"My view on general election strategy is simple: whatever resources Alba commit to the election should be totally concentrated in the two constituencies we are defending, and perhaps also in support of Angus MacNeil in the Western Isles, to the extent he feels that would be helpful. Success in those three constituencies, whether in the form of outright wins or substantial vote shares, constitutes by far the best opportunity to build Alba's profile and credibility, and to propel us towards a Holyrood breakthrough in 2026. Putting up Westminster candidates in other constituencies would be a lose/lose, because it would deflect resources (especially human resources) away from the priority seats, and would risk creating a mythology among independence supporters that Alba were responsible for needless Labour and Tory victories due to a widespread split in the pro-indy vote."
I think we all know from the mood music that the above advice is unlikely to be heeded in full, but nevertheless it's my honest view and I believe the reasoning is fairly inescapable. Alex Salmond has said that Alba's main strategic focus must be on Holyrood 2026 - that's entirely right, and with that in mind I really do struggle to see the logic of spreading our resources too thin with risky interventions in too great a number of seats in Westminster 2024, which of course is a first-past-the-post election. However, the SNP have made any number of far bigger strategic missteps in recent years, so if Alba make a collective decision I'm dubious about, I'm sure I'll come to terms with it.
It would perhaps be easy to caricature my views as cautious and always veering towards the least belligerent strategy, but the reality is that if I had been on the NEC a few weeks ago I would have been strongly arguing for Alba to stand in the Rutherglen by-election, as long as there had been a big name candidate. And I'm not being Captain Hindsight in saying that, because I repeatedly said so at the time on this blog. It was a missed opportunity to build Alba's profile and transform Alba's credibility, and again, I don't really understand the thinking behind the decision.
One thing I would add is that if I'm elected to the NEC, I would strive in the same way as I did in 2021-22 to be a voice of realism about where Alba truly stands in respect of public opinion, and the challenge it faces in reaching the level of support required to win a decent number of list seats in 2026. As long-term readers will remember, I was a bit disturbed last year about an analysis of the local election results that I felt was somewhat divorced from reality. There was a seductive argument being put around that any voter who had ranked an Alba candidate higher than any party other than the SNP could be counted as a likely Alba list voter, which to be blunt is nonsensical. In many cases, these were people who had voted SNP 1, SNP 2, Alba 3, or even SNP 1, SNP 2, SNP 3, Alba 4. The obvious likelihood is that they would have been "both votes SNP" in a Holyrood election, and yet they were being prayed in aid as an indication that Alba's "real" vote was much, much higher than 2%, that very substantial progress had been made since the Holyrood election the previous year, and that the party was already firmly on course for multiple list seats - all of which unfortunately was without foundation. I believe that list seats
are absolutely attainable, but we're far more likely to get there if we're honest with ourselves about the distance we still need to travel.
Of course I entirely understand that in an attempt to generate momentum, it can sometimes make perfect sense to publicise poll results suggesting 20%+ of voters would consider voting Alba, and to point out the number of list seats that could theoretically translate into. But the problem kicks in if we start to internalise that messaging and take it too literally ourselves, which I sometimes feel is exactly what is happening. As I always point out, Archie Stirling commissioned a YouGov poll in 2007 which showed 20%+ of voters would consider voting for his new Scottish Voice party - but on election day a few weeks later, only 0.1% actually did so. Archie Stirling-type polls count for little in the real world. I don't want us to get into a groupthink belief that 20 list seats can be easily won through enthusiastic campaigning, and then wake up on the day after the election wondering how on earth we've ended up with zero again.
Six or eight seats, which might be won on around 6% of the national list vote, will be a Herculean effort. That would be a tripling (in fact almost a quadrupling) of the Alba vote from 2021. We need to have a hardheaded, rooted-in-reality think about where those extra votes might come from and how they can be won over.
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If you're a member of the Alba Party, and haven't yet voted in the party's internal elections, I'd be grateful if you'd consider giving me your first preference for Membership Support Convener. The email link to vote should be in your inbox from just over a week ago.
James, hard-headed reality as always. It's why the Alba NEC desperately, urgently needs your voice. But I fear that your propensity for speaking hard truths will not go down well with the bulk of the Alba crowd.
ReplyDeleteIt seems that they're so disillusioned by the SNP fantasyland groupthink, that they've decided to set up a rival court of fantasyland groupthink in their stead. It's the Court of Sturgeon versus the Court of Salmond, both of them asinine, self-indulgent, and totally divorced from the realities of Scottish voters.
If we're honest with ourselves, I don't think the whole of the independence movement has been so troubled and anaemic since well before the turn of the century. It has become a petty, partisan, self-obsessed, grudge-fuelled realm.
And I'm afraid that no less than absolute electoral annihilation will remind people of our original aim. Unfortunately, electoral annihilation will also necessitate a generation in the wilderness for Scottish independence.
But we have brought this on ourselves. Alba was my last hope at seizing back some perspective and rationality in the Yes movement - for refocussing minds. But it turns out that Alba has as little perspective in its midst as the SNP.
You're an honest man among knaves, James. And I'd very surprised to see that rewarded by your Alba peers.
Nonetheless, I live in hope!
Alba needs to show it's cable of winning something somewhere to get sufficient votes to look like a good bet. What you say convinces me as a way to achieve that.
ReplyDeleteIs it possible Alba's waiting to see the effect on Alex Salmond's reputation when the SNP's legal woes really hit the fan? Hoping that Branchform, the perjury investigation and his case against Leslie Evans will make him look more like the victim and transform the landscape might work for some, but I fear his detractors' opinions are fixed beyond facts or argument. Hardly fair, but that's contemporary politics.
Anyway, for what it's worth, unless and until pro-independence parties agree a joint slate for a "de facto" ref-election, or a joint slate for any kind of break-out strategy, they'll be pretty much following the Sturgeon practice of disabling Yes everywhere.
Perhaps anonymous No1 above is correct but I for one (anonymous 2 for easy reference ) can never forgive the SNP for their treatment of AS, in fact I think that the people in the party who were a part of this stitch up are evil and deserve to go to prison themselves for a very long time and should be named, it will be very difficult to vote for such people.
ReplyDeleteHowever this does not alter my support for Scottish independence, its a pity that the evildoers in the party use this unfortunate circumstance as protection because folks must vote snp if they want independence hence they feel safe in their sanctuary, but Alba are a growing concern for the snp and if we need to start again without the snp then Alba are as good a party to start again with as any.
In general I agree with you James - though I would of thought a couple of high profile candidates could use the opportunity to promote ALBA policy.
ReplyDeleteHi Anonymous 2, Anonymous 1 here, Rob, actually. Your hymn sheet is my hymn sheet, I think. Maybe it's wishful thinking on my part, but once the legal stories have played out, the SNP should be lacking enough of the Sturgeonistas to see a clear out of the stables.
ReplyDeleteAnon No2 here, Indeed I hope you are correct, it will be the only way to clear the air,snp thinking such betrayal can just be swept under the carpet and all will be forgiven is naive in the extreme.
DeleteIn my opinion there is no electoral room in Scotland for two mainstream independence supporting parties. After the Scottish Constitutional Convention is reconvened there will be scope for Alba to agree an electoral strategy with the SNP for the next Scottish elections. I can appreciate why you think it would be wise to concentrate Alba resources on attempting to defend MacAskill and Hanvey's seats at the next UK GE but I think that it would be no more than forlorn gesture politics and a waste of precious resource best kept in reserve for the elections where you will have the best chance of a return.
ReplyDeleteI'm not a member of Alba (or any other party), but I tend to agree with your analysis. There are two points on which I'd disagree - if there's a big-name candidate (and, really, there's only one) who is inclined to stand in a 'winnable' seat, that's probably worth a punt. And I wouldn't apply any resources to help Angus MacNeil unless and until he joins.
ReplyDeleteBut, as I said, I'm not a member, so it's not up to me.
I agree James.
ReplyDeleteAlba should do their utmost to keep Hanvey and MacAskill's seats. The whole of Alba should converge on their constituencies, and not just in the week before the election. They should be scheduling a long-run campaign from now.
It would be an enormous fillip if they could get one or both of them re-elected.
That's where the people and resources should be deployed.
WGD numpty Dr Jim says:- " And in some nice news today. Nicola Sturgeon passes her driving test, first time of course. Give her a toot if you're oot and aboot. " Jimbo she is more likely to get a lot of two - fingered salutes.
ReplyDeleteDr Jim also says:- " Is it not time for a *FFFM* Free the former First Minister campaign or petition." What prison is she in Jimbo and will you be visiting her?
Dr Jim what a nicophant.
Thnking outside the box there's nothing to stop Alba concentrating on a few constituencies to maximise the efforts, have a nominal candidate in each one, but not actually run that candidate. A simulated campaign, whereby Alba can get themselves known, and their policies.
ReplyDeleteIm not being funny but what odds will it really make if SNP lose 25 or 35 seats? The narrative will be the same regardless. Is the extra handful of losses "caused" by Alba (at best) worth throwing away the exposure for Alba in an election?
ReplyDeleteThey are either a separate party or they are not.
That's an absurdly simplistic way of looking at it. All parties pick their battles and don't stand in every single contest - that doesn't mean they're not separate parties.
DeleteJames, I agree with you on most of what you say in the article. I differ in that I think ALBA were right not standing in Rutherglen as it showed the disaffection with the SNP had nothing to do with them. I note that one of the anonymous has said that he or she feels that ALBA members have set up a rival court of madness but I must admit I don't recognise this - although I definitely could be wrong. I assume this refers to social media outbursts? I don't use social media so I don't get involved in this sort of stuff so the input I get on ALBA comes from the ordinary media and from the behaviour and performance of the party's two MPs which has been pretty good. Obviously I get updated from HQ and the LACU but that's about it. The point I would like to make is that it might be better for ALBA members to keep off social media it seems to me that it creates heat and people say things that are ill-advised to say the least - let the party lead the message and let the members lead the party. A big concern is that ALBA have no real access to the media. The National is supposed to be an independence supporting paper but it isn't, it is an SNP fanzine. It doesn't criticise the SNP and never has. To give a contrast, everyone I assume would accept that the Telegraph is a Tory paper but it regularly criticises the Tory government, supporting isn't the same as parroting. We really do need a real independent independence supporting newspaper one that criticises. How did Sturgeon get away with all the false starts to the drive for independence? Because she was never put under any pressure from our side. Nobody ever sat down and interviewed her in a hostile manner regarding her inability to deliver a promise. Had someone done that many more people would have found out early that she was an independence chancer. And, now we have Youssef whose views on Palestine are unequivocal and succinct but when discussing independence the language becomes double speak, as slippery as a snake oil salesman - and again, a robust hostile independence interview could assist in publicly exposing that, but we have none. The independence movement has no real public voice, we are powerless to express ourselves and can only do so tempered by outside agents such as BBC STV and Newsquest (Gannet). Even with posters, Global blocked a fairly innocuous ALBA one while finding no problem with much more contentious ones in England to do with the labour- Tory battle - the political old firm. Unpicking this representational difficulty has to be a must.
ReplyDeleteWith regard to the 'success' of votes for ALBA on an SNP 1, SNP 2, Alba 3, or even SNP 1, SNP 2, SNP 3, Alba 4. I think that the success only lies in the fact that these people were prepared to put a number next to ALBA at all. These people are there to be won over whereas the likes of WGD supporters would find their hand bursting into flames rather than put anything other than a turd next to ALBA.
It will be disappointing if I was unable to vote Alba in the next UK GE but if it is better for the long term success of Alba then I can live with it. I did however, vote Alba on the regional list in May 21 and will do so again in 2026 unlike both votes SNP numpties like yesindyref2.
ReplyDeleteThe way Humza useless is continuing Sturgeon's trashing of the SNP as a party of independence he will probably issue the same both votes SNP message in 2026.
Yesindyref2 votes Tory like you Cubby, but he'll vote Labour next time, like you
DeleteTo be fair Both Votes SNP will make much more sense in a situation where they are likely to lose a lot of constituency seats than it did in 2016 or 2021 and if Alba don't contest a lot of seats in 2024 to raise their profile then they will be very easy for the SNP to portray as a wasted list vote in 2026.
DeleteJames - you blocked me on twitter a few months ago. Mo grudges on that. Re your question about the youngvwoman who instantly likes a tweet
ReplyDeleteRe the young woman who instantly likes tweets, the answer is yes. It srarted 4 or 5 weeks ago. She also 'followed' me. I don't think she's at all interested in Scottish politics. I'd have tweeted this to you but you blocked me a while back after I argued with you. C'est la vie. 😃
ReplyDeleteI think with an SNP MP defecting to the evil hated Yoons then Alba should take the gloves off and run in every seat aaginst the now Yoon owned SNP. The SNP 1 Alba 2 strategy must alse be dumped for Holyrood. Get the Yoons out. Get the traiters out, the lot of them.
ReplyDeleteGet traiters out - and the bad spellers!
DeleteGreat post by 'WT'
ReplyDeleteAlba members would be well advised to keep off social media unless their messaging is about ALBA.
'Let the party lead the message and let the members lead the party.'
Exactly.
James - above re the young woman liking your tweets is acknowledged.
ReplyDelete