Friday, September 20, 2024

Here is the *minimum* that Alba members should be demanding from the constitution review process, in my view

The weekly Alba email to members, this time written by Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh, has announced among other things that a National Assembly of the party will be held in Perth on 1st December to discuss the proposals of the Constitution Review Group.  This is the first news of any type I've heard about the constitution review process since I was suddenly informed by Chris McEleny around ten days ago that I had been removed from my elected position on the Constitution Review Group - a decision which I am reliably informed by those with legal expertise that the leadership quite simply had no right under the existing constitution to take.  (The General Secretary can certainly temporarily suspend someone's party membership pending a disciplinary hearing, but there's no provision for someone to be removed or suspended on an 'a la carte' basis from their elected position on a specific committee or group.)  I've no idea whether today's announcement means that a meeting of the group has already been held in my absence.

I would urge all Alba members who believe in the type of thoroughgoing constitutional reform that would make the party fit for purpose to attend the National Assembly and to insist as best they can on real change.  I intend to be there and to make a pro-reform contribution, although obviously that will be contingent on the truth or otherwise of Yvonne Ridley's boast of having inside knowledge that a decision has been taken to expel me from the party on baseless, trumped-up charges about a breach of confidentiality rules.

December could well be the last chance for the rank-and-file membership to seize back control over the reform process.  It's a statement of the obvious that my own unconstitutional removal was part - perhaps a small part, but nevertheless a part - of a set of tactics intended to ensure that any reform package is as superficial and limited in scale as possible.  Unless members put up a real fight at National Assembly and then at conference, the opportunity to make the needed changes will be lost and may never come round again.

Regardless of what the Constitution Review Group proposes (and remember that group now has a majority of leadership-appointed members, with elected members firmly in a minority), I would suggest the minimum that the Alba membership should be insisting upon is the following:

1) All members of the National Executive Committee (NEC), with the exception of Ash Regan as leader of the parliamentary group, should be directly elected by the whole membership on a one member, one vote basis.  During the Blair/Brown government, I saw a Labour minister on TV making an atrocious defence of an unelected House of Lords.  He argued that in a democracy, it's not necessary for every position to be elected - for example, in some American jurisdictions, judges are elected.  We don't do that here but we're still a democracy, he said.  Well, OK, it may not be necessary in a parliamentary democracy for judges to be elected, but it surely is necessary for parliament to be elected.  The same principle applies to Alba.  The NEC is the governing body of the party, and if the membership doesn't elect it, the party doesn't have a fully-fledged internal democracy.  At present around 95% of the members are in practice deprived of the right to elect ordinary members of the NEC due to the discredited 'pay-per-vote' system.  

I suspect the main reason that the leadership prefer a restricted franchise is that it ensures that a far greater percentage of those able to vote in NEC elections are the equivalent of a 'pay-roll vote', ie. not actually paid employees but people firmly under the leadership's influence. Anecdotally, I've been left in no doubt that people were told who to vote for last year. The system maximises the chances of the leadership getting a pliant NEC that will mostly do as it's told and not challenge anything or ask awkward questions.

But the even bigger danger is that the pay-per-vote system turns Alba into "the best democracy money can buy", ie. it potentially allows wealthy individuals to purchase a place on the NEC by buying voting rights for lots of people and then telling them to vote as a bloc.  Whether this has already happened in past years is something that can only be speculated about.

2) Other key committees, such as the Conference Committee and the Disciplinary Committee, should also be elected by the whole membership on a one member, one vote basis.  The main pushback I've heard against this is that it would somehow be 'overkill'.  People have said things like "I support the NEC being fully elected, but can't you have too much of a good thing?"  Well, it might not be the end of the world if the Finance & Audit Committee is not directly elected, but in many ways the other committees are more powerful than the NEC itself (in practice), and if they're not elected, the democratisation process will be hopelessly incomplete.  The Conference Committee is the gatekeeper of what can and cannot be debated at conference, so if the members don't control the Conference Committee, they have no ability to determine party policy.  At present the leadership appear to maintain control of the Conference Committee by swamping its meetings with people whose right to be there is highly dubious even under the existing constitution.  And if an increasingly authoritarian leadership is taking more and more disciplinary action against rank-and-file members, those members need protection against arbitrary treatment, and the most effective protection of all is for members to choose for themselves the composition of the Disciplinary and Appeals Committees.

3) Committees should select their own conveners, rather than have conveners imposed on them by the leadership.  The Alba constitution is closely modelled on the SNP constitution, so in the places where the Alba constitution is actually less democratic than the SNP, it raises a red flag for me and makes me wonder why.  As I understand it, the SNP's Conduct and Appeals Committees are independent from the NEC in their composition, but that is not the case in Alba, where the NEC (in reality the leadership using the NEC as a rubberstamp) appoints two members to the Disciplinary Committee and designates one of them as convener.  And even though nobody on the NEC is allowed to be a member of the Appeals Committee, the NEC still appoints the convener of the Appeals Committee, which is a ludicrous contradiction.  And in case you're wondering, no, the NEC did not appoint a convener from within the Appeals Committee's own ranks, they appointed a convener from outside who was not elected by anyone. That hopelessly compromises the committee's independence.  All committees should be trusted to choose their own chairs.

4) The "Enabling Act" should be removed. Like the SNP constitution, the Alba constitution permits rules to be drawn up that have the same force as if they were in the constitution itself.  But the SNP constitution adds the caveat that this is only the case insofar as the rules do not conflict with the text of the constitution. That caveat appears to be missing from Alba's constitution.  Why?  In theory, this is a weakness which could be exploited as a sort of 'Enabling Act' allowing the constitution to be overridden.  That's got to be sorted.

5) The General Secretary's veto powers over the disciplinary process should be abolished.  As Alan Harris' guest post set out, under the current system, the General Secretary can simply veto all complaints he doesn't approve of, and the Disciplinary Committee is not even made aware that those complaints ever existed.  But for complaints that the General Secretary allows through or sets in train himself, he is free to go all in, and demand certain outcomes and penalties.  That is not a fair, just or independent system, and unsurprisingly it is not producing fair, just or independent results. The Disciplinary Committee must be an independent, fully elected body that investigates all complaints without interference from the General Secretary or the party chair.

6) Something has to be done about the unelected nature of the party chair and General Secretary positions.  We have the weird paradox that most national office bearer roles are directly elected, but by far the two most powerful office bearers are not elected by anyone.  Presumably the leadership must be worried about those positions falling into the "wrong" hands, but given the huge power these two people wield over party members, I believe it is unsustainable for party members to have no say at all.  My suggestion is a compromise by which the leader would propose their preferred party chair and General Secretary, and the party membership would then either accept or reject those nominations via affirmative ballots.  However in an ideal world I do believe both positions should be directly elected.

Additionally, although it's not something I've personally prioritised, I know the biggest concern for many members is Alba's unsatisfactory approach to policy formation, which could potentially be addressed by the creation of a Policy Development Committee, or an elected Policy Development Convener.

152 comments:

  1. Sorry James but it seems to me that the decisions have already been made by the self appointee’s as to what is to happen.

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  2. Although it’s no longer my circus. I suggest in light of Gordon Millar’s blog there should be an elected Treasurer.
    There is no one that can be questioned by the membership on what money is being spent on

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    Replies
    1. Is there a link to Gordon Millar's blog?

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    2. https://www.denisefindlay.org/post/guest-blog-by-gordon-millar-alba-in-the-balance

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    3. Salaries and expenses?

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  3. The general secretary is a judge jury and executioner.
    He suspended young Sean Davis without any action as Alex Salmond said an apology would be sufficient and all would be forgotten, in the query of Yvonne Ridley.
    Sean's counter complaint was completely ignored against his complainer.
    These self appointed people are power happy and only in it for the money.

    The deputy secretary which we know isn't in the constitution deleted evidence to do with her being caught lying about young Sean.

    The alba party are now attacking apparently disgruntled ex-members and claiming it's some cabal attacking the party.

    Moaning Minnie's that will amount to the square rout if nothing.😏 If you know you know!

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    1. My eyes are drawn to certain words.
      Boulevard
      Whistle
      Cities
      Knead
      Sea
      There are many other ones that your readers might like to know about.

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  4. The mandate from Conference was for an online National Assembly. Why a meeting in Perth?

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    1. To reduce participation, presumably.

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    2. I agree it was voted and passed for an online national assemble for wide as partipation from members as possible. This was passed in a resolution of the party main body for decisions National Confernce. Who is over ruling National Conference?

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  5. The Alba conference in Edinburgh has a capacity of 200

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    1. Which (if true) presumably means the governing body of a party of thousands will be "elected" by a maximum of 200 people.

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    2. Say what you like about Alba, but they're completely unique. No other party would allow the capacity of a venue to be the determining factor of who is allowed to vote in internal elections.

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    3. I can save some money. My back room is for hire -holds 20. Downside only 1 toilet.

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    4. Anon at 0915. You don't have to physically be there to vote. You just need to buy a ticket. Leaves it wide open for those with wealth to recruit (buy) new members from abroad, hide these new members in HQ Lacu, get them to bloc vote, then refuse to publish full results. Which is exactly what happened in last years NEC elections.

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  6. As regards 1) it behoves me to point out that, regardless of the presence in the Conference Committee of Office Bearers - who have no constitutional right to attend, let alone speak or vote, there is the domineering behaviour of the party chair to consider. Until you have experienced this, it is difficult to understand just how oppressive this behaviour is. Indeed, her opinion on the matter of something that should be uncontentious, such as a Policy Development Committee is "It's a big 'No' from me".

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  7. The vetting committee should also be elected. At the moment the Chair is appointed by the General Secretary- and she appoints the committee. So the committee is totally in the control of the leader

    Only candidates that pass vetting are then sent to the NEC for final approval. Candidates that fail have to re-apply there is no appeal process

    So if the Leader doesn’t want a candidate he can just ensure they never pass vetting and the candidate has no recourse to object

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    1. I support all the points James has made in this blog post but I do think a Leader should have a veto on whether someone should be able to stand. A bit like HR doing it work and offering candidates for a position in your team, the manager should have the final say

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    2. Should Keir Starmer have had a veto on whether Diane Abbott could stand?

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    3. I actually think he should have the ultimate decision yes, albeit caveated by reports and recommendations.

      He then takes the flack and responsibility for they decision.

      Also anyone pretending he didn't make the decision, despite what may be in the rules, is kidding themselves on.

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    4. Well, that is kind of the generalised problem James has identified, is it not? "Member led" is a sham (or scam).

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    5. Not really, no.

      Different things imo

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    6. Exactly the same.

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  8. In short, nothing that the party chair doesn't like gets through the Conference Committee.

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  9. Two points specifically on your penultimate point, James. The Party Chair is elected. The current party chair is Tasmina and she was elected to the NEC as an ordinary member, she was then elected by the elected NEC to become chair.

    On the General Secretary, he is a member of staff. It would be quite unusual for a member of staff to be elected. He is accountable to the elected NEC who have the ability to question him at every meeting. He has no voting rights.

    If the elected NEC wish, they could call a no confidence vote at any meeting and call for his removal.

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    1. "The Party Chair is elected"

      No she isn't and you know she ian't. It's an appointed position.

      "The current party chair is Tasmina and she was elected to the NEC as an ordinary member"

      Yes she was. She was elected as ordinary member of the NEC but not as party chair, which is an entirely separate, appointed position.

      "she was then elected by the elected NEC to become chair"

      No she was not. She was appointed as chair by the party leader. The NEC's only role under the constitution is to approve the appointment.

      "On the General Secretary, he is a member of staff. It would be quite unusual for a member of staff to be elected."

      Then what the hell is a mere employee doing suspending members, making up party policy, etc, etc? You can't have it both ways - either he's got to be elected, or his vast powers have got to be severely cut back so that they actually start resembling those of a mere employee.

      And nice try with the continual repetition of the words "elected NEC" as if they mean something, but the NEC is at best semi-elected, and that certainly has to be fixed.

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    2. Can the NEC call for the Secretary's removal?

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    3. If they wanted to get the hairdryer treatment from the party leader, they could always try, I suppose.

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    4. I suppose the reason for last years election shenanigans was fear that the NEC would not approve Tasmina or Chris’s positions.
      The leadership thought they were going to lose control of the NEC
      Of course Salmond could have sorted that with a bit of schmoozing of the NEC members. Denise Findlay, Heather McLean, Jacqui Bijster, Eva Comrie were all very loyal to Salmond
      Instead he treated them as his political enemies. Which was a huge mistake and quite unfathomable.

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    5. If there was a danger these posts wouldn't be approved by the NEC, it shows that being approved by NEC is a part of the process.

      Prob bad enough without over egging the pudding.

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    6. Wealded the change

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    7. Anon at 1105. How do you know the chair was elected? The results have never been published.

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    8. Anon at 1.51. You come across as untruthful. If you are representative of the Alba faithful Alba should be wound up.

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    9. James was Tasmina elected? Nobody has seen the results of the OM election so nobody knows for sure do they?

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    10. "If there was a danger these posts wouldn't be approved by the NEC, it shows that being approved by NEC is a part of the process"

      There is no danger those posts wouldn't be approved by the NEC, no danger at all, and therefore it does not show the NEC is part of the process. You've destroyed your own argument there.

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    11. Erm.. the post came about from the comment saying it may not have been approved by the NEC last year with the elected members on that committee?

      There's no danger now because of the makeup of the committee. There maybe was then because of the makeup of the committee. That's what elected committees are like.

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    12. Elected? Bless. The elections were unceremoniously cancelled to give Salmond and Majid a fair chance to rig them at the second attempt.

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    13. What an utter shambles of a party.

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    14. The point is the NEC elections were subverted so insure the NEC would vote the way Salmond wanted. That’s what led to the problems Alba members weren’t voting the way Salmond wanted them to - remember all the promotion of various leadership favourites from the Alba accounts which didn’t work , the rest is history

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    15. Well talk about how the nec was subverted then. The rules don't allow that.

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  10. It should be pretty obvious now that IFS is probably Chris McEleney. The way he cowers from the frank and genuine discussions of Alba that James has, in an attempt to actually BETTER the party and make it the viable pro-independence alternative that Alex Salmond seems so determined Alba should not be - IFS wouldn't want to upset the Fat Controller of Alba now, would he? Not when he's been given a bully pulpit beyond his limited imagination.

    The last time I mentioned Alba's tactical failings to IFS, he had a tantrum to rival the best of McEleny's thuggish meltdowns. I criticised the SNP as a turgid, cowardly, rotten party that shows no signs of leading us to independence. I demanded, as James is doing, that Alba be better.

    What was IFS's response? To scream bloody murder that I was a devoted member of the Sturgeon gang.

    That inability to comprehend simple words on a page; the incandescent rage with which he insisted that even the most tepid criticism of the Fat Controller signified lifelong devotion to the failed Sturgeon clique; the unedifying tantrums he has when the Conservative and Unionist from Bath is called out on his Conservative Unionism - all of these signify the small-mindedness, the inability to intellectually adapt, and the notorious temper of a certain Christopher from Greenock.

    The beauty of it is, of course, that he actually thinks he's being subtle with it.

    Give it up, Chris. You have all the subtlety of Fifi La Bonbon.

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    1. Anon at 3.12am has posted a load of garbage and simple lies after a night out on the booze. What I posted when this drunk posted previously I was McEleny was " does McEleny live in East Ren because I do." What is it about these people with their long posts about who I am. Obession disnae cover it.

      I didnae scream "bloody murder ". I didnae have a "tantrum" - there was no "incandescent rage" - all dramatic effects to try and make his post seem interesting. There are annoying one line trolls but now I have seem to have a drunk obsessive on my case.

      I voted for the ISP leader in Clarkston in July but this nutter claims I am a member of Alba. Why would I ever want to disclose who I am when there are nutters like this guy about.

      My advice to this anon troll is if you want to hassle McEleny away you go to twitter - or has he blocked you because you are clearly an obsessive nutter.

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    2. In fairness to McEleney he’s not the brightest but he’s not a complete idiot. The self titled Idiot For Scotland undoubtedly is. He hates NS and SNP more broadly and does not actively work for or support the Indy movement. He has admitted this himself. He is a troll of limited intelligence and doesn’t know when to quit.

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    3. Anon at 12.42pm - " he has admitted this himself " - no I have not. More lies from moronic trolls.

      I am all for free speech but trolls just making up lies about you is just not acceptable.

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    4. You absolutely have admitted it. It’s in previous posts for everyone to see. You simply confirm just how thick you are. By your own admission, you have never been in a party, never staffed a stall, never knocked a door. Notice your band of merry men no longer even attempt to defend you. Give up, your troll mask slipped some time ago. You are an object of derision and ridicule. Away back to wings and see if he’ll have you, and failing that the Daily Fail. Sad wee man.

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    5. Moronic Anon lying troll at 3.55pm. The wee thing again - 😂😂😂😂😂😂- definitely projection there. According to idiot trolls like you I was Campbell and now I am McEleney of Alba. Trolls will troll and lie but you are a scary obsessed looney. I never had a band of merry men it's all in your bamboozled troll mind.
      You contribute nothing to SGP apart from personal abuse and that is trolling.

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    6. The Tory troll masquerading as Independence for ScotlandSeptember 22, 2024 at 10:08 AM

      Emily in Paris is fun

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    7. I have never accused you of being anything other than Idiot For Scotland. Try to stop making things up. For you to accuse anyone of being abusive is beyond irony. You know you are being called out for exactly that. You can’t handle being called out. It’s long been a Tory tactic to do what you are doing. I see that no one has come forward to back you up. Ask yourself why. Then go away, and let adults discuss serious political issues.

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    8. Anon at 12.42pm hiding in the anon crowd expects me to just take his word for it. You are the same troll who is always telling people to go somewhere or jog off or go back to WOS or go back to the Express etc etc etc. You are an obsessive nutter who contributes nothing but trolling. People like you have been trolling me for years on SGP but sadly for them all I have posted has turned out to be true.

      What points have you ever made about anything - zero - just personal abuse from an anon too scared to identify the non stop stream of trolling they post so they hide as an anon.

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  11. Enough of the people of Scotland are onside with independence for us to have opportunities to build the kind of movement that will be necessary to combat the neoliberal and anti democratic monolith of the British state.

    Does anyone seriously think that on the tough road that we are going to have to go down either Swinney's wet lettuces or an Alba leadership more interested in power in their own tiny bubble are the way forward ?

    Scotland's political elite were weaned and brought up on the false premise that independence could be achieved by parliamentary means alone. Our whole national, political crisis over the last ten years has been about their inability to deal with the obvious and apparent fact that there is no such road.

    New leadership will have to emerge from a new and determined movement. Current leaders are the flotsam of the failure of their own strategy. Beating a dead horse will get us nowhere.

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    1. I agree alt cult.
      You just have to look at this line in point 8 of the SNP's 11 point plan. " If the SNP takes office the Scottish Government will again request a section 30 order from the UK Government believing and publicly contending that in such circumstances there could be no moral or democratic justification for denying that request."

      Believing the UK gov has morals and believes in Scotland having democracy and rights shows how detached from reality the SNP leadership are ( assuming they actually believed that sentence).

      Scotland is a colony and the coloniser has no morals and certainly does not give a stuff for Scotland's rights.

      As alt cult says " there is no such road" - we need leaders who accept this reality and are willing to deal with it. It is just more nonsense to think that if polls say 65- 70% yes then Westminster will just say ok have your referendum and when you vote yes we will honour it.

      The SNP are now the colonial local guards guarding HMS Prison Scotland and Swinney is the prison governor. It's not that Labour diddy Ian Murray.

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    2. John Swinney should not be dismissed as a leader. His Glasgow University speech, at his installation, as leader, will not quickly be forgotten. He has the common touch and is well liked by ordinary people.

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    3. Anon at 2.29pm - what did he say that was so unforgettable or have you forgotten?

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    4. You can watch it here:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iGvEu1tUCiI

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    5. So anon you couldnae remember and had to reference a YouTube recording.

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  12. Are Alba not led by the very same people that held a grip on the SNP pre Sturgeon and then led it a massive civil war that is still having an effect on everything now?

    You aligned with the very people who helped cause such an issue, it takes two to tango and I am struggling to understand why their actions are such a surprise to everyone.

    Let them die with a whimper, they are all yesterdays men and women and who are screaming for attention and have utter delusions.

    Perhaps a people's party should start with a clear checklist that no previous politicians are put forward etc.

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    1. I'm sorry but that's nonsense. Whatever faults Alex Salmond and those around him may have, he did not cause the civil war. Sturgeon was his protege and he was supportive of her after she became leader. Her clique rewarded that by trying to get him jailed for crimes he did not commit, and then continued to demonise him even after the court cleared him, as if that was a mere technicality.

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    2. Nicola Sturgeon was not to blame. She was speaking up for the women whose voices deserved to be heard.

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    3. Most of whom who didn't want to come forward or had moved on from insignificant incidents that were resolved years prior but were pressured into coming forward in order to 'establish a pattern of behaviour ' to make the fictitious rape claim sound more plausible?

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    4. She was to blame. Try not to kid yourself - there's no point in it.

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    5. Salmond has known Murrell since the 1980s. Murrell was involved in Salmond’s campaign for Banff and Buchan in 1987.
      Sturgeon was Salmond’s protege
      Humza’s first job was with Salmond
      Swinney was a member of Salmond’s cabinet
      Mike Russell was CEO of the SNP under Salmond

      All the politicians that have failed Scotland were Salmond’s people
      And we now see the type of people Salmond surrounds himself with

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    6. You seem be under the impression the previous 20 years of independence service was a fleeting moment.

      Sturgeon may or may not have broken the back.of independence but her, Salmond and the current first minister blatantly had the UK in fear for a number of years.

      Revisionism at it's finest some of the above.

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    7. Anon at 1.18pm - the alphabetties all had their voices heard at the High Court in Ediburgh and they were found wanting. Most people would say they were liars.

      Sturgeon instigated and signed off a new procedure in late 2017 designed specifically to persecute Salmond and end his political career. A procedure declared unfair, unlawful and tainted by apparent bias by the Court of Session judge. An abuse of power and misuse of public funds by Sturgeon's gang. Two of the gang are currently under polis investigation - both for perjury. Sturgeon is under polis investigation and her husband who resigned for lying about membership numbers has been charged with embezzlement. Their Treasurer Beattie is also under investigation.

      Fergus Ewing called it a major scandal yet people like you defend Sturgeon. Just what would it take for Sturgeon to be suspended from the SNP - I'll answer that - an honest person with a degree of integrity as SNP leader.

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    8. The whole affair, or catalogue of them were undoubtedly due to Salmond having his gang and Sturgeon having her gang and woe betide anyone getting in the way.

      As it happens I do believe the CPS and Police Scotland are at it.

      From both sides, sturgeon and Morrell accounts are a mess but they haven't run away with the money.

      The CPS illegally released the list of complainants and yet no one an pit two and two together to release their are 3 parties in this war. Sturgeon, Salmknd and the establishment.

      Divide and Conquer. And they have. Time to move on and find new blood.

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    9. Chalks you can believe the moon is made of cheese if you want but it disnae make it true. They haven't run away with the money says Chalks who clearly disnae understand what raising money for " ring fenced " means. 100k at least is sitting in a polis compound in the form of a motorhome.
      Sturgeon worked with the Britnats and their media to cause the problem that is the truth.

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    10. Motorhome was going to be used as a mobile HQ for elections. They never ended up using it. It never has actually been used. It has more to do with utter incompetence than fraud. It's not exactly the best way for two well known political figures to go on holiday is it?

      Do you seriously believe he bought a motor home and intended its use for him and Nicola?

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    11. Chalks you will believe anything. Regarding your last sentence no I do not believe that because I don't believe stupid stuff like you do.
      So you now think it's the Henry McLeish it's a muddle not a fiddle. You see that's what wrong with SNP supporters they accept any old nonsense to explain away Sturgeon/Murrell misdeeeds?

      Ring fenced means the money is only to be used for the purpose it was raised otherwise it can be seen as a fraudulent scam. Continually promising Indyref2 since 2016/7 and raising the money off the back of the promise with no intention of having Indyref2 seems like a scam to me.

      You just cannae accept that Sturgeon has conned the whole independence movement. It's just too much for you to accept and you try everything to explain it away so you don't seem a fool. If it's any consolation for you she has fooled everybody at one point including me. I just don't emotionally invest in politicians.

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    12. That's fine, you think I'm an idiot, no worries. Been called worse.

      I'll put this to you though, if the Police etc actually have fk all on Murrell and Sturgeon and drop the case etc, will you think it's a conspiracy and that Sturgeon is calling in favours?

      The issue with this is that you would be speaking utter horseshit and failing to realise this whole sorry affair has been blown up and pushed by the UK government with Salmond and Sturgeon only too willing to go tit for tat on it.

      Sturgeon worried that Salmkmd would come back as he was planning and Salmond wanting Sturgeon to push for different things and/or just take over again

      The two of them should just get to fuck out of it and leave it to people that don't have their own interests at heart, but Scotlands instead.

      And no, I do not think that any of the crop of careerists in Alba or SNP have that either.

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    13. Chalks you seem to want to keep asking me questions.

      My turn:

      1. Where is the ring fenced money?
      2. Why did Murrell not let his own recently appointed treasurer and recently appointed internal audit office bearers look at the books?
      3. Why did Murrell give the SNP a personal loan of £100k that Sturgeon claimed she knew nothing about.
      4. Many SNP members like you who think it is ALL the British state at work here regularly claimed it was that bad Leslie Evans working for the British state who was behind it all when the judge in the Court of Session made its decision. If that was the case why did Sturgeon reappoint Evans on a much improved contract for another two years.
      5. You say Salmond and Sturgeon willing to go tit for tat on IT What is IT? I don't see how Salmond has had any role in the missing £600k. I also don't see Salmond being willing to have to go to court twice to prove his innocence. For the criminal trial Salmond had to pay his subtantial legal fees. Sturgeon's gang didnae have to pay a penny. It cost the innocent person a lot but the liars could lie with no consequences ( yet).

      I agree with James last sentence above in his reply to you. The fact is the British state could not have done any of this without the help of Sturgeon and her gang. Sturgeon using Covid TV briefings to attack Salmond, say he was guilty and trash the jury was one of the most disgusting things I have ever seen by any politician but the person holding the office of FM during a pandemic - the lowest of the low.

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    14. Oh well perhaps Chalks will answer in due course.

      Meantime, regarding your point about Sturgeon calling in favours I would remind you that the current Lord Advocate who is in charge of COPFS was appointed by Sturgeon when the current FM was deputy FM and all three served in the cabinet. Swinney and the Lord Advocate Bain are still in the cabinet and Bain reports to Swinney.

      I would also point out that Westminster passed a law stating that secret service personnel were above the law and could not be prosecuted when carrying out their duties even if this included killing.

      I agree that self serving careerists are not what is required to achieve independence.

      Delete
    15. Sorry for the delay in responding.

      Let's find out shall we? It's been a long time now, surely they have something.

      My understanding of the accounts is that they were a mess but the 600k was not missing.

      Anyway, the truth will come out.

      As for the Sturgeon stuff, Salmond is also very friendly with establishment types, including the Royals, so let's not delude ourselves that he can't call in favours either eh?

      Mervyn King was going to be leading the negotiations with the Bank of England if we voted Yes, salmknd has plenty of old friends in London and Westminster. As papers are only too happy to print whatever BOTH sides want to print.

      Where do you think the public list of complainants came from? And yet Salmond was never done for this because it couldn't be proven....as I have said, both sides are as bad as each other buy you only defend Salmond.

      I'm not an SNP member either sunshine.

      Delete
  13. The silence from Alex Salmond is deafening on this issue. Has he just given up and hopes ALBA disappears withering on the vine? If he doesn’t clean this up the party will not wither but be strangled by some of the ego’s at the top whose only interest is themselves.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Alex is not the person to complain about he is a very good leader.

      Delete
    2. 1% of the electorate agree with you. Does that not tell you anything?

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    3. Go on, what does it tell you?

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    4. Either Salmond knows exactly what is going on or they are running rings around him. Neither is a good look and it is the logic of that which has forced me to re-evaluate Salmond.

      Delete
  14. What about the said dossier has anyone asked if it exists?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Of course it exists, in the same way that Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction existed and could be deployed within 45 minutes.

      Delete
  15. So does the Big Dug mention the SNP throwing in the towel and telling everyone they have surrendered to Westminster ( in reality Sturgeon surrendered in Jan 2020). Nope. No mention of what Swinney or Brown said. No apologising for his part in leading the independence movement up a road to nowhere.

    So after years of telling his readers Sturgeon from 2017 onwards was just about to deliver Indyref2 - it was always just next year - he now says:- " If we seize the chances that Starmer's sleaze and lies present us, in ten years time we won't be looking back at what might have been, we will be building a new and better Scotland in an independent nation."

    He also calls Starmer a charlatan (true). Very much a case of kettle and pot. His plan for independence is seize the chances. Well there was an abundance of them in recent years - why should we believe future chances will be seized by the same people who failed over the last ten years.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Polls prior to a referendum do not win referendums. I Reference the EU ref. To quote you KC you must be desperate if that's all you have got. Support for the UK is also below 50% when you remove Don't knows.

      Delete
    2. IFS,
      If you think a majority of Scots favour independence you clearly live in cloud cuckoo land.

      Delete
    3. KC wow a new cliche. Definition of a cliche: - A phrase or opinion that is overused and betrays a lack of original thought. The latter part of that definition pretty much sums you up. No wonder James keeps deleting your posts.

      Delete
    4. Some of the criticism of Nicola Sturgeon misses the point that she raised the SNP's vote share to a high level and was able to secure an SNP government under a number of elections. That sort of electoral talent is not to be dismissed.

      There should be more recognition of the work she has done over the 9 years that she was leader which came at huge personal sacrifice. She gave up many other opportunities in order to dedicate herself to the job she did. And she did that job very well, winning election after election for the party.

      Delete
    5. Anonymous at 1:54,
      Well said.
      Sturgeon made mistakes no doubt about it, but some of the criticism of her is way over the top.
      What would we give now for somebody with her leadership qualities?

      Delete
    6. That would depend on whether they actually seek independence when all eyes are upon them, unlike her.

      Delete
  16. Meanwhile: AUOB just announced there won't even be a march in Edinburgh this year. How times change. I remember the hundred thousand turnout back in 2019. We had hope back then.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes I was there in the pouring rain. But we still have hope. We just need leaders in the SNP who actually want to do something to get independence. A good clear out of all these phoney politicians who are really Britnats. Didnae see Swinney, Yousaf or Sturgeon there in 2019. Sturgeon and Swinney preferred the Pride marches.

      Delete
  17. AUOB in fact have been very active all across Scotland. Let's be reasonable - not every location can have an AUOB march every year.

    Also the "The Ayes have it" events that Tasmina produces are continuing to evolve, develop, and do well in terms of impact.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Re: "... that will be contingent on the truth or otherwise of Yvonne Ridley's boast of having inside knowledge that a decision has been taken to expel me from the party on baseless, trumped-up charges ..."

    To make a few connections for everyone, Yvonne Ridley was [and might still be] depute convenor in Alba Scottish Borders. And that is depute to Gail Hendry, who also was [and probably still is] on the Alba conference committee. Mrs Hendry is also Salmond's sister [and her daughter Christina is a player in Alba, whose name pops up occasionally]. Yvonne Ridley is probably close enough to Mrs Hendry that she is probably in the know and Mrs Hendry herself played a role in my decision to walk away from Alba nearly 2 years ago.

    While I was in Alba in October 2022, I criticised Mrs Hendry at a meeting of Yes Scottish Borders, for having too many roles [Alba Conference Committee, Alba Scottish Borders Convenor and chair of Yes Scottish Borders]. As treasurer at the time, I resigned because of my strong reservations and felt I had a duty to Yes Scottish Borders to express my reservations. I don't believe that anyone should be so revered that they are above criticism, especially when Mrs Hendry herself often complained to me that we couldn't do this or that because she had too much to do.

    I won't go into what had been happening in Alba Scottish Borders in the year prior, but it was not a pleasant experience and I had already resigned from the exec there. Shortly after I resigned as Treasurer of Yes Scottish Borders, Mrs Hendry referred me to the Alba Disciplinary Committee alleging 'Bringing Alba into disrepute' for expressing my reservations about her at Yes Scottish Borders and for a small protest I was alleged to have had made at the proclamation of Charles Windsor as king - despite it being Alba conference policy that the late Queen should be the last monarch in Scotland.

    This referral contained Mrs Hendry's own statement and was accompanied by a statement from a non party member, another from a party member [with an idiotic claim that I was a unionist] and by a rambling or even demented 7 page document in a small font I will call the 'indictment' from the local Alba Organiser. This was a 'Gish Gallop' [google it] of spin, half truths and downright lies designed to discredit me, going back to things within the SNP and within Yes Scottish Borders which predated Alba, little of which really bore any relevance to the primary charges.

    Among the gems in this indictment was the claim "I am aware of what I believe is misogynistic bullying behaviour and manipulation, of five other women in our LACU". This claim was not accompanied by any names, details, statements or substantiation of any sort and should never have been put before a disciplinary committee if only for the simple reason that there was insufficient substance for the defendant to offer any defence. It is relevant that someone had told me about this allegation about 2 months prior so I asked Mrs Hendry about it. Mrs Hendry at that time denied that there were any such women. It is ironic that Mrs Hendry passed these allegations in this form to the Disciplinary Committee, given how her brother had been treated. At least he knew who his accusers were, even if we don't and he knew what the accusations were against him. I just said it was ironic. Actually, I would characterise it as hypocritical.

    Part 2 to follow

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    Replies
    1. Part 2
      Although I could defend against the allegations point by point, it would have been an uphill struggle. The 'Gish Gallop' technique, as used by practitioners such as Donald Trump, seeks to overwhelm an opponent with a barrage of untruths and distortions, each one of which takes substantially more effort to refute than it did to make the lie in the first place – and moreover, to refute it would bore the audience to death. The 7 page 'indictment' might have required a 50 page rebuttal. When Morgwn Davies contacted me to investigate, he told me that Hamish Vernal [Disciplinary Convenor] wanted the matter concluded within I think 72 hours, in any case, an unrealistic timescale, unless, to be fair, they might have been looking to a summary dismissal of the complaint.

      Anyway, the story ends there. I stopped paying a subscription to Alba. I feel that life is more valuable than any benefit from dealing with this stuff. If I had prevailed, I would only have 'won' the ability to be in Alba with some individuals whom I could no longer care about. The most bitter remark I will make about this is that it is reminiscent of Orwell's Animal Farm, where the pigs free the rest of the animals from their human masters and ultimately move into the farm house and act as the masters.

      James, you believe in Alba. So you must do as you believe. I respect that. But do prepare yourself for what could come your way, because the more you are invested, the harder it might be if the worst happens. Look after yourself by starting to imagine your possible life after Alba.

      Delete
    2. Thank you for posting this. Very concerning behavior.

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    3. This didn't shock me one bit. You were forced out by their lies and their processes.

      Delete
    4. It took a day to sink in. The complaints against you are not so important as the fact that criticising Hendry in Yes Scottish Borders should have been dealt with there. Taking it to Alba for a disciplinary was weaponising the Alba process. This is terrible for democratic accountability, because every Alba member will be reluctant to call Hendry out for anything or even hear out a complaint. She is not safe for any office outside Alba.

      Delete
  19. " leading economist" ? All economists agree do they? Really do you actually think Britnat bullshit like that will convince anybody? Nae doot the same mannie would say an independent Ireland would be bankrupt too

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  20. You Britnats lack imagination.

    ReplyDelete
  21. I admire yours and Alans integrity in speaking up. Too many know what went on and yet kept quiet about it all to protect their own ambitions. Too many talked a good game privately and yet said nowt in public. Theres a lot of hypocrites in politics.

    ReplyDelete
  22. You're fighting a brave solo battle, James. Kudos for trying, but i suspect it's a lost cause.

    ReplyDelete
  23. The Salmond Speaks show usually gets 2-3 K viewers most often fewer than Prism. For iMax a large number of free tickets were given away. But that is hardly the point is Salmond a serious politician or a chat show host?

    The live audience wee Alba book events Salmond used to do were free and reached outside the bubble. And were political meetings reaching the public not cosy chats between Salmond and his cronies

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    1. These initiatives -- Scotland Speaks with Alex Salmond and The Ayes Have It -- have been very successful.

      Delete
    2. Tasmina has been important in this as she is heavily involved in these promotions.

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    3. She is growing into the role and showing sureness-of-touch. She made a great speech at conference. The Ayes Have It event was a sell-out. We can all agree.

      Delete
    4. Sarcasm to one side, Tasmina has provided a lot of production talent, which has been key to ensuring these events and broadcasts have been so successful.

      Delete
    5. Define successful
      A few thousand viewers on YouTube.
      Alex is Taz’s meal ticket. Without him there is no media company and no chance of her getting to be an MSP. She has been milking him for all he’s worth but his star is fading and so too is Taz.
      She would not be the Chair of a political party without Alex. She would not have a few hundred viewers if it was her YouTube show.
      If he decides to retire she has nothing

      Delete
    6. There was also the "The Ayes Have It" show at the Edinburgh festival which was successfully promoted and produced.

      Delete
    7. No Ayes Have It this year

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    8. It was a once-off initiative.

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    9. Successful in what way? Who benefits from these shows? Who gets the money?

      Delete
    10. Successful in terms of whether the event went well, well received, enjoyable, well attended etc. It's a private initiative separate from Alba so entirely appropriately the money goes to the people who work for the company.

      Delete
    11. Piers Morgan and Tucker Carlson and other successful figures with a personal following have now taken to YouTube as well as live events in place of linear television; Alex Salmond is doing the same in a Scottish context with "Scotland Speaks with Alex Salmond".

      He has developed relationships with many people from different political backgrounds and (unlike some we would best not mention) is quite able to engage with those who have different view from himself. This explains some of the success as it makes for a more interesting show than one where everyone sings from the same sheet.

      Delete
  24. Whenever anyone says something bad about their own party, others say "You shouldn't wash your dirty linen in public". What a load of negative rubbish. It gives the party the chance to correct problems it has, and that's a double win. First in actually improving, and second in doing it so publicly.

    Nobody expects perfection, what people do expect is recognition, acceptance and improvement.

    You are giving Alba the chance of a double win. Do they have the guts and integrity to grab it with both hands?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wheesht for Indy!

      Delete
    2. Independence is more important than the political party that can achieve it
      Alba can achieve nothing because no one will vote for it, so to do so is a complete and total waste and a gift to the unionists
      Alex devo max Salmond is not standing for election because that not what he's out to do

      Delete
    3. But what’s the SNP out to do? They voted with the Tories against a de facto referendum just this week. What’s their goal besides permanent status quo?

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    4. No, they voted against a de facto referendum on the list.

      Delete
  25. I know some won’t agree, but it might be no bad thing if the SNP lost the ‘26 Holyrood election. Have a term in opposition, probably Labour mess up. That would surely increase support for independence. Then when the SNP get back in we can really start building a head of steam for Indy from 2031.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The need to survive though.

      But I agree

      It's going nowhere currently but many just need the mojo back. Will only come from a victory, not a tredding water election

      Delete
    2. The situation's worse than that, though. Here's why.

      Labour just hasn't the numbers for a majority coalition with the (desperate) Liberals or even the (very willing) Greens. If Reform is still around in 2026 and still polling well, even the grand red, white and blue coalition of Lab+Tory+Libs doesn't work, even if you add the Greens!

      Why should we care? Because in those circumstances, the SNP will be very, very tempted to be Labour's white knight. Just picture it now: "who will stand with us against Reform?" Who will "save liberal democracy from the forces of populism and nationalism?" Why, we civic minded (please don't call us) nationalists will save you! We can rise above partisan interest and join you in government to give Scotland the stability it needs.

      An SNP + Labour coalition becomes more likely as long as Reform wins seats and remains as untouchable as AfD and Le Pen. And absolutely guaranteed, any alliance between SNP and Labour will park independence outside the door.

      There is no rebuilding then.

      Delete
    3. Labour will do minority before doing that.

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    4. Negotiations are where policy goals come from


      You think we'll get a referendum or other goals when Labour don't need the SNP?

      Hell, the catalan parties managed to get an improved financial deal and pardons for some of their leaders due to Madrid parties needing their votes.

      You're completely wrong on this. Only looking at it in one direction.

      Delete
    5. Hey, I’d grab Indyref2 with both hands if indeed Labour and their British pals ever put it on the table. I sincerely doubt they ever would, however. I can imagine the lot of them working with Reform in preference to taking another round of Russian roulette with the Union.

      Delete
    6. Let labour win says the pretendy independence supporter. New dress suits for all or free hols in New York says labour

      Delete
  26. A minority government is always effectively an implicit coalition. Getting anything passed—especially Holyrood's annual budget—requires deals with opposition parties. They've always got the votes to defeat you, so you have to keep them on side for the big stuff.

    Salmond pulled it off because Anabel Goldie loved getting it right up Labour in 2007-2011, and she never saw the SNP landslide coming or indyref. The Tories didn't really have much in common with the SNP on policy, but they delighted in denying Labour just enough to keep them aboard the partnership that dare not speak its name.

    How is Anas Sarwar going to balance something like that in 2026? The Libs and Greens are in the bag, fair enough, but the Tories aren't what they used to be and he's still short of enough votes to appoint a government or pass a budget. Ultimately, he's forced to look over at the remaining two power blocs (by current polling) and do some sort of deal with either the SNP or Reform.

    I don't envy his, or the SNP's position!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The other parties would cause an election if they vote against the budget.

      Delete
    2. Correct. Though of course Labour would wheel out the “stabbed in the back” legend of 1979 yet again, blaming the SNP for whatever comes next.

      Funny how we don’t have a handy bomb like that to lob at them.

      Delete
    3. The system they have in Northern Ireland which ensures both unionists and nationalists get ministers in the government (bt d'Hondt) may work here.

      Delete
  27. Alex Salmond is winning by losing, he has effectively demoralised a large part of the independence movement into arguing with itself

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was not his fault it was Sturgeons fault.

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    2. Aw, poor Nickie. All those years in power, you’d think it was her responsibility. Bless.

      Delete
  28. Ah the pride before the fall.

    At the snps lowest ebb it's neck and neck with Labour still, or at least within a 2.5% swing.

    Independence ain't going away. Just waiting til the next political cycle

    No pain, no gain

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  29. Crawl back into your sewer a' bhalich.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Anyone else think that Tasmina and clan are decidedly dodgy? Her hold over AS looks like another glaring mistake he’s made in terms of who to trust
    When the SNP announced their 25,000th member at conference in Inverness in 2013, who just so happened to have a song ready to perform on stage there and then! it all seemed a bit contrived.
    Is Scotland destined to be outmanoeuvred at every stage?
    Glad I’ve withdrawn from Alba, there’s none so blind as those that will not see

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. She is in fact very much an asset to the party.

      Delete
  31. Anon at 10.26. He is sixty years old, and never had his hole. This is how he works off the frustration. Sad wee man. Wipe down your keyboard, have a shower, and get out into the fresh air.

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  32. Are you her hubby or being ironic?

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  33. Wings over Scotland continues to struggle with hits down to about a third of the number achieved in its prime. His guest slot at the Alba event doesn’t seem to have had the desired effect. Campbell and IFS should team up. He maybe has a spare room down in Bath. Of you go IFS.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. One thing which surprised me is I learnt recently he doesn't own his own home.

      Delete
    2. Moronic troll at 12.46pm who once said I actually was Campbell but now claims I am McEleney of the Alba party. The arrogance of the guy telling people where to live. I am more than happy where I live in Scotland. You are a scarey obsessed troll.

      Delete
    3. Toys out of the pram again IFS.

      Delete
    4. Like the Britnat troll KC this troll loves his cliches. Definition of cliche: a phrase or opinion that is overused and betrays a lack of original thought. Yep that last part sums up most trolls and you are no exception.

      Delete
  34. If Alex Salmond had not resigned following 2014, and Scotland had continued on a sensible low-tax economic course encouraging all types of industry and business to move here which is what he was advocating, then all this craziness would have been avoided and there could have been a real debate on independence eventually. Salmond does not himself favour Scotland joining the EU but instead now prefers the EFTA alternative, as he mentioned on Scotland Speaks with Alex Salmond recently.

    Unfortunately with the dragging down of our economy by Nicola Sturgeon and her anti-business agenda, and the lack of any any pro-business sentiment whatsoever within the SNP govt, not to mention those awful and dangerous Greens the prospects of independence has been damaged.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. People tend to say that he "ran away" after losing the referendum... but when a leader suffers that kind of defeat the common practice is for them to resign. Be like Sunak sticking around now, it just doesn't happen.

      He also believed he was leaving the Party in perfectly capable hands, now that is probably the biggest mistake he made.

      Like him or loath him it's very doubtful he would have just sat back and not utilised Brexit, the weakness of Theresa May or the Covid Partying Boris Johnson to further the independence cause. He wouldn't have tried to overturn the democratic wishes of the rest of the UK or shrugged his shoulders and accepted "now is not the time". It was never in his nature to simply roll over and do nothing.

      Delete
    2. I never understood why Sturgeon didn't plan ahead for what would happen when she left office.

      Salmond obviously intended for Sturgeon to succeed him and gave her the mentorship and experience for that purpose but with Sturgeon she seemed to not want talent around her. She surrounded herself with nodding Yes men & women and didn't mould any potential successors.

      Even now the *talent* in the Parliamentary Party seems to be severely lacking.

      Delete
    3. I always suspected Sturgeon (and even Humza) copied Alex Salmond's mannerisms of speaking whether in interviews or parliamentary debate. John Swinney does not however and nor does Kate Forbes who have their own styles.

      Delete
  35. Sandy Brindley, mouthpiece of the alphabetties getting hammered in the media for trying to give out names of rape victims who she claims supports her. Did she get their permission - no. I bet none of the names were alphabetties though - they must always remain secret you know. Ordinary people Brindley couldnae care less.

    A member of Sturgeons gang getting their just deserts. Resign Brindley you are a disgrace.

    ReplyDelete
  36. oh saddo person you are. You are very close to those involved are you?

    ReplyDelete
  37. OT - I see the BBC are reporting an issue in NI re their hospitals. The approach seems to be more level headed than their PQ colleagues. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/clyvgy2qp89o

    ReplyDelete