A few hours ago, I sent another email to the powers-that-be in Alba to make a number of points. I won't quote the whole email in case somebody tries to argue that doing so indirectly reveals confidential information. But what I am going to do is quote a few lines from my opening paragraph, because there's nothing confidential in them, and they contain a point that very much needs to be put firmly on the public record -
"As far as any patience on my part is concerned, my view is that the delay has been of such excessive length that it was self-evidently indefensible to leave me suspended from the party on one man's whim pending the delayed hearing. I appeal to you and Mr McEleny to belatedly do the decent thing and lift that suspension immediately. I have no doubt that appeal will fall on deaf ears, as all appeals for fairness, due process and constitutionality invariably do when Mr McEleny is making the decisions, but I would nevertheless like it noted that I have made that appeal and that I did not at any stage accept an arbitrary suspension of almost *two-and-a-half months* as remotely reasonable or acceptable."
Since Alex Salmond's tragic death, it has been claimed a number of times, and by a number of different people, that Mr Salmond was so profoundly affected by his own brief expulsion from the SNP in 1982 (for membership of the proscribed 79 Group) that he ensured that essentially nobody at all was expelled from the SNP during his combined total of twenty years as party leader. The one and only exception was apparently Bill Walker, the former MSP for Dunfermline, who was well on his way to being convicted on twenty-three charges of domestic violence.
And yet as someone who has served as an elected member of Alba's Disciplinary Committee since January, I'm as well-placed as anyone to know that expulsions have been taking place in Alba, and for much, much less serious reasons than domestic violence. In fact, I would go so far as to say that people have been expelled from Alba despite having done absolutely nothing wrong whatsoever, unless you count displeasing the leadership as a form of wrongdoing. That would suggest Alba is a fundamentally different beast from the Salmond-led SNP. It's much more authoritarian. Much more illiberal. That's a very odd path for a much smaller party to choose to go down, and I'm not going to pretend to fully understand why it's happened.
Until recently, I would have been cautious about making any reference to Mr Salmond's "no expulsions" policy in the SNP, because I didn't know for sure whether it was true. However it's mentioned as a key point in a recent article written by Professor James Mitchell, and while I often disagree with many of Professor Mitchell's views, I don't think anyone would dispute that he knows his modern Scottish political history - not least because he's witnessed much of it first-hand. So it's probably safe to assume the "no expulsions" policy was indeed a real thing.
In which case it's reasonable to ask why on earth I find myself in my current situation, and in particular why Yvonne Ridley boasted that she had inside knowledge that the Alba leadership made a secret decision to expel me from the party several months ago. For those who have not been following this saga, it's important to stress that I am not accused of violence, or racism, or any of the other very serious things that might normally lead to expulsion from a political party. Instead, I seem to be facing potential expulsion simply because the leadership bristled at this blogpost I wrote in April, which criticised the undemocratic impulses that I had detected within certain quarters of the party. I would encourage you to read that blogpost and see if you can spot anything at all in it that would even begin to warrant the most severe sanction that any political party can impose on any member, and that would justify putting me in the same bracket as *Bill Walker*. I must confess that I am totally baffled, and deeply hurt.
On a separate matter, you might remember that I recently wrote a blogpost expressing my disquiet that the Alba leadership were taking a leaf out of the authoritarians' play-book by cancelling the party's internal elections, and by instead holding a plebiscite on extending the current NEC's term of office by several months. Members were practically instructed to vote Yes to the proposition, with no viable alternative option presented. I predicted that this North Korean style tactic would produce a North Korean style vote of 90%+. That turned out to be an underestimate - Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh apparently announced today that it was 94%. If anyone thinks that's some sort of "achievement" to brag about, they couldn't be more mistaken. Alba now finds itself in a very dark place, with Alex Salmond's death being used, frankly, as an excuse to put practically all aspects of the party's internal democracy and internal politics into the deep freeze for an indefinite period. I'm not sure there's any real intention to ever reverse that process, or at least not in full.
That said, I welcome the rescheduling of the disciplinary hearing, if only because I strongly suspect Yvonne Ridley's boast will prove to be well-founded. If expulsion has already been decided upon, it's better that it happens in December, rather than me being left in purgatory for several more months. And if the Alba leadership are hellbent on forcing me to make a fresh start in a new political home (and they would be forcing me to do that, because I didn't ask for any of this nonsense to happen), I look forward to finally getting on with that process by January at the latest, once my appeal is presumably rejected. To be honest, though, I'm still genuinely 50/50 about whether I will apply to rejoin the SNP in that circumstance, or whether I will try something completely new.
"To be honest, though, I'm still genuinely 50/50 about whether I will apply to rejoin the SNP in that circumstance"
ReplyDeleteI cannot imagine how you could even consider that, knowing what little you and I clearly know about the SNP at this point in time.
Well, give me a realistic alternative, then. I've looked at every small pro-indy party I can find, and none of them look viable. ISP seem to be obsessed with abstentionism, even at Holyrood - it's just not credible politics.
DeleteI would join the party started by Celine Gottwald. The ISNP. Everyone is ignoring her but apart from Winnie Ewing and Hector Simpson nobody has done more to advance the cause of independence.
DeleteJames. Politics is tough. You are picking the wrong hill to die on here son.
ReplyDeleteYou have integrity. I don’t always agree with your views but wish you all the best.
What hill am I actually dying on? I don't think being expelled from Alba is the end of the world, and as I said in the blogpost, if I am expelled I expect to be in a new political home by the end of January. But it's important to go through the process to demonstrate that I wanted to stay in Alba and wasn't allowed to for reasons that only other people can explain. Nobody is going to be able to accuse me of walking away, as has happened to several people who were effectively forced to leave in order to preserve their mental health as a result of severe bullying.
DeleteThe hill is known as Big Hill it is a hill and it is big. It dies exactly what it says on the tin. Big Hill.
DeleteI admire your tenacity and your attempts to change things within Alba, James - but it simply will not work, going by your own observations.
ReplyDeleteLike the vast majority of us Yessers, you are now left with the choice of being a member of no Pro-Indy Party at all, or (re)joining an actually- electable one with at least a credible chance of getting to the end goal we all want.
That narrows it down to SNP and Greens.
This site seems to be pretty full of haters of both those parties, so I can imagine the majority 'advice' you might get on that.
Unlike myself, you are relatively young and have much more to contribute to the Indy cause, so the question for you is whether you can do that better within or outwith a party structure.
I made my choice decades ago and, with all its present turmoil, I will stick with the SNP as the best hope for Scotland's Independent constitutional future. I see absolutely no better alternative being available in my lifetime.
You may take a different view.
Whatever you decide, do NOT let your undoubted talents fritter away in the obscure long grass.
The Indy Movement certainly needs them.
Good luck in reaching your conclusion.
I’m with you in most of what you say, but I am no longer of the view that the Greens as a party actually support Indy. I now believe they cynically adopted Indy as a basis for acquiring votes and positions of power and influence within S G. They have shown themselves to be incompetent in govt, and they refuse to acknowledge let alone work in a manner that accepts the very real need for compromise and pragmatism in govt. I resigned from SNP going on two years ago now. I had hope that there was an alternative party structure that offered real scope for a Constituency/List double ticket in Scottish elections but quickly became concerned at the way Alba was being run. James’s experiences seem to confirm my concerns. I, and a small group of others, who left SNP at the same time, are going to rejoin and turn up, “mob handed” at constituency events and meetings to try to re direct the party, at least at constituency level, back onto the Indy path it was once on. Divisive policies need to be sidelined until Indy is achieved. Indy has to be the priority. Like you I agree that this site has become populated by a small group of SNP haters, and their commitment to hating the SNP, and especially N S, seems to greatly outweigh any interest in Indy. N S let us down badly, and I am hugely disappointed by her , but hate does not come into it. I am actually glad that these haters appear to play no part in any party that forms part of the democratic process. We know who the main perpetrators of this are, and I now simply ignore their lies, disinformation, and vitriol. They are not worth the effort. But I intend renewing my active role in pushing for Indy through rejoining the SNP, and I hope James does the same. James is, I think, a touch naive. I was one of the few people who cautioned him a good number of weeks ago not to publicise the fact that he wasn’t going to prepare for his then upcoming hearing, on the basis that it probably wasn’t going to go ahead anyway due to the tragic death of A S. It struck me then that he may be a touch naive. That is not a criticism and I hope that he does not take it as such.
DeleteI urge James to consider rejoining SNP. Work from within. We are not going to achieve anything from outwith. That is unpalatable, but it is the reality.
On the "naive" point, I don't think it was naive to assume that a meeting of the Disciplinary Committee wasn't going to go ahead some five days after Alex Salmond died. I think there was a 99.9% chance that I would be proved right about that, and I was. However, I took advice from people, and they did advise me to not assume anything and to check with the Deputy General Secretary. I did that prior to the deadline for making a written submission, so if I hadn't received a reply I could have reasonably made the point that was the only reason why the written submission hadn't been made (and I would still have been able to make an oral submission anyway).
Delete