Wednesday, July 2, 2025

Ipsos poll confirms that the end is nigh for Alba

I didn't get around to giving you the party political voting intentions numbers from the Ipsos poll yesterday, so here they are...

Scottish Parliament constituency ballot:

SNP 34%
Labour 23%
Reform UK 14%
Conservatives 10%
Liberal Democrats 9%
Greens 9%
Alba 1%

Scottish Parliament list ballot:

SNP 26%
Labour 22%
Reform UK 16%
Greens 15%
Conservatives 10%
Liberal Democrats 8%
Alba 2%

Scottish voting intentions for next UK general election:

SNP 31%
Labour 22%
Reform UK 16%
Conservatives 10%
Greens 10%
Liberal Democrats 9%
Alba 1%

If the Alba vote shares are accurate, and I don't particularly doubt that they are likely to be reasonably accurate, Alba have made no progress at all since 2021 when they were light-years short of winning any seats.  One of the several dishonest points in Jim McEleny's email to party members after resigning as convener of Alba's Inverclyde branch was that he tried to make out that things had fallen apart since the good old days when his son/brother (I think it's son but I'd better cover all the options) was General Secretary - ie. that opinion polls showed the party on course for seats back then but no longer do.  In fact there has been no change in the polls at all - Alba have always been on course for zero seats and they remain on course for zero seats.  To be blunt, Alba members were cynically deceived by Chris McEleny with his ridiculous "poll after poll" catchphrase - it was a downright lie that Alba were ever on course for seats, and yet it was obvious from social media that many Alba members were successfully duped.

This is why independence supporters must ignore the siren voices, such as the controversial "Stew" blogger, which are trying to convince them to throw their list votes away on fringe parties that cannot in the real world win any list seats.  Given how evenly spread their vote is, Alba would need to at least double their support to even have an outside chance of nicking a seat somewhere.  If anyone were to say "oh of course the SNP can achieve objective X or Y, all they need to do is double their vote", Stew would be the first to mock the naivety and the dishonesty of that position - so why it should supposedly be any different with Alba or with the wilder fringe elements represented by Liberate Scotland is a complete mystery.  There are only two pro-independence parties capable of winning list seats, namely the SNP and the Greens, and frankly the task facing anyone who is serious about electing a pro-indy majority at Holyrood next year is to choose between those two parties.  Voting for anyone else increases the chances of a unionist majority without a shadow of doubt.

Incidentally, I heard an extraordinary story last week about a senior figure within Alba, possibly even one 'of Salmond blood', trying to get the police involved in her vendetta against a female NEC colleague who recently left the party.  The story was so garbled that it was hard to fully make sense of, but there's a real whiff of 'the last days in the bunker' about Alba at the moment.  NEC or other committee members who are the subject of the leadership's paranoid suspicions about "treachery" should probably just count themselves lucky if they escape the firing squad.

Stew was gloating yesterday about John Swinney's net approval rating of -17.  It's true that's unusually low by the standards of other recent polls, but nevertheless it still leaves Mr Swinney with slightly better ratings than Mr Sarwar.  There was speculation at the Holyrood Sources event last week that Labour's position might improve once voters turn their attention away from Westminster and towards Holyrood, just as there was a big swing towards the SNP in 2011 once voters actually remembered it was a Holyrood election.  But that swing in 2011 was driven by two factors - a) the fact that Alex Salmond was regarded as a far more credible leader than Iain Gray, and b) the fact that the SNP were more trusted than Labour to stand up for Scotland.  Well, in the new Ipsos poll, John Swinney is slightly more popular than Anas Sarwar, and the SNP are more trusted than Labour to stand up for Scottish interests, by a margin of 37% to 12%.  If the hypothetical Labour fightback is going to happen, what exactly will it be built on?

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

More analysis of the Ipsos poll showing a pro-independence majority

Just a quick note to let you know that I have an analysis piece at The National about the new Ipsos poll, which shows Yes in the lead by 52% to 48%, and a substantial SNP lead in both Westminster and Holyrood voting intentions.  You can read the article HERE.

Ipsos abandon a decades-long tradition of phone polling in Scotland - but continue to show a Yes lead on the independence question

As you'll remember from a few days ago, there was a GB-wide poll from Ipsos which used a new methodology.  Ipsos announced they were moving away from telephone polling in favour of using an online panel which had been recruited offline (making it significantly different from most online polling panels).  I wondered at the time whether there would be a similar methodological change in the next poll in the long-running Ipsos series for STV, which has always previously been conducted by phone, and which in recent years has produced much better results for Yes on the independence question than most online firms.  It didn't take long to find out - a new Ipsos / STV poll was released today, and it has indeed switched to online fieldwork, but crucially it still shows a Yes lead.

Should Scotland be an independent country? (Ipsos / STV News, 12th-18th June 2025)

Yes 52% (+1)
No 48% (-1)

More details and analysis to follow...

Monday, June 30, 2025

A question for Mandy Rhodes: who has killed the most women over the last year, Iran or Israel?

I saw a furious response on Twitter to a Mandy Rhodes article about the Israeli assault on Iran, and having taken a look I can understand where her detractor is coming from.  Ms Rhodes seems to have heartily embraced the prevailing London media narrative of "when Israel is committing a genocide, the priority is clear - we must denounce left-wing activism at Glastonbury".  Specifically she thinks activists have no right to champion Iran over Israel-Trump, given Iran's appalling human rights record.  She cites the high number of executions in Iran, and in particular the number of executions of women - although oddly the main thing she succeeds in doing is demonstrating that the number of women executed is only a very small percentage of the overall number of executions in Iran.  As in most countries with the death penalty, the people most affected, to a vastly disproportionate degree, are men - and to be clear, that does not make it any the more excusable.

One thing that can be said to Israel's credit is that it is 'abolitionist in practice' on the death penalty - it has only executed two people in its history, and the last one was Adolf Eichmann well over half a century ago.  But how much of a virtue is that in the real world, when Israel's allies allow it to commit extra-judicial killings on an industrial scale with absolute impunity?  Who has killed the most people over the last year - Iran or Israel?  Who has killed the most women over the last year - Iran or Israel?  Who has killed the most children over the last year - Iran or Israel?  It's not even a contest.

The US, by contrast, is very much on the same page as Iran in its enthusiastic application of the death penalty against both men and women.  In fact, the three countries with the highest number of verified executions in 2023 were Iran, Saudi Arabia and the US.  The list would undoubtedly be topped by China if the number of executions there wasn't kept secret, but nevertheless the US is almost certain to be in the top seven or so.  Donald Trump has of course lifted the moratorium on the use of the federal death penalty.  If Mandy Rhodes thinks a country's retention of capital punishment means it can never be actively supported in military conflicts regardless of any other circumstances, I trust we'll find that she's been morally consistent over the years by refraining from showing any support for military action taken by the US in the aftermath of 9/11, for example.

A key point that left-wing activists who have expressed sympathy for Iran in recent weeks would make is that Iran was the victim of unprovoked aggression from Israel, and indeed aggression motivated by a desperate wish to distract the world's attention from the genocide in Gaza - a tactic of breathtaking cynicism that Ms Rhodes seems only too keen to reward Netanyahu for.  If a country's poor human rights record means that the normal sympathies can't be extended to it when it is the victim of unprovoked aggression, I trust we'll find Ms Rhodes consistently applied the same principle immediately after the Hamas attacks of 7th October 2023, and refused to express any sympathy for Israel due to its brutal occupation of Gaza and the West Bank since 1967.

As for any suggestion that the Israeli and US bombing of Iran can be justified as a pre-emptive strike against Iran's nuclear programme, don't make me laugh.  Iran is a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.  It does not possess nuclear weapons and according to America's own intelligence assessment of only a few weeks ago, it was not seeking to acquire nuclear weapons.  By contrast, Israel is one of a tiny number of countries to have refused to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and it has possessed nuclear weapons for decades.  If belligerent Middle Eastern countries possessing nuclear weapons is deemed to be a problem, the first step towards a solution is pretty obvious - Israel must be disarmed at all costs.

Sunday, June 29, 2025

A gentle hint to the non-Sovereignty contingent within Liberate Scotland: the tactic of "slinging a deefie" at any questions about the electoral pact with a far-right nativist party is not going to work for a whole year, and especially not when the mainstream media start asking the questions

As you know, I'm far from content with the SNP leadership's current approach to independence, but the point is that pretty much any plan is superior to the Barrhead / Barcelona brew of a) uniting 0.2% of the independence movement under a "big tent", b) demonising the other 99.8% of the independence movement as "saboteurs", c) fiddling the franchise so English people living in Scotland can't vote, d) strolling effortlessly to a landslide election triumph, and e) marching on the UN to beg them to decolonise us.

This is the first time I've had any contact with Eva since she made what I can only describe as the dreadful error of joining Liberate Scotland.  If she had stayed as a genuine independent candidate and stood on the list only, I think she would have had a small outside chance of becoming an MSP, but she's blown it by associating with a brand that is likely to become as toxic as Alba (if not more so).  But as I hadn't previously spoken to her about her decision, I expected she'd have some kind of thoughtful answer to the question of what on earth had possessed her to enter into an electoral pact with Sovereignty.  Her refusal to even acknowledge the question, let alone answer it, stunned me.

I was on the Alba NEC with Eva for a year in 2021-22, and two things stood out for me about her.  One was her absolute commitment to the equalities role - she was extremely passionate about aspects of it that have been neglected by others, most notably justice for Scotland's Travellers community, which is an issue that has been in the news very recently.  It's hard to believe that someone who feels so strongly about equality for one of the most marginalised segments of our society would have much truck with the idea that some residents of Scotland should be denied citizenship after independence on arbitrary ethnic grounds, but that appears to be the Sovereignty position.

The second thing that stood out was Eva's hardheaded realism about electoral strategy.  When she was concerned about the deficiencies in Alba's preparations for the 2022 local elections, she spoke up volubly and identified exactly what she thought the shortcomings were.  She was nobody's yes-woman - she cared about independence and about the party above all else, and if she thought that Alex Salmond and Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh needed a forceful dose of reality, she was more than willing to provide it.  I find it very hard to believe that she's naive enough to think that the questions about Sovereignty and its nativist policies will go away if they're just studiously ignored.  It's one thing fobbing off fellow independence supporters on social media, but when the mainstream media start asking the same questions, Liberate Scotland are going to be absolutely crucified if they can't find a more convincing and respectful way of answering.  (That's assuming the mainstream media pay them any attention at all - and if not, all of this becomes totally academic because Liberate will be lucky to get 0.1% of the vote.)

To me, the obstinacy of just repeatedly ignoring the questions has more of a "made in Barrhead" or "made in Barcelona" feel to it than "made in Clackmannanshire".  Barrhead Boy is by all accounts the de facto leader of Liberate, and Eva may be reluctantly going along with the dubious wisdom of a "just sling a deefie" directive imposed by HQ in sunny Catalonia.

Saturday, June 28, 2025

Now we've established that Stew doesn't want Holyrood to have any say on foreign affairs (meaning by definition that he opposes independence), can he clarify whether he agrees with his own retweet that Israel's 1967 invasion and conquest of the Arab town of Bethlehem was "the liberation of Bethlehem"?

As mentioned in the previous post, my devoted Somerset stalker "Stew" has been continuing to fire off tweets about me over recent days, faster than I can really keep up with, even though in some cases he has been directly demanding responses from me.  And this is the guy who just a few months ago innocently claimed to mention me on Twitter only a couple of times a year at most.  One might almost be tempted to say that he's finally dropped the pretence, although actually that's not true, because in most cases he's still doing his usual thing of making clear by indirect means that he's referring to me but without mentioning me by name.  He repeatedly does the same thing on his blog - the idea being that in a few months' time he can successfully shove what he's been doing down the memory hole by inviting his readers to search Wings or his Twitter account for my name, and say "You see?  I've barely even mentioned the guy!"

While I have a few spare moments, I may as well work my way through a few 'highlights' of his tweets about me from the last week or so, although frankly there aren't enough hours in the day to deal with all of them.  First up, there's a multi-tweet thread in which he critiques the question I asked of Anas Sarwar the other night.  You'll be dumbfounded to hear that he's not a fan of it.



Look, Stew, I'm truly sorry if I dismayed you by asking a question that departed from the women-with-beards issue.  Like all of us, I do know the lyrics of the reworked Elton John cover I Guess That's Why They Call It The Stew off by heart: "time wasted asking non-women-with-beards-related questions could be time spent asking women-with-beards-related questions".  Very true.

Leaving aside my blasphemy in neglecting the Sacred Topic, however, I'm rather surprised that Stew was so unhappy with my question, because I saw him earlier in the week imploring anyone who attended the Swinney/Sarwar event in Edinburgh to ask the two leaders whether there were any policy areas that divided them apart from independence.  I had already submitted my question by then, but I was confident that what I had put forward fulfilled a very similar function, because Gaza has been one of the points of difference between the SNP and Labour.  "Give us points of difference, but not THAT one" seems to be Stew's message.  "Don't even mention that one, because Bibi must be allowed to get on with the genocide in civilised peace and quiet."


So here's the remarkable thing. I asked Anas Sarwar whether he thought the Scottish Government should think small, "get back to the day job", and stop talking about foreign affairs.  His answer on all three of those points was essentially "no", and he promised to speak out about foreign affairs if he becomes First Minister, because he said his social justice values do not end at the Scottish border.  So having set out to find a dividing line between Mr Swinney and Mr Sarwar, the irony is that I ended up finding a dividing line between Mr Sarwar and Stew instead.  Despite opposing independence, Mr Sarwar believes, or at least claims to, that the Scottish Government should not be restricted to concerning themselves with the limited number of devolved powers imposed on them by Westminster.  Whereas Stew absolutely thinks they should be restricted in that way, and that they should stop getting ideas above their station, which is an extraordinary worldview for any self-styled 'independence supporter' to hold.  But there again, it's a statement of the obvious that if you don't think foreign affairs should be the province of the Scottish Government, you don't actually support independence at all.  

Let's stop pretending black is white, shall we?  Stew probably was a genuine independence supporter eleven years ago, but he no longer is.  He's a unionist now, and a devo-sceptic unionist at that, albeit one who ties himself up in knots trying to convince people that he still supports independence in some sort of convoluted, upside-down manner - because he knows he would lose readers otherwise.


Aw, bless.  You gotta love Stew, he's apparently convinced himself that his latest cosplay "psephologist" blogpost was some sort of killer effort that has left everyone totally stunned and that no-one can think of a response to.  Stew, I don't know how to break the news to you, dear heart, but apart from the first few sentences I haven't even read your precious blogpost yet.  I deliberately didn't read it, because I knew I might not have time to respond for a few days and I didn't want my mind cluttered up with gibberish while I was getting on with other things.  But rest assured I will find the time to read it and respond at length.  A little patience, if you please.  Although I do love the fact that you've clearly been frantically hitting the refresh button over the last week in the hope of seeing my reply.  A proper stalker badge is on its way to YOU, my friend.


This one isn't a Stew tweet about me, but instead a Stew retweet of a Stephen Daisley tweet about an anonymous comment on this blog.  What's deeply disturbing about it is that Daisley presents screenshots of a Spectator article he wrote about Winnie Ewing's supposed ties to Israel, and in which he describes Israel's 1967 invasion and conquest of Bethlehem as "the liberation of Bethlehem".  

Long-term readers of Scot Goes Pop will know I've made numerous references to an extraordinary article that Daisley wrote many years ago, long before he was even employed by STV, in which he similarly said the 1967 invasion and conquest of East Jerusalem was "the liberation".  But to talk of the liberation of Bethlehem is even more offensive, because throughout modern history Bethlehem hasn't been a Jewish town at all.  The censuses in the 1920s and 1930s found literally just two Jewish people in the whole town.  Traditionally the population was overwhelmingly Arab Christian, and more recently has been overwhelmingly Arab Muslim, ie. Palestinian.  The vast majority of countries in the world regard Bethlehem as part of the sovereign (but illegally occupied) territory of the State of Palestine, and the minority that don't recognise the State of Palestine instead regard Bethlehem as part of the 'Occupied Palestinian Territories'.

The only way of making sense of Daisley's barmy claim that Bethlehem was liberated in 1967 is that he means it was promised to Israel in the Bible thousands of years ago, and therefore it needed to be annexed and its population expelled or exterminated, so that the rightful ethnoreligious owners could take over.  Now, we all know the standard disclaimer that "retweets are not necessarily endorsements", but if I was retweeting content that contained such an outrageous claim, I would go out of my way to make clear I disagreed with it.  Stew very noticeably did not do so, and I think we could do with some clarity from him about whether he agrees with Daisley about Bethlehem or not.  Even if he read Daisley's words and didn't think they were controversial, that speaks volumes too.

Elsewhere, Stew's newest obsession seems to be retweeting derogatory comment about Zohran Mamdani, the progressive and rather wonderful Democratic nominee for Mayor of New York...


Presumably Stew was cheering on the disgraced and God-awful "centrist" Andrew Cuomo in the primary, and in November will be keeping his fingers crossed for the Republican incumbent Eric Adams.

There's also this immigrant-bashing dog-whistle of a retweet, presumably preparing the ground for Stew's inevitable endorsement of Reform UK next year...




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The running total in the Scot Goes Pop 2025 fundraiser currently stands at £3000, meaning it is 44% of the way towards the target figure of £6800.  If you'd like to help the blog keep going, donations by card are welcome HERE, or alternatively you can cut out fees altogether (depending on which option you select from the menu) by making a direct donation via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Friday, June 27, 2025

Crossbreak cornucopia as SNP stun rivals with epochal lead in Scottish subsample from Find Out Now

GB-wide voting intentions (Find Out Now, 25th June 2025):

Reform UK 30% (-1)
Labour 22% (-1)
Conservatives 18% (+2)
Liberal Democrats 13% (+1)
Greens 11% (-)
SNP 3% (-)
Plaid Cymru 1% (-)

Scottish subsample: SNP 37%, Reform UK 16%, Labour 14%, Liberal Democrats 11%, Conservatives 9%, Greens 8%

You know the drill by now: only YouGov are known to correctly structure and weight their Scottish subsamples correctly, so subsample numbers from Find Out Now and other firms have less credibility.  Nevertheless, there has been a lovely consistency to the SNP's commanding position in subsamples across multiple firms recently, including YouGov themselves, so I don't think it's too outlandish to hope that there may be more than a grain of truth in it.

At GB level, the impression that Labour may have been recovering a bit has been dented - they're back down closer to their post-election low once again. However, it remains to be seen what the effect of the climbdown on benefits cuts will be - that's too recent to be factored in yet.

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For those that have been asking, yes I'm aware that my devoted Somerset stalker has been tweeting about me relentlessly in recent days and seems desperate for a reply.  That's kind of what he does all the time anyway, but I promise, I AM NOT IGNORING YOU STEW, and you'll get some of the attention you've been craving in due course.

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The running total in the Scot Goes Pop 2025 fundraiser currently stands at £2780, meaning it is 41% of the way towards the target figure of £6800.  If you'd like to help the blog keep going, donations by card are welcome HERE, or alternatively you can cut out fees altogether (depending on which option you select from the menu) by making a direct donation via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Scot Goes Pop puts Anas Sarwar ON THE SPOT

Well, sort of.  I had a little cameo last night at the Holyrood Sources podcast recording in Edinburgh where both John Swinney and Anas Sarwar were questioned at length - albeit separately, they didn't debate each other directly.  Audience members were invited to submit questions in advance, and I was lucky enough to have my question for Anas Sarwar selected.  I just read it out exactly as I had submitted it a few nights ago, and it was this - 

"The Scottish Government, especially under Humza Yousaf but also under Mr Swinney, has taken a principled stance against Israel's actions in Gaza.  That stance differs sharply from the UK Government and has given a voice to countless people throughout Scotland and the UK who feel that Keir Starmer and David Lammy do not speak for them on this issue.  Wouldn't something precious be lost if Mr Sarwar wins the election and the new Scottish Government thereafter just parrots the UK Government line on Israel and Gaza?  Would Mr Sarwar even accept that the Scottish Government should be speaking out on foreign affairs, or does he think small like so many other Scottish Labour politicians before him by insisting that devolved governments should 'get on with the day job' and not concern themselves with reserved matters at all?"

You can watch both the question and answer HERE or on the embedded YouTube player below, starting at around 5 minutes in. 

 

In reality it didn't put Mr Sarwar on the spot to any great extent, because what I didn't anticipate was that in the seconds before I read the question out, he made an extremely strong statement that "Benjamin Netanyahu is out of control", which lent him greater credibility in answering my question by saying he would "continue" to speak out on foreign affairs.  Where he was on much weaker ground, though, was in arguing that I had unfairly characterised the UK Government's position, when in fact all I had actually said was that the Scottish Government's stance had differed sharply from the UK Government's - which is pretty much unarguable, given the contrast between Humza Yousaf's strong condemnation of Israel as First Minister and Keir Starmer's repeated insistence that "Israel has every right to defend herself".  If you listen to Mr Sarwar, you'd think the Starmer government has been fearless from day one in standing up to Israel - and that, I'm afraid, is the depiction of events in a parallel universe.  I also remain unconvinced that Mr Sarwar, in the unlikely event that he ever becomes First Minister, would be given the latitude by London Labour to use the type of language about Israel that he did last night.  If he can just about get away with it now, it's only because no-one thinks he is important and no-one is paying much attention to what he says.

Geoff Aberdein said at the start of the event that, barring miracles, one of the two men we'd be hearing from would be elected First Minister next year.  I think that gives a slightly misleading impression - it would be more accurate to say that, barring miracles, John Swinney will be re-elected First Minister next year.  To the extent that Anas Sarwar does still have a small percentage chance, it's probably comparable to the small chance of Reform being elected to lead the Scottish Government next year - although in fairness, it would have been very difficult to devise a three-way event incorporating Reform, because no-one seems to have a scooby who Reform's candidate for First Minister is going to be.  

Andy Maciver channeled his inner Stuart Campbell by spending much of the evening talking up the chances of an SNP-Labour coalition government.  His basic argument is that the current relationship between the SNP and Labour is analogous to the previous relationship between the CDU and SPD in Germany, and to the previous relationship between Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil in Ireland - ie. they agree on most policy areas apart from independence but can't imagine going into government with each other because of supposed historical baggage.  Mr Maciver points out that in both Germany and Ireland, the historical baggage was pretty easily dispensed with when grand coalitions were required to freeze out the Left Party and Sinn Féin respectively.  But the operative words are that there is broad agreement between the SNP and Labour except on independence - which is not exactly a trivial matter, and as far as I am aware there was no equivalent massive dividing line between the CDU and SPD, or between Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil.  My guess is that in Mr Maciver's case, the expectation of an SNP-Labour deal is coming from the centre-right perspective that the SNP's prioritising of independence is a bit of nonsense that can and will be set aside as part of a sort of 'maturing' process.  In reality, the SNP's support base is highly unlikely to allow that to ever happen.

Incidentally, there is at least one other extremely weighty point of division between the SNP and Labour which has nothing to do with independence, and which Mr Sarwar touched on briefly last night - namely new-build nuclear power.  Labour are in favour of it, and the SNP are viscerally opposed to it (quite rightly).

Mr Swinney did not explicitly rule out an SNP-Labour coalition, but Mr Sarwar did, saying it was going to be a parliament of minorities and that the only way he'd be going into power was as head of a Labour minority government.  The hosts instantly picked up on that and pointed out that it meant he was giving up on any chance of winning a Labour majority, but perhaps more interesting is that it also seems to exclude any possibility of a Labour-led unionist coalition government.  When Labour have been in power in Holyrood in the past, it's always been in coalition with the Lib Dems, so it seemed a bit odd to take that possibility off the table, given that any narrow path to power left open to Mr Sarwar is almost certain to involve the Lib Dems (and indeed the Tories) in some shape or form.

I think last night was the first time I've seen Professor John Curtice in the flesh, and the one thing that doesn't come across on TV is just how remarkably tall he is.  He has quite a commanding presence when he walks into a room.  As for Anas Sarwar, I saw him pressing the flesh with the people sitting close to me during a break in the recording, some of whom he seemed to know and others he didn't, and it's fair to say that he has an easy-going charm about him that I don't think you really see on TV when he is trying to look all slick and polished.

My off-peak return train ticket from Cumbernauld to Edinburgh for some reason specified that travel via Glasgow is not valid, which is a complete nonsense because there are times at night when the quickest way back is via Glasgow, and by that time obviously the trains are all off-peak anyway.  So I had to wait an extra hour for a train to Falkirk, but that gave me a chance to enjoy walking around Edinburgh only a few nights after the Summer Solstice in what I believe is known in Shetland as 'the simmer dim'.







Astounding YouGov MRP poll puts the SNP within eight seats of overtaking the Tories UK-wide - and with a 26% chance of holding the balance of power

The title of yesterday's blogpost was 'Using an election to double as an independence referendum is the ONLY way independence can and will ever be won. Resisting it just delays the inevitable and causes needless pain along the way.' I realised afterwards that I'd inadvertently 'done a Stew' and completely contradicted myself in the space of a few days - what I should have said is 'using an election to double as an independence referendum is the ONLY way independence can ever be won, unless the SNP get lucky and hold the balance of power at Westminster'.  The first YouGov MRP poll since the general election confirms that there's a non-trivial chance of the latter happening, because in 26% of simulations a centre-left Labour-led coalition can be cobbled together, but only with the SNP's help.  In most cases this would have to be a five-party coalition involving Labour, the Liberal Democrats, the SNP, the Greens and Plaid Cymru, but there's an 11% chance of four parties being enough and a 3% chance of three parties being enough (ie. Labour, the Lib Dems and the SNP).  So it would just be a question of whether the SNP are willing to play hardball and to make an independence referendum a condition of installing a Labour PM.

Remarkably, the seats projection shows the SNP within just eight seats of overtaking the Conservatives UK-wide - 

Reform UK 271 (+266)
Labour 178 (-233)
Liberal Democrats 81 (+9)
Conservatives 46 (-75)
SNP 38 (+29)
Greens 7 (+3)
Plaid Cymru 7 (+3)

The SNP would have roughly two-thirds of Scottish seats, and once again it's important to stress that this is in no way inconsistent with the result of the Hamilton by-election.  The Westminster seat of Hamilton & Clyde Valley would be one of the one-third of seats staying in unionist hands, with Labour projected to hold it by a margin of 30% to 27%, and with Reform in a strong third place on 23% - pretty much bang in line with the by-election result.

Most of the crude uniform swing projections from standard opinion polls have Reform failing to win any Scottish seats at all, but that is categorically not the case here - Reform would actually construct a 'mini light blue wall' in the south of Scotland, taking Ayr, Carrick & Cumnock, Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale & Tweeddale and Dumfries & Galloway.

One thing that is consistent with the uniform swing projections, though, is that Labour are shown to be on course to hold Na h-Eileanan an Iar by some distance, with the SNP not even in second place.  I'm fairly sure that's a wonky projection caused by the unusual baseline figures in the constituency from last year's election.  In reality, if the SNP take two-thirds of Scottish seats, Na h-Eileanan an Iar is pretty likely to be one of them unless Torcuil Crichton has built up a really sizeable personal vote.

Although the Tories are projected to hold a couple of Scottish seats, both of them are on a knife edge.  The SNP are only one point behind in Berwickshire, Roxburgh & Selkirk, while in Gordon & Buchan there is effectively a three-way tie between the Tories, the SNP and Reform UK on 24% apiece - with the Tories only ahead by a tiny fraction.

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The running total in the Scot Goes Pop 2025 fundraiser currently stands at £2780, meaning it is 41% of the way towards the target figure of £6800.  If you'd like to help the blog keep going, donations by card are welcome HERE, or alternatively you can cut out fees altogether (depending on which option you select from the menu) by making a direct donation via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Using an election to double as an independence referendum is the ONLY way independence can and will ever be won. Resisting it just delays the inevitable and causes needless pain along the way.

"The fact is that most Scots, pro-independence or not, accept without question our right to self-determination", says the SNP MP Seamus Logan in his latest column for The National.

"So for heaven's sake let's make sure we never exercise that right", is the subtext of the rest of his article.  

I don't know whether Mr Logan is speaking on behalf of the SNP leadership, and whether his column is part of a softening up exercise for an unpalatable message that will come more directly afterwards, but if so that would be extremely depressing.  He even resorts to what is by now the rather tired old Gotcha attempt of: 'If you think the UK government would never agree to a referendum, why do you think they would respect the result of a de facto referendum and negotiate independence afterwards?'. That always sounds a hell of a lot less clever and sophisticated once you remind yourself that it's an argument for giving up and doing nothing at all: neither trying to secure a referendum, nor trying to secure independence itself.  In fact, once you get to the nub of it, there are very few things in life that are less sophisticated than clarion calls for passivity and inaction.

Despite my disagreements with Alex Salmond towards the end, there was one thing I definitely did agree with him on, and I know that for sure because he said "correct" when I expanded the argument in a phone conversation with him two years ago or so.  It goes like this.  There are two things that need to happen for Scotland to become an independent country:

1) A clear majority of the people of Scotland need to vote in favour of independence in a democratic event - meaning either a referendum or a parliamentary election in which one or more parties have sought an outright mandate for independence in their manifestos.

2) The Scottish and UK governments need to negotiate an independence settlement, that is then ratified by the Westminster parliament.

We have no unilateral power to make 2) happen, because it clearly takes two to tango.  But we have absolute power (and by 'we' I mean the people of Scotland) to make 1) happen.  The UK government can block a referendum, but short of abolishing democracy altogether it can do nothing to prevent scheduled elections from taking place, so there will always be a way of exercising our inalienable right to an expression of self-determination, and of securing a democratic mandate for independence.  The obvious point is that if there's one-half of the equation you can do, and one-half that you can't do for now because it is being frustrated by others, you get on with doing the bit you actually can do.  You do that because winning a mandate for independence is an end in itself - it would be a historic moment in which the Scottish people take confidence in themselves for the first time in centuries.  But you also do it because it's an absolute prerequisite for the negotiation of an independence settlement to ever happen.

Mr Logan's argument is the equivalent of saying you shouldn't go to a train station because you can't force the train to turn up - when the rather more salient point is that if you never go to the train station, it is you and no-one else but you who is guaranteeing that you will never be getting on a train.  Winning an independence mandate will not force the UK government to grant independence or even to come to the negotiating table.  But it will completely transform the psychology of the situation and open up options that were not there before.  If, for example, the SNP regain a majority of Scottish seats at Westminster in 2028 or 2029, those seats can be used as leverage to back up an independence mandate from the people - either by means of parliamentary disruption tactics or by temporarily withdrawing our MPs from Westminster until the UK government agrees to negotiate.  There are still enough believers in democracy in the London media and establishment that there will begin to be a feeling that it not sustainable to refuse to negotiate when Scotland has clearly voted for independence and is going unrepresented in the UK Parliament.

A cynic might almost say that the reason the Scottish Government don't want a mandate for independence is not because they think there would be nothing they could do to press the mandate home afterwards, but precisely because they know there would be plenty they could do and would be expected to do by their own support base.  Perhaps the specific tactics they would be required to use in that circumstance make them feel queasy, and they would prefer never to be put in that position in the first place.  So they prefer to do nothing at all.  

But for anyone who actually wants independence, rather than to just use the distant prospect of independence as a tool to remain in power, that simply isn't good enough.  Seamus Mallon famously said that the Good Friday Agreement was "Sunningdale for slow learners" - in other words Sunningdale or something very close to it was the only agreement that was ever going to be available, and unionist politicians had wasted a whole quarter of a century before accepting the inevitable anyway.  In exactly the same way, the use of a scheduled election to win an independence mandate is the only option that is ever going to be open to us, and exercising that option is an absolute necessity if independence is ever to be won.  Anyone who resists the inevitability of going down that path is simply wasting time, completely pointlessly.

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Craig Murray is the latest in the long (pretty much endless) line of people to have been stabbed in the back by the Alba leadership.  He has been blocked from standing as an Alba parliamentary candidate, for two reasons:

1) His prison sentence.

2) His candidacy for the Workers' Party.

The first reason is absolutely ridiculous, given that he only went to prison in support of Alex Salmond, who praised him to the skies for his bravery.  As for the second reason, I pointed out at the time that standing for the Workers' Party should, on any reading of the Alba constitution, have led to Craig automatically losing his party membership, because the Workers' Party was putting up candidates in direct competition with Alba.  The fact that the party constitution was breached to allow Craig to stay a member, seemingly just because of a private chat he had with Alex Salmond, and at a time when lesser known Alba members were being expelled or suspended left, right and centre for fictional breaches of rules that didn't even exist, demonstrated that Alba is a tinpot dictatorship where the constitution and rules are just for show, and where all that matters is the whim of the leader and those around him.

To allow Craig to remain a member while blocking him as a candidate is logically incoherent.  Either you accept he broke the cardinal rule by standing for a rival party, in which case he shouldn't be an Alba member anymore, or you don't accept the rule was broken, in which case there's no reason to block him as a candidate.  Trying to have it both ways is an absolute nonsense.

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The running total in the Scot Goes Pop 2025 fundraiser currently stands at £2780, meaning it is 41% of the way towards the target figure of £6800.  If you'd like to help the blog keep going, donations by card are welcome HERE, or alternatively you can cut out fees altogether (depending on which option you select from the menu) by making a direct donation via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Another week, another SUBSAMPLE SENSATION as SNP soar to twenty-point lead in YouGov crossbreak for the ages

GB-wide voting intentions (YouGov / Sky News, 22nd-23rd June 2025):

Reform UK 27% (-)
Labour 23% (-)
Conservatives 17% (-)
Liberal Democrats 16% (+1)
Greens 10% (-1)
SNP 3% (-)
Plaid Cymru 1% (-)

Scottish subsample: SNP 39%, Reform UK 19%, Labour 17%, Liberal Democrats 10%, Greens 6%, Conservatives 6%

Oh, who will save the Scottish Tories now?  The number of respondents in these subsamples is tiny, but there does seem to be a weird consistency to the SNP doing markedly better after their setback in the Hamilton by-election than before.  That may seem counterintuitive but it's not impossible that it's a real trend.


Monday, June 23, 2025

The SNP have now been in power for longer than the Thatcher/Major government

Just a quick point that occurred to me the other day, and apologies if someone else has already pointed this out.  The longest-running UK government since the Second World War was the Thatcher/Major Conservative government that held office for exactly two days short of eighteen years.  It came to power on 4th May 1979 and was ousted on 2nd May 1997.  

The SNP government in Scotland has now exceeded that record.  It took office on 17th May 2007, which means it has been in power for eighteen years, one month and six days.  The only minor sense in which the comparison is not an exact one is that the Thatcher/Major government was always a single-party Tory administration, whereas the SNP had the ill-fated period of coalition with the Greens, and technically some or all of the law officers have been independents (ie. non-party).

But those are no more than points of pedantry, because the government has clearly been totally dominated by the SNP throughout.  From a purely party political point of view, ie. leaving aside for a moment the frustrations over the lack of progress on independence, that is quite some achievement.

And yes, I will be wearily responding to my Somerset stalker's 7562nd blogpost about me, but it'll probably have to wait until at least tomorrow at this stage.

The Stew-pot calling the Stew-kettle Snow White


You may have noticed that this has been a recurring theme from Stew for several weeks now - whenever I point out the obvious fact that voting against independence is not the ideal strategy for winning independence, he accuses me of "hate".  He even wrote a blogpost about me on Wings a few weeks ago called "Blinded By Hate" - although curiously it does not feature in his "compare and contrast" list of blogposts (or in his pie-chart of blogposts - genuinely a thing!) which seeks to establish that he has only ever written three blogposts about me and that I have written dozens about him.  Mysteriously, his landmark 2022 blogpost "For Karen and James", in which he made the downright bonkers claim that I and Karen Adam were literally the only reasons he had returned to "full-time blogging", also does not appear on the list or pie-chart of his supposed "three blogposts" about me.  Nor do the vast majority of the other blogposts about me that have featured on Wings over the years.

What is going on here?  Well, look at the screenshotted tweet above.  You'll notice that it's unambiguously about me but it doesn't directly mention me by name.  He does the same thing in many of his other tweets and blogposts about me.  A cynic might almost wonder if that's a deliberate tactic - allowing him to stalk me relentlessly while still being able to innocently invite people to "do a search of the words 'James Kelly' on the site - look, only three posts appear!  It's him that is Blinded By Hate, not me!"  But then a cynic would only wonder that because cynics are very, very cynical indeed.  

So what is this "hate" of which he speaks?  I can only assume that he thinks I hate both him and the Alba Party (or at least the Alba leadership) - that's what he seemed to be getting at in the past.  But, Stew, here's the thing - Fergus Ewing is not you, and he's not even a member of the Alba Party, so why would my supposed "hate" extend to him?  I find him perfectly likeable, and I've actually been extremely complimentary about him at times - I've said that I agreed with some (definitely not all, but some) of his critique of the SNP's strategic choices over the last few years, and I also made abundantly clear that I thought the SNP had made a terrible mistake by temporarily suspending him.  It's hard to make much sense of what Stew is getting at unless he's hinting that there's some kind of informal arrangement between Alba and Mr Ewing that he knows about and the rest of us don't.

But there's also the small matter of the pot calling the kettle black.  If Stew thinks that me calling for independence supporters to vote for the pro-independence Scottish National Party is a "strange place" for me to end up in, and that I can only have been led there by "hate", what would he say about a nominally pro-independence blogger who told his readers to vote for the anti-independence Labour party in the general election, simply as an act of revenge because he was so eaten up with resentment and bitterness after Nicola Sturgeon refused to back him in his idiotic vanity court case against Kezia Dugdale?  What would he say about the same blogger now moving towards an outright endorsement of the soft-fascist and most certainly anti-independence party Reform UK - something he'll only be able to justify with mind-bending contortions of logic along the lines of "to win independence, we must first kill independence"?  

I think that's a pretty strange place for you to end up in, Stew, and yes, I do think you've been led there by hate - or at the very least by deep-seated bitterness and grievance.  Others may disagree...but only because you've brainwashed them.

Here's yet another Stew tweet that is unambiguously about me but evades the search function by not mentioning me by name.  It's also just about the laziest retort I've ever seen from him - it amounts to no more than "Rubbish, because reasons!"  Who are the two "groups"?  What is the nature of the "massive insult"?  What are the "different reasons" for it being an insult in each case?  Nobody knows, and his lips are sealed.  Probably you're supposed to conclude that he'd tell you if only you were on his own plane of intellect, and capable of understanding.

One logical possibility is that the two groups he's referring to are "Palestinians" and "humanity", and that he regards a comparison between the two as an insult to humanity, because he sees the entire Palestinian ethnic group as 'terrorist trash'.  That's a point he made once before when he wrote a blogpost last year calling for the Green MSP Ross Greer to be prosecuted for hate crimes simply because he had used the words "Victory to Palestine!  Victory to humanity!"   According to Stew, "Palestine" and "Hamas" are indistinguishable concepts, and you are therefore illegally supporting a proscribed terrorist group if you simply wish the Palestinians success in their resistance to genocide.

Conflating the Palestinian ethnic group with Hamas most certainly constitutes a profound insult, but I somehow doubt Stew has had that particular epiphany quite yet.  So what he thinks the insult to Palestinians was remains a total mystery.

Sunday, June 22, 2025

"You must now vote for the SNP on the list": controversial Somerset-based blogger reveals stunning change to his tactical voting advice in the Highlands

When Somerset's controversial "Stew" blogger started talking up Fergus Ewing's chances of holding his constituency seat as an independent, it struck me that he (ie. Stew) was setting himself up for a bit of a problem.  It's become extremely important to him to hold the line, patently absurd though it is, that the SNP are definitely not going to win any list seats at all at next year's Holyrood election.  I think he's banking on the simplicity of that (totally fraudulent) message to convince people to abandon the SNP on the list when they simply haven't done so in past elections - including in 2016, of course, which was before Stew's Damascene conversion on the subject and when he was still on the same page as me in pointing out that "tactical voting on the list" is a mug's game and essentially impossible to pull off successfully.

But by arguing that Ewing has a real chance of beating the SNP in Inverness & Nairn, Stew is by definition reducing his "projected number of guaranteed SNP constituency seats" in the Highlands & Islands and thus making it even more likely that the SNP will win at least one compensatory list seat in the region - which is one of the two regions where they already have a list seat, of course.  So if Stew concedes that inescapable point in an effort to maintain at least a semblance of logical coherence, it basically pulverises the simplicity of his "definitely no list seats at all for the SNP" messaging and means he'll have to revert to a more complex and probably less persuasive sales-pitch that factors in the real possibility that in some places SNP list votes will translate into SNP list seats.

I was curious to see how he would handle the dilemma, but I wasn't quite expecting this - 

Wow.  So in the blink of an eye he's gone from "every single SNP list vote in Scotland will definitely be wasted" to "SNP list votes in the Highlands & Islands will not be wasted and that's a good thing because it means you can vote for Fergus Ewing safely".  But the most important part of this new tactical voting advice is the bit he doesn't want to spell out, for very obvious reasons.  The logic only holds true if the SNP don't fall short of the percentage vote on the list that Stew is expecting - in other words he's tacitly saying you can only vote for Fergus Ewing safely on the constituency ballot if you also vote for the SNP on the list.  And by implication that has to be what he's advising you to do.

Stew telling people to vote tactically in favour of the SNP on the list - now that was a plot twist I didn't see coming.  

By the way, if I lived in Inverness & Nairn I would be voting for the official SNP candidate Emma Roddick and not for Fergus Ewing - and that would be the case even if I hadn't rejoined the SNP a few months ago.  It's no secret that I'm closer to Mr Ewing's views on identity politics issues than I am to Ms Roddick's, but Mr Ewing's call for the SNP to abandon independence for the next ten years makes it next to impossible, I would suggest, for independence supporters to vote for him.  He's now become a short-term and medium-term unionist.

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The running total in the Scot Goes Pop 2025 fundraiser currently stands at £2760, meaning it is 41% of the way towards the target figure of £6800.  If you'd like to help the blog keep going, donations by card are welcome HERE, or alternatively you can cut out fees altogether (depending on which option you select from the menu) by making a direct donation via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Majesty. Grandeur. The Taj Mahal of polling crossbreaks. SNP hit 41% in simply sumptuous Ipsos subsample.

Marcia on the previous thread pointed out that the SNP are on an unusually high 4% in the latest GB-wide Ipsos poll.  So I had a look at the data tables to see if I could find the Scottish subsample figures, and they didn't disappoint...

GB-wide voting intentions (Ipsos, 30th May-4th June 2025):

Reform UK 34%
Labour 25%
Conservatives 15%
Liberal Democrats 11%
Greens 9%
SNP 4%
Plaid Cymru 1%

Scottish subsample: SNP 41%, Reform UK 30%, Labour 15%, Liberal Democrats 7%, Greens 3%, Conservatives 3%

Having talked the subsample up, I'm now going to have to talk it back down again, because Ipsos are not like YouGov, so the Scottish figures are probably not correctly weighted.  However, 4% for the SNP in the GB-wide numbers, which are properly weighted, is not at all shabby - and this is the latest in a string of decent GB-wide polls for the party since their setback in the Hamilton by-election, although curiously the fieldwork for this poll took place before that vote.

Why the long delay?  It may have something to do with Ipsos rolling out a new methodology - they seem to be changing their emphasis from telephone polling to an adjusted version of online panel polling (one of the adjustments being that panel members are recruited offline).  I don't know whether that will affect their long-running series of Scottish telephone polls commissioned by STV.  But certainly the headline numbers do look a bit different from polls conducted by other firms - as far as I can see, Reform's 34% is an all-time high across all pollsters, beating even the 33% previously recorded by Find Out Now a couple of times in May.  The gap between Labour in second place and the Tories in third is also bigger than other firms have been showing.

Incidentally, Ipsos have given Alba propagandists no hiding place in this poll, because it looks like Alba were offered as an option, but recorded a big fat zero in the Scottish subsample.

Net ratings for party leaders:

Nigel Farage (Reform UK): -15
Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats): -15
Kemi Badenoch (Conservatives): -49
Keir Starmer (Labour): -54

Percentage of respondents who rate each party leader *positively*:

Nigel Farage (Reform UK): 34%
Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats): 23%
Keir Starmer (Labour): 19%
Kemi Badenoch (Conservatives): 11%

I think it's fair to conclude from the above numbers that Labour are unlikely to turn things around unless they either change leader or drastically improve Starmer's reputation with the public.  The latter is far harder to do than the former.  It's always said that Labour are not as ruthless as the Tories and don't dump their leaders in a crisis - but if they don't, they may already be toast, and Nigel Farage may be the next Prime Minister.

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The running total in the Scot Goes Pop 2025 fundraiser currently stands at £2760, meaning it is 41% of the way towards the target figure of £6800.  If you'd like to help the blog keep going, donations by card are welcome HERE, or alternatively you can cut out fees altogether (depending on which option you select from the menu) by making a direct donation via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Bilingual people no longer need to feel left out: yes, Stew hates you too


As far as I can remember, I don't think we had definite proof until now that the controversial "Stew" blogger's hostility to Gaelic also extends to Scots, but it's not a huge surprise to learn that it does.  Of course it takes a different form in the case of Scots, because whereas he hates Gaelic and regards it as alien and useless and wants it to be totally eradicated, he's merely trying to reclassify Scots as just English in a funny accent.  That has the same ultimate effect, though, because if Scots is seen as merely a non-standard variant of English, it becomes acceptable for authority figures to "correct" people's Scots speech and push everyone towards standard English.  By contrast, accepting that Scots and English are closely-related but distinct languages means giving parity of esteem to Scots and English words and phrases and treating them as equally valid and legitimate.

It may totally blow Stew's mind that it's possible to understand the words of another language without being bilingual, but it's certainly not news to Portuguese people, who can watch Spanish TV and understand the bulk of what is being said without needing subtitles, simply because Spanish and Portuguese are very closely related languages.  That doesn't make Portuguese people bilingual, except for the minority who have taken the trouble to learn to speak Spanish themselves.  The same principle applies to Scottish Gaelic speakers, who can generally understand what is being said on the Irish language channel TV4 without much difficulty.  But for the most part they are not Irish speakers and are not bilingual in Gaelic and Irish.

So by the same token, most monolingual English speakers in Scotland can understand the fragments of Scots spoken in Still Game because the words are closely related to their English equivalents, and also because everyone in Scotland (except maybe in the Highlands) has been passively exposed to Scots throughout their lives.  But what about people who can actually speak Scots themselves, and not just understand it - are they bilingual?  Well, yes they are.  In most cases they don't recognise that fact about themselves, because speaking both Scots and English is just second nature to them and thus seems utterly unremarkable.  

Think about how Scots is used in the real world (and also in Still Game, for that matter).  There's probably nobody who truly speaks "pure Scots" (as I discussed in my podcast with Len Pennie four years ago), but by the same token, there's probably well over a million people in Scotland who never speak pure English either.  Scots speakers tend to constantly 'code-switch', often within the same sentence.  You might hear a sentence like "get aff that floor".  The word 'that' is common to both Scots and English, but 'off' and 'floor' are different in Scots.  In this case the speaker has used the Scots word for 'off' but not for 'floor'.  Does that mean he or she speaks a transitional dialect which incorporates 'aff' but not 'flair'?  Nope.  He or she knows both versions of both words, but has just semi-consciously chosen in the moment, probably for no particular reason, to use the Scots version of 'aff' but the English version of 'floor'.  They know which one is "Scottish" and which one is not, and if you asked them to translate from the Scottish version of each word to the English version, or vice versa, they would be able to do so.  But how can anyone "translate" unless Scots and English are different things?  How can they pull off the feat unless they're bilingual?

Answers on a postcard, folks (to be sent to Bath).

Incidentally, just as a general observation: why does someone like Stew, who still nominally claims to be an independence supporter (despite regularly urging his readers to vote against independence) want Scotland to be as similar as possible to England?  Why does he seemingly want to eradicate all points of difference, of which Gaelic and Scots are prime examples?

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The running total in the Scot Goes Pop 2025 fundraiser currently stands at £2760, meaning it is 41% of the way towards the target figure of £6800.  If you'd like to help the blog keep going, donations by card are welcome HERE, or alternatively you can cut out fees altogether (depending on which option you select from the menu) by making a direct donation via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

The Alba Party's shambolic infighting intensifies as the convener of Inverclyde branch sends an email to all local party members blasting the MacAskill leadership for "barely registering" - and then QUITS

An Alba member from Inverclyde has forwarded to me an extraordinary email that was sent out to all local party members two days ago by Jim McEleny - who I presume is Chris "Mad Dog" McEleny's father, unless there's also a brother with the same name.

""Stand up for what is right even if you stand alone. Stand up for truth, regardless of who steps on it."
Suzy Kassem

I believe that it is essential to stand up for our beliefs even when everyone around us disagrees with what is being said. Because silence implies agreement and speaking out could provide courage for others facing similar struggles.

Staying silent about the things that bother or scare us won't make them go away. In fact, it could make them worse by giving the people who are causing those problems a feeling of impunity.

I believe that the recent treatment of our former general secretary by the Alba Party has been shameful. In last year’s Gourock by-election we achieved Alba Party’s highest ever result at almost 10%. At that point we were on a trajectory to win seats at the Scottish Parliament election.

Since then, after the decision to unfairly expel the former General Secretary - one of the late Alex Salmond’s chief strategists and confidantes - the party has struggled in by-elections and we have went from polling numbers that would see success next year to barely registering at all.

To that end, I can no longer continue as the Convener of the Inverclyde Alba LACU that as a result of how the Party has treated someone who led the independence movement for a decade on Inverclyde Council and has stood in every single election on our behalf since Alba Party was formed by Alex Salmond.

I wish you all the very best for the future and thank you for your support of Alba Inverclyde LACU during my time as Convener and our Alba Party group leader on Inverclyde Council.

The dream shall never die.

Jim McEleny
Former Convener
Inverclyde Alba LACU"

It won't surprise you to hear that I don't have sympathy with either side in this dispute.  Chris McEleny is the classic example of living by the sword and dying by the sword - he regularly abused his powers as General Secretary to trample all over people, and was not shy about resorting to outright falsehoods in doing so.  The only excuse anyone has ever been able to offer for his behaviour is "he vos only following orders", ie. that the beneficiaries of his abuses of power were people like Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh and never himself.  But even if that was true (and I don't believe it was) it means he knew he was doing the wrong thing and carried on doing it for years anyway.  Those of us who were on the receiving end are not going to be impressed by breathtaking hypocrisy about "standing up for what is right even if you stand alone".  That is scarcely one of McEleny's values - indeed, the polar opposite appears to be one of his values.  "Stand up for what is wrong because that's what you're paid for.  Stand up for lies because you think you'll get away with it" would just about sum it up.

As far as McEleny's performance in the Gourock by-election is concerned, the fact that it's still considered some sort of stellar result speaks volumes about just how catastrophic Alba's electoral record has been otherwise.  He achieved that "success" because Alba sat out multiple other by-elections in order to pour all their resources into Gourock - and yet despite supposedly being a big local name, he still took less than one-tenth of the vote.  And perhaps even more revealing is that he brought essentially no personal vote whatsoever to the table in the 2022 local elections, when Alba's resources were spread more evenly.

Presumably McEleny senior is acting on instructions from (or according to the wishes of) "Mad Dog" himself, and so this will be part of the five-dimensional chess the former General Secretary imagines himself to be playing as he bids to resurrect his political career.  Is he trying to trigger some sort of popular uprising against the leadership, so he can then use his leverage as Alba's Nominating Officer to regain control of the party?  Or is this is a sign that he's finally given up on a comeback within Alba, and is instead preparing the ground for a defection of his faction to a different party or grouping?  One way or another, we'll find out pretty soon.

Ironically, one of the key factors that led to McEleny's expulsion was his abuse of emailing privileges - he sent out a long email to all Alba members at the end of last year which sought to undermine the announcement that the acting party leader had only just made that the position of General Secretary was to be abolished.  Now that McEleny's father has also used his emailing privileges to attack the leadership, it wouldn't be surprising if those privileges are much more tightly controlled in future - perhaps by ensuring that all emails have to be vetted by Tyrannical Tasmina and her team.  

That would be in keeping with the response to whistleblowing last year about wrongdoing in the party's upper echelons - instead of accepting a need for greater openness and transparency, Tasmina introduced a new rule requiring all elected committee members (including NEC members) to sign a legally binding gagging agreement.  If some people have flatly refused to sign, on the basis that their loyalty is to the members who elected them and that they are not employees required to take orders, that might explain some of the ongoing strife we've seen in recent weeks.

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The running total in the Scot Goes Pop 2025 fundraiser currently stands at £2760, meaning it is 41% of the way towards the target figure of £6800.  If you'd like to help the blog keep going, donations by card are welcome HERE, or alternatively you can cut out fees altogether (depending on which option you select from the menu) by making a direct donation via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Friday, June 20, 2025

SNP win the first preference vote in the Cromarty Firth by-election, but miss out after transfers

There were two by-elections in the Highlands yesterday, both of which were counted today.  And while there is nowhere in Scotland more fascinating in geographical terms than the Isle of Skye, I think politically the Cromarty Firth by-election was probably the more interesting of the two, so I'll start with that.  When I sat down to write this post, nobody had yet transcribed the result or calculated the percentages, so I've gone old school and calculated them myself manually from the video of the announcement.  Hopefully I haven't made any mistakes...

Cromarty Firth by-election result on first preferences (19th June 2025):

SNP 23.8% (-5.3)
Independent - Cross 20.1% (n/a)
Independent - Rattray 15.4% (n/a)
Reform UK 14.6% (n/a)
Liberal Democrats 12.2% (-15.7)
Greens 3.9% (+1.0)
Alba 3.8% (n/a)
Labour 3.2% (-1.0)
Conservatives 2.0% (-4.7)

The percentage changes above are measured from the 2022 local elections, rather than from the previous by-election in the same ward last year.  The SNP vote has held up pretty well, bearing in mind that in 2022 Nicola Sturgeon was still in her pomp and her party was still polling in the mid-to-high 40s in opinion polls.  Normally a 3.7 point lead on first preferences would be enough to be transfer-proof and to seal the victory, but probably a lot of unionist voters got through all the independent candidates before they 'boaked', allowing Mr Cross to sneak home from second place.  

Alba, as we know, clutch to absolutely any straws they can find in any and every situation (now that McEleny has been expelled it'll probably be HQ's resident wonderbairn Robert Reid doing the clutching, albeit from behind the curtain of anonymity), so they'll undoubtedly crow about finishing ahead of both Labour and the Tories.  But in context I don't think this is a great result for Alba.  They had a high-profile candidate in Steve Chisholm, who is well known for his championing of freeports, which obviously has a special relevance in the Cromarty Firth area.  Yet even with that USP he still didn't break the 5% barrier.  That said, of course, a lot of actual Alba members absolutely loathe and despise Chisholm's stance on freeports and believe it is contrary to the democratic wishes of the party rank-and-file, so maybe his candidacy was a double-edged sword.

The slump in Lib Dem support is surprising given that they did well in Skye, but perhaps it can be put down in part to the loss of any personal vote for Molly Nolan, who was on the ballot for them in 2022.

Obviously the Highlands aren't a Labour-SNP battleground area, so the swing between those two parties is less meaningful than it would be in the central belt or parts of the north-east.  But for what little it's worth, there was a nominal swing from SNP to Labour of just over 2%, which if extrapolated to the whole country is consistent with a Scotland-wide SNP lead of around eight percentage points over Labour.

More to follow...

Thursday, June 19, 2025

The cause of Palestine is the cause of humanity - and it is therefore inseparable from the Scottish independence movement

I've been meaning for weeks to comment in more detail on former Alba man Neil Sinclair's claim that vocal opponents of the Gaza genocide are 'piggy-backing' their cause onto the independence movement, and that Yessers must 'protect' the movement at all costs by silencing all views about Gaza or at least putting them into a sort of sealed antechamber where they cannot contaminate the drive for independence.  There's a paradox here, of course, because Neil also demanded that Gordon Millar's "Sacred Comment" defending and 'contextualing' the genocidal views of the Israeli civilian population must be published in full on this pro-independence blog, and he denounced my earlier deletion of it as "censorship".

So why wasn't he logically consistent by applauding my refusal to allow Millar to contaminate this pro-independence space with a pro-Israel agenda and frankly repugnant apologism for genocide?  There was something really rather comical about the way that Neil initially broached the subject on his private chat group for former and disillusioned Alba members.  He grandly announced out of the blue that we were going to have to discuss the issue of "censorship" and that on this occasion it just so happened to touch on the issue of Israel/Palestine.  As several people instantly pointed out in a state of some bewilderment, whenever anyone else had wanted to make comments that just so happened to touch on the issue of Israel/Palestine, Neil had always been extremely quick to invite them to either shut up about it or to take it elsewhere.  But perhaps it's different when it's a mate of Neil who wants the freedom to express views on Israel/Palestine and to do it in the pro-independence space of his choice?  Perhaps it's different when Neil himself has strong private sympathy with the specific views on Israel/Palestine that are being piggybacked onto the independence cause?  Or perhaps it's because he saw Millar's 'contextualising' of genocide (essentially saying that Palestinians are undesirable troublemakers who 'nobody wants') as just 'regrettable statements of fact' that need to be introduced into the pro-independence space to 'help people to understand' why it is so terribly important to silence or banish all other expressions of views about the subject?

Openly expressed anti-genocide views might, for example, offend the many independence supporters who are supposedly pro-Israel and pro...well, pro-genocide, not to put too fine a point on it, or who at least, like Stuart "Stew" Campbell, think there are overwhelmingly strong arguments against taking any sort of principled stance about the mass extermination of an ethnic group.  Above all else, it might prevent us from immersing ourselves totally into the 24/7 crusade against women with beards, and we can't be having that, can we? It was interesting that after I called Neil out publicly on his hypocrisy, his main cheerleader kept saying to me "Neil and I don't like the genocide and we've criticised Israel's actions on occasion, but..."  The operative word is always 'but', isn't it?

I can see absolutely no evidence to support Neil's fantastical claims of entryism of anti-genocide or pro-Palestinian activists into the independence movement or into specific pro-independence parties.  There would scarcely need to be any entryism, because the anti-genocide cause is the cause of literally millions of people in this country, and those people can therefore entirely naturally be found in huge numbers in all walks of life and in all organisations.  And there's an especially strong affinity between independence supporters and the Palestinian cause, for the obvious reason that it touches on issues of self-determination and domination by a more powerful neighbour.  If Palestinian flags were ever to be banned from pro-independence marches, as Neil Sinclair and his ilk demand, many Yessers who have been devoted to the goal of independence for years or decades would feel hurt and confused.  They'd think the movement had lost its heart, its soul, its humanity, that it had been turned into a sterile, soulless environment by dictatorial headmaster types with no moral compass or even common sense.  They might start walking away from the movement in their droves, and for what?  To protect the sensibilities of the supposed hordes of 'silent' pro-indy folk who are disgusted by Palestinian flags, either because they think the genocide is cool, or because they think the arguments for and against the genocide are far too complex to grapple with?  Well, where exactly are these people?  Where are they hiding?  Frankly I think there are about twelve of them, and they're all helpfully closeted off in Neil Sinclair's chat group or the Wings Over Scotland comments section.

I didn't know whether to laugh or cry when Israeli sympathisers on the Sinclair chat group informed me on the night of the Eurovision Song Contest that the twelve points awarded to Israel by the "UK public" was indicative that there was a silent pro-Israel majority out there, or a silent majority that doesn't care at all for the Palestinians.  I pointed out that there was massive evidence that the vote had been manipulated on an industrial scale by the State of Israel and by sympathetic actors, and that it hadn't been at all hard to do given that each phone number or payment card could vote up to twenty times for the same song.  With the overall vote split between 25 different countries, it didn't take all that many sets of twenty votes to push Israel into the 'douze points' position.  There were even some people boasting on social media that they had managed to vote EIGHTY times for Israel because they had payment cards registered in four different jurisdictions.  

But these points were met with sneering incredulity: "Don't you think, James (snigger) that it's just a tad more likely that these were just ordinary British people voting for their favourite song, as they do every year?"  No, I replied, it was far more likely that the State of Israel has engaged in massive manipulation of the vote, partly because of the evidence I had already identified, and also partly because the Israeli song was pretty bland and clearly wouldn't have topped a public vote on its own merits.  And with impeccable timing, a Find Out Now poll conducted among a demographically representative sample of UK viewers of the contest was published only a day or two later, setting out exactly what would have happened if British people had just voted for their favourite song and if there had been no Israeli manipulation of the vote - 

Find Out Now poll, 18th May 2025:

Of the following countries, whose performance did you particularly like?  Please select any that apply.  (UK excluded from below numbers, because British viewers couldn't vote for the UK in the contest itself.)

1) Sweden: 28%
2) Estonia: 19%
3) Austria: 18%
4) Malta: 15%
5) Iceland: 14%
6) Spain: 12%
=) Latvia: 12%
=) Finland: 12%
9) Italy: 11%
=) Israel: 11%
11) Luxembourg: 10%
=) Switzerland: 10%
=) Germany: 10%
14) Denmark: 9%
=) Netherlands: 9% 
16) France: 7%
=) Armenia: 7%
18) Norway: 6%
=) Greece: 6%
20) San Marino: 5%
=) Lithuania: 5%
22) Ukraine: 4%
23) Portugal: 3%
=) Poland: 3%
25) Albania: 2%

So, as I suspected, there would have been no humiliation for Israel if the vote hadn't been manipulated, but it would have been no better than the upper end of mid-table respectability for them.

The irony is that the whole reason that Israel went to such lengths to manipulate the vote was to mess with people's heads and to try to get them to say things like "uh-oh, maybe we'd better disassociate our political cause from the Palestinians, it looks like we've misread the public mood".  It is nothing short of astounding how easy it was for Israel to deceive some members of Neil's chat group into precisely the desired response - but, then, that was because the fictional version of the British and Scottish public that Israel was presenting them with was one that they desperately wanted to believe in.

"Relative" is an interesting choice of word, because here is a direct comparison from Stew's very favourite traffic comparison site SimilarWeb:

Estimated total visits in the 28 days up to 16th June 2025:

The National: 2,079,000
Wings Over Scotland: 242,808 

Looked at that way, The National's anti-genocide stance appears to be almost ten times more popular than Stew's "both sidesing" moral bankruptcy.  I know some will argue that it's unfair to directly compare traffic for a newspaper website to traffic for a mere blog, but who are we to argue with Stew's long-standing delusions of grandeur?  Perhaps of more significance is the comparison between The National and their own direct competitors such as The Herald and The Scotsman.  The Herald are not all that far ahead on around 2,700,000 visits, while The Scotsman are on around 4,300,000.  In both cases, the differential is less than I would have expected given the perception of The National as a relatively 'small' publication. 

It may well be that The National is gaining significant traction simply by being the only mainstream media outlet in the UK to actually provide a genuine news service on the Gaza issue.  Many people well beyond the borders of Scotland have pointed out that literally nobody else is doing what The National is doing.  That has vastly improved the paper's reputation - and by extension it has enhanced the reputation of the independence movement itself.

Once international organisations and academics are able to access Gaza, the full scale of one of the gravest crimes against humanity since 1945 will become apparent and will be documented in detail.  There will then be a reckoning about the complicity of western governments and western media.  The National, the only pro-independence newspaper in Scotland, will shine like a beacon for having been on the right side of history from day one.  Why anyone in the independence movement could possibly think that is a bad thing is beyond me.

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