is it trans rights? Pronouns? Bottle return schemes?

Hopefully today's tragic news will play a small part in helping the SNP to step back, and reconnect with what they once were as a party, and should never, ever have stopped being.

15 comments:

  1. Humza Yousaf: Stop the independence movement, I want to get off.

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  2. Paul Kavanagh is an SNP leadership apologist as his utterings in both his blog and The National testify to. He's long since abandoned critical thinking with regards to what is best for Scotland's Cause in favour of mimicking the party line. He's best ignored.

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    1. My question, though, is what his relationship with the Sturgeon/Yousaf leadership has been and is. Does he write in support of everything they do entirely spontaneously, or do they get on the phone to him at strategic moments and say things like "Paul, it would really help if you write something to soften people up for Fergus Ewings's expulsion"? I don't know the answer to that question, but I do wonder.

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  3. This is the problem with the SNP (and assorted hangers-on) now. It's this mindset of "if you're not with us you're against us".

    There's no possibility for disagreement, no agree to disagree that people can want independence but disagree with other parts of the SNP policy manifesto and/or the process of how to achieve independence, no independent thought is allowed whatsoever. If you're not swallowing the SNP brief hook line and sinker then you're a Tory. Politically, this is the viewpoint of absolute children.

    The point of independence is supposed to be so that we, as a country, can decide how we want to do things and run things. Not, as the SNP seem to want, so that they can have already decided what it all means for everyone and only their vision is the true independence, even though they can't actually articulate any of that currently anyway.

    The SNP don't want members any more, they want drones. I sort of hope they do withdraw the whip from Ewing, as that seems to be continuing on the path of "what's the quickest way to completely implode the party internally and move the narrative on somehow" that they've been on for a while now.

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  4. Difficult to see the SNP recovering. They’re lurching from one crisis to another. Most of their own making.

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  5. So kavanagh doesn't even want yessers on side any more? Sad. I remember when he supported independence for all of Scotland and advocating trying to get No voters to Yes, now it seems that some Yes voters aren't acceptable to him. Very sad. Good guy gone bad let's hope he can find his way home soon

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  6. As someone btl on that article says:

    "If the SNP isn't a broad enough church to accommodate Fergus Ewing, it is never going to get past 50%."

    From the article itself:

    "it is all the more important for the SNP to assert its centre left and progressive credentials."

    Shoerepairers. It is all the more important for the SNP to assert its support for Independence, its plans for Independence, and its determination to spend every waking and sleeping second making sure Independence happens - and the economy to encourage people to vote for it.

    Fergus Ewing at least has a clue about the economy as does Kate Forbes; same can not be said about Yousaf.

    Imagine calling Ewing a "Tartan Tory" - the very language the unionists use about the SNP itself. Sad sad sad. And so divisive.

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  7. A nice relevant tribute James. Like you I hope that there's a pause and that saner minds let Fergus be.

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  8. I bet the Wokist Yoons in the SNP are doing Eightsome Reels tonight at the death of another obvious Scot Nat and believer in Scots Indy.

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  9. RIP Winnie. I was there in '67 cheering you on. Saor Alba.

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  10. Fergus Ewing can be a "tartan tory" and a supporter of independence. The only purpose for the SNP should be to attain independence. The SNP should support a broad church. Personally, I want a very pro-friendly small business model upon independence as this will increase economic growth. Taxes can increase on unproductive individuals (land-taxes). We need to be business-friendly while engendering a social democratic model. Reduced corporation taxes can also be used to entice the HQ of BP Shell and Diageo North of the Border.

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  11. I am very sad that Winnie Ewing has passed away from this world.I have canvassed with her,and worked for her election as an MEP.I learned a great deal from her.

    Regarding Paul Kavanagh,I have not read his article in the National,but everything that I know about him does not suggest that he lacks critical thinking.In fact,I would say that he displays metacognition,an ability to
    think about thinking.He is one of the most powerful advocates for
    Scottish independence

    Regarding Fergus Ewing,he is now my MSP since I returned from living abroad.I agree that it does not matter whether he has different views on various topics.The only thing that matters is that he believes in independence.Untill we are independendent,we can deliver very little that matters to most peoples lives,such as financial security,and freedom of movement.I recall that in 1974,the fact that the SNP was a broad church was seen as a positive thing that united people around the campaign to achieve the ability to make your own decisions and to have them respected.We were not concerned then whether people were

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    1. There's an interesting question as to whether broad-church political parties work in the present era.

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  12. What exactly is the SNP convention in Dundee going to achieve? I fear the SNP are in danger of becoming a laughing stock.

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  13. Sad that Winnie has gone.

    A new poll has Yes in the lead - https://twitter.com/Celebs4indy/status/1672301031315652631

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