A pro-independence blog by James Kelly - voted one of Scotland's top 10 political websites.
Saturday, January 13, 2024
Here's the news they're not telling you: 49.4% support independence in the latest poll
Friday, January 12, 2024
Shock blow for Starmer as Labour LOSES its outright lead in Scotland - SNP draw level in new Redfield & Wilton poll
Wednesday, January 10, 2024
POLL FUNDRAISER REMINDER: The case for a new Scot Goes Pop opinion poll at the start of general election year, and how it might help make a difference
Tuesday, January 9, 2024
First polling straw of the wind about where the SNP stand in election year
Let's have a look at the first GB-wide YouGov poll of general election year, if only because YouGov seem to structure and weight their Scottish subsamples correctly, thus giving us a little straw in the wind about where public opinion currently stands (albeit one with a huge margin of error).
GB-wide voting intentions (YouGov, 2nd-3rd January 2024):
Moderation policy: I've decided to experiment with switching pre-moderation off in the comments section of this blog to encourage more free-flowing debate. The quid pro quo, though, is that I henceforth reserve the right to delete (or possibly edit) any comment for absolutely any reason I see fit, and without explanation, so please only comment if you understand and accept that. Part of the reason I had to switch pre-moderation on in the first place was the sheer exhaustion of endlessly having to deal with people demanding explanations for their comments being deleted - so please note that any comments criticising or querying moderation decisions will generally be deleted without reply (and that applies no matter how many times you indignantly re-post them!).
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I am currently fundraising in the hope of running a new Scot Goes Pop opinion poll in the near future - details can be found HERE, and the fundraiser page itself is HERE.
Monday, January 8, 2024
Is Scotland really going to sell itself to Labour so cheaply - or even for nothing?
Ten years ago in the approach to the indyref, Scotland famously did not have a single pro-independence daily newspaper, but now it has precisely one. Plenty of indy supporters criticise The National for plenty of different reasons, but whatever you think of it, surely it's obvious that it's in all our interests that the paper does not fail or fold. That's why the negative reaction to Owen Jones' appointment as a regular columnist seems misguided in the extreme to me - he's one of the star commentators of the British press, and hiring him can only boost the paper's credibility and hopefully its readership too.
I have plenty of problems with him as an individual, mostly due to his intolerance towards anyone who disagrees with him on the trans issue. But in many ways he's a good fit for a pro-indy paper at the moment because he seems to have genuine admiration for the way Humza Yousaf has spoken up about Gaza, and he is also scathing about Keir Starmer - which he made the subject of his first regular column. He pointed out that even in comparison with the centre-right Tony Blair, there is no inspirational progressive vision on offer from Starmer. We could mention devolution at this point, which was an obvious incentive for Scots to vote for Blair in 1997, but the reality is that Starmer will probably further undermine devolution, not build on it.
What seems to be about to happen is Scotland's equivalent of the Quebec portion of the Canadian federal election in 2011, when the pro-independence Bloc Québécois finally lost majority status after six consecutive election wins. But for that to happen required a so-called 'French Kiss' from the New Democratic leader Jack Layton, who offered substantial constitutional and language concessions to the sovereigntist support base. By contrast, Scotland seems to be selling itself to Labour in return for nothing but a Glasgow Kiss, and that's the real tragedy.
Moderation policy: I've decided to experiment with switching pre-moderation off in the comments section of this blog to encourage more free-flowing debate. The quid pro quo, though, is that I henceforth reserve the right to delete (or possibly edit) any comment for absolutely any reason I see fit, and without explanation, so please only comment if you understand and accept that. Part of the reason I had to switch pre-moderation on in the first place was the sheer exhaustion of endlessly having to deal with people demanding explanations for their comments being deleted - so please note that any comments criticising or querying moderation decisions will generally be deleted without reply (and that applies no matter how many times you indignantly re-post them!).
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I am currently fundraising in the hope of running a new Scot Goes Pop opinion poll in the near future - details can be found HERE, and the fundraiser page itself is HERE.
Sunday, January 7, 2024
Shepparding pro-indy votes can't work unless you're actually trying to win independence
Tommy Sheppard's column in The National suggesting that an SNP defeat in the general election would be the 'end of the journey/conversation' on independence is both fair comment and infuriating. It's fair comment because we know what will happen if Labour win in Scotland: the media and the London political class will declare the independence issue dead, merrily dance on its grave, and will not deem even an SNP Holyrood victory in 2026 to be a resurrection. After all, the argument will go, if "now was not the time" for independence or a referendum when the SNP dominated Scottish representation at Westminster, how can it be the time when unionists once again are ascendant in the "national parliament"?
But it's infuriating, of course, because Tommy Sheppard himself played a pivotal role in ensuring this general election is not about winning independence, with an amendment calling for more devolution instead, and yet is now lecturing independence supporters on how they have to unite behind the SNP to keep independence alive. There's also an argument that he's being irresponsible in the language he's using, because the chances of the SNP actually pulling their election chances out of the fire are getting slim enough that we have to think about whether his words will be recited back at us as "once in a generation" were.
If it's any consolation, he's largely wasting his breath, because the SNP don't win elections by begging for pro-independence votes in a pro-independence publication. As I pointed out in my previous post, by reversing Nicola Sturgeon's de facto referendum policy, and by reversing it quite as thoroughly as they have done, they've effectively set themselves the task of winning the general election without the pro-independence vote being galvanised. I see no sign yet that they've recognised that reality or have fathomed a way of pulling the feat off - assuming it's even possible at all.
This is not a counsel of despair, incidentally, because I think the obvious point is that the SNP need to revisit the decision they made last autumn on the role of independence in their election strategy - and they have the time to do that. They also need a unity SNP Cabinet and an advertising campaign to discredit Keir Starmer. And, for the absolute love of God, they need to swallow their pride and not stand against Angus MacNeil, who is the only pro-indy candidate who can possibly stop Labour in the Western Isles. From memory, there's a precedent of the SNP not standing in Orkney & Shetland in a general election and backing a local autonomist movement instead, so it's not as if they'd be breaking some iron law by standing aside.
Moderation policy: I'm going to experiment with switching pre-moderation off in the comments section of this blog to encourage more free-flowing debate. The quid pro quo, though, is that I henceforth reserve the right to delete (or possibly edit) any comment for absolutely any reason I see fit, and without explanation, so please only comment if you understand and accept that. Part of the reason I had to switch pre-moderation on in the first place was the sheer exhaustion of endlessly having to deal with people demanding explanations for their comments being deleted - so please note that any comments criticising or querying moderation decisions will generally be deleted without reply (and that applies no matter how many times you indignantly re-post them!).
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I am currently fundraising in the hope of running a new Scot Goes Pop opinion poll in the near future - details can be found HERE, and the fundraiser page itself is HERE.