I know a small number of people prefer direct bank transfers, so if you'd like to do that, just drop me a line at my contact email address and I'll send you the necessary details. My contact address is different from my PayPal address and can be found on my Twitter or BlueSky profiles.
A pro-independence blog by James Kelly - one of Scotland's three most-read political blogs.
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
Yet another stellar YouGov subsample for the SNP, as Labour brace for a return to the wilderness
Tuesday, August 19, 2025
If the SNP conference is to be denied the chance to consider the "rebel" motion, then John Swinney's plan must either be defeated or amended to remove the harm from it
I know a small number of people prefer direct bank transfers, so if you'd like to do that, just drop me a line at my contact email address and I'll send you the necessary details. My contact address is different from my PayPal address and can be found on my Twitter or BlueSky profiles.
Sunday, August 17, 2025
A review of the first three weeks of Scot Goes Pop as a video blog: how is it panning out so far?
As it looks like there aren't going to be any polls this weekend (meaning there have been no full-scale Scottish polls for two whole months - we're really not being well-served), I thought this might be a good moment to draw breath and look back at how the experiment of turning Scot Goes Pop into a video blog has gone over its first three weeks. To recap briefly on why I've chosen to go down this road, I finally accepted a few weeks ago what in truth has been staring me in the face since 2021 - that traditional blogging just isn't sustainable anymore because the annual fundraisers have been consistently falling short of their target figures. It's true that I've just about managed to stay afloat over the last four years, but I've been constantly lurching from mini-crisis to mini-crisis, and as a result I've had to post literally dozens of reminders about the fundraisers every year, which a) can't be expected to save the day indefinitely, and b) just becomes embarrassingly repetitive. (And I'm afraid that the embarrassment will have to continue for a little while yet - because even in the best-case scenario it'll take several months for any alternative funding model to start bearing fruit, and to keep the show on the road during that transitional period I'll need to get the current fundraiser as close as possible to its target figure. It's currently 68% funded, and I'm extremely grateful to everyone who has chipped in over the last few weeks. But the grind goes on until and unless we get to 100%!)
People have been telling me for years that conventional blogging is yesterday's medium and that the action has moved elsewhere, so it seems to me there are two potential alternative funding models that are worth giving a serious try before giving up the ghost completely -
1) A switch to video blogging.
or
2) A switch to Substack or something similar, ie. in which at least some content is put behind a paywall.
I much prefer the first option, because the videos can be very easily embedded on the blog and everything remains freely available. So I'm going all in for video blogging for the time being - but to even get to the point of finding out whether it's viable as an alternative funding model, I'll have to hit the minimum threshold of 1000 subscribers on YouTube.
So how is it going so far? I've posted 21 videos over the last three weeks, and if nothing else the viewing numbers have proved that there is still a substantial appetite out there for information about opinion polls from a pro-independence perspective. All of the most popular videos have been about polls, with the most popular one of all being 'Triumphant SNP romp to 24-point lead over Labour in epic YouGov crossbreak', which has 2252 views so far - only around 500 short of my most-watched video from the past, which was my 2021 interview of Alex Salmond. It's also significantly higher than the number of views for recent episodes of Slanszh Media's riveting weekly YouTube show Tas Is Still Talking, even though I'll obviously never be able to match the production values of the Great Zulfikar Sheikh.
I started out audio-only while I tried to work out the best approach to video content, because investing in a proper camera a few years ago had backfired horrendously - the lighting and the focus often seemed to be all wrong, but I'd always be oblivious to that until I'd finished the recording. I've realised that simply using a webcam is the obvious solution, because you can see how the video looks as you're actually recording. So far, though, I've just been using our normal webcam that we use for family Zoom calls, and the picture quality is therefore adequate at best. If anyone can recommend a reasonably affordable webcam with genuinely crisper picture quality, please let me know.
My number of YouTube subscribers has roughly doubled since three weeks ago, from around 220 to 440. I think that's pretty solid progress, but at that pace it'll be roughly November before I reach 1000 and can even begin to find out whether video blogging is viable as a funding model. If you'd like to help speed things up, and if you have a Google account (even if you don't use it for YouTube very often), all you'd have to do is sign in, go to my channel and hit the 'subscribe' button. I think maybe the word 'subscribe' puts off people who don't use YouTube much because it sounds like subscribing to a pay TV channel, but it's nothing like that at all - it doesn't cost a penny. Subscribing is basically just the equivalent of following someone on social media.
On the whole, then, I'm reasonably encouraged and I think it's possible that over time I might be able to build up a YouTube channel with a decent following. But the jury is still very much out, and until I reach 1000 subscribers I remain in limbo and will need to keep pushing the fundraiser to keep the show on the road during this prolonged transitional period. So if anyone who hasn't donated yet has £5 or £10 burning a hole in their pocket, it would be very gratefully received. Card donations can be made HERE, or if you prefer, direct donations by PayPal are also an option. My PayPal email address is: jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk
I know a small number of people prefer direct bank transfers, so if you'd like to do that, just drop me a line at my contact email address and I'll send you the necessary details. My contact address is different from my PayPal address and can be found on my Twitter or BlueSky profiles.
Scot Goes Pop Fundraiser 2025: Another update, and a crunch-point
Friday, August 15, 2025
Labour have the support of barely ONE TENTH of Scottish voters in landmark Find Out Now poll
Wednesday, August 13, 2025
Anas and the Apocalypse: Labour face TOTAL WIPEOUT in Scotland as SNP run riot in history-making YouGov crossbreak
The Scottish subsample from the latest GB-wide YouGov poll is extraordinary, not just for the scale of the SNP lead, but also because it shows Labour on course to lose all of their Scottish seats at Westminster - not even Ian Murray would be left standing. Find out all about it in today's YouTube commentary - you can watch via the embedded player below, or at the direct YouTube link.
Tuesday, August 12, 2025
I still believe what Alex Salmond told me in 2020 about the leaker to the Daily Record - but the independence movement desperately needs to move on
Saturday, August 9, 2025
Eighty years on from the horrors of Nagasaki, Scotland must redouble its determination to join the international ban on nuclear weapons after independence
Friday, August 8, 2025
Wednesday, August 6, 2025
Here's why the independence plan of the "SNP rebels" is MORE workable than John Swinney's own plan
I suppose on some level you have to admire the chutzpah of John Swinney, winner of the coveted 100% rating in the 2025 Guide To The World's Worst Plans For Winning The Independence Of A Country, in criticising *someone's else's* independence plan for being "unworkable", but that's what he's just done. In today's YouTube commentary I explain why the plan of the so-called "SNP rebels" is self-evidently far more workable than Mr Swinney's plan, and at the end I also point out the single worst feature of the Swinney plan - meaning that we'd practically be better off going into the election with no plan whatsoever than with the Swinney plan.
You can watch via the embedded player below, or at the direct YouTube link.
Tuesday, August 5, 2025
Triumphant SNP romp to 24-point lead over Labour in epic YouGov crossbreak
For today's YouTube commentary, I bring you the results of the weekly GB-wide poll from YouGov, which are unusually good for the SNP on the Scottish subsample. I also discuss Andy Maciver's view that John Swinney's new independence strategy, insisting that only a single-party outright majority for the SNP will count as a mandate for independence referendum, "accepts the fact" that independence is off the agenda. I explain why Mr Maciver is wrong about that, because John Swinney is not accepting a fact - he's needlessly creating a reality that forces independence off the agenda for at least five years. The SNP faces a choice of two futures at its conference, because Mr Swinney's target of an SNP-only majority is totally unachievable, whereas the alternative proposal of seeking an outright mandate for independence on the list ballot, and with votes for all pro-indy parties contributing to that mandate, is perfectly achievable, and if successful would push independence right back onto the agenda again. Why is John Swinney pushing for obviously the wrong one of those two strategies?
It may be that he wants to get back to his comfort zone, and intends to engineer a situation where he can say "we went all out for a cast-iron mandate that couldn't be ignored, but fell pitifully short - that shows how far away we are from building the trust of the people, and we now have to accept that's going to be a very long-term project". I think that may be part of it, but it's not the whole explanation. I think he also believes that the SNP will get a better election result by linking independence to votes for the SNP alone and setting the unattainable target, and he is therefore using independence as a tool to win elections for the SNP, which he regards as an end in itself. He therefore isn't unduly concerned if the independence cause is harmed along the way. Most SNP members, I would suggest, think it should be the other way around - they understand that independence is the goal, and that the SNP should be used as a tool to win that goal.
You can watch the video on the embedded player below, or at this link.
Monday, August 4, 2025
Kate Forbes' departure feels like a setback for the SNP and for independence - but can someone seize the moment and transform it into an opportunity?
Should the State of Palestine possess an independent nuclear deterrent?
Saturday, August 2, 2025
"This doesn't make sense!" x 12: My reaction to the full text of John Swinney's independence strategy motion
Friday, August 1, 2025
Here's why Keir Starmer will be in BIG trouble if he ever goes to PARAGUAY
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Campbell has now openly stated that the goal of his "tactical voting" advice is the total destruction of the SNP - a goal that is so obviously unachievable that it suggests a complete loss of rationality. The issue is therefore no longer arithmetical - it's psychological.
Starmer was dragged kicking and screaming into doing it by Macron and by Labour MPs...but his recognition of the State of Palestine will change EVERYTHING
This was my second failed attempt to verify my age to continue using BlueSky - not exactly the most dangerous of sites. If the technology isn't up to scratch, then neither is the legislation. pic.twitter.com/a6QWYYwkuy
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) July 29, 2025
Tuesday, July 29, 2025
SNP jubilation as they remain dominant in latest cosmic crossbreak from YouGov
For today's YouTube commentary, I have all the details from the latest weekly YouGov poll of GB-wide voting intentions - which shows Reform UK with their biggest lead over Labour for two months, and the SNP remaining dominant in the Scottish subsample. I also give my thoughts on the major problem the independence movement may face if Zack Polanski takes the Green Party of England & Wales into an electoral pact with the new Corbyn/Sultana party, thus leaving the independent Scottish Green Party with the dilemma of whether to run on a joint Holyrood list with a party that is unlikely to be explicitly pro-independence.
You can listen via the embedded player below, or via the direct YouTube link, or on Soundcloud.
By the way, I received an email yesterday from someone who says they usually read the blog when at work, and therefore can't listen to the audio commentaries because it would be too noisy. The good news is that YouTube provide auto-generated transcripts of each video, so if you turn the sound down on your phone before clicking the video link, and then go into the description section, you'll find a "show transcript" option. Obviously it's AI-generated so there are always a few little errors, but it's usually 95% correct.
Monday, July 28, 2025
I say this with tremendous regret...but John Swinney's new roadmap for independence is a false prospectus, it's a dead end, and it will need to be completely changed if independence is ever to be achieved
Sunday, July 27, 2025
Why the new Corbyn / Sultana party should back proportional representation
For today's YouTube commentary, I discuss why the new left-wing party being formed by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana should embrace proportional representation - partly because it's the right thing to do in itself, but also because it would help neutralise the charge that they're splitting the vote and helping Reform into power. You can listen via the embedded player below, or via the direct YouTube link, or on Soundcloud, or on Spotify.
Saturday, July 26, 2025
What Mhairi Black's departure from the SNP reveals about the "broad church" paradox
A few people have been asking me for my thoughts on Mhairi Black's decision to leave the SNP, so that's the subject of today's YouTube commentary. You can listen via the embedded player below, or via the direct YouTube link, or on Soundcloud, or on Spotify.
If you have a few seconds after listening, I'd be grateful if you'd subscribe to my YouTube channel, because I'm trying to build it up.
After I recorded the above, I spotted a monumentally stupid reader's letter in the Scotsman, accusing Mhairi Black of "inconsistency" because of her stance on Palestine and in favour of LGBTQ rights. The guy then proceeded to basically do the whole "but what if you were gay in Gaza?" meme, although he presumably was blissfully unaware that he was doing a meme, and also blissfully unaware of what memes are. The answer, of course, to the question "but what if you were gay in Gaza?" is "you would be murdered by Israel, just like heterosexual people in Gaza". That's actually a form of equality, I suppose.
Mhairi Black should know, the Scotsman reader prattled further, that Hamas opposes decriminalisation of homosexual acts. OK, and? Mhairi Black has never, to the best of my knowledge, expressed any support for Hamas, so where's the inconsistency? Do you mean that she has to drop her opposition to genocide in order to look sufficiently condemnatory of anti-gay laws that by all accounts are rarely enforced anyway?
Nothing ever changes. The Scotsman readers' page remains whacko central.
They didn't tell us about THAT one! The "secret" YouGov poll showing a surge in support for independence
Friday, July 25, 2025
The new Jeremy Corbyn / Zarah Sultana party: what will it be called, how popular will it be, and will it help to deliver Scottish independence?
For tonight's audio commentary, I turn my attention to the 'soft launch' of the new Jeremy Corbyn / Zarah Sultana radical left party. You can listen via the embedded player below, or at the direct YouTube link, or at Soundcloud.
After you've finished listening, I'd be very grateful if you hit the 'subscribe' button and the 'like' button on YouTube, because I'm trying to build my channel up.
Also, just a reminder that the fundraising post will be staying pinned to the top of the blog for a prolonged spell, so whenever you visit over the coming days please remember to scroll down for the newest content.
Thursday, July 24, 2025
Astonishing poll shows big support in England for Scottish independence - plus Labour is totally at odds with its own voters on Gaza
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
Make that a double: both SNP and Plaid Cymru lead the seismic subsamples in latest YouGov poll
Stop giving "release 23 Israeli hostages" parity of esteem with "the genocide must end"
The fabled international community, including even Ursula von der Leyen, Kaja Kallas and David Lammy, seem to have finally reached the point of "twenty-one months of genocide were fine, but we draw the line at twenty-two", and yet they still can't bring themselves to just directly demand that Israel stop what they're doing without the "Hamas must release all hostages" qualification. This was Lammy trotting out the standard formulation a couple of days ago -
"We need an immediate ceasefire now, the release of all hostages and a surge in aid."
It would of course be a good thing if the remaining hostages were freed, but insisting on always giving that objective joint top billing is highly problematical in a number of ways -
* It sounds very much like a condition or a prerequisite for a ceasefire, ie. Israel can say "you were only calling on us to stop mass-killing people if Hamas released the hostages, and they haven't, so we're good to continue".
* The subtext feeds into the narrative of "this all started on 7th October", thus giving some succour to the idea that Israel's genocide was semi-justified in response to the Hamas attacks. Why not add in a further clause to make it "We need an immediate ceasefire now, the release of all hostages, an end to the illegal Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories, and a surge in aid"? Lammy would probably say that the end of the occupation is a completely separate issue - in other words he doesn't want to admit that the problem can be directly traced back to 1967 (and ultimately to 1948), rather than to October 2023.
* It effectively accords far less proportionate worth to each Palestinian slaughtered than it does to each Israeli hostage. There are thought to be around 23 remaining hostages, compared to at least tens of thousands of Palestinian dead (and it would be a brave person who doubts that the true death toll is way, way over 100,000). To give parity of esteem to those two issues seems almost obscene. It used to be said that one Israeli life was deemed to have the same worth as 1000 Palestinian lives, but now it's even worse than that - simply denying liberty to one Israeli citizen seems to be considered a graver crime than massacring 1000 Palestinian women and children.
* By implication, it denies the hostage status of the Palestinian "administrative detainees" held captive by Israel without charge, and it certainly accords less urgency to their freedom than it does to the far smaller number of Israelis still held by Hamas. "Only Israelis can be hostages, Palestinians can only be prisoners or detainees."
Tuesday, July 22, 2025
Here I am, Stew-ck in the middle with you
Monday, July 21, 2025
A response to Stew's latest abusive attack (yes, it's Monday AGAIN)
The controversial and increasingly far-right Somerset blogger "Stew" seems to have been more than a tad triggered by my blogpost of last night, in which I pointed out that the catastrophic failures and errors of judgement of the people behind Alba and Liberate Scotland have ended any chance of a non-SNP route to independence, and that therefore John Swinney has to at least be given a limited window of opportunity to make his own strategy (which I made clear that I do think is flawed) work. I suspect the reason Stew is so touchy about this is that he knows perfectly well that he personally bears partial responsibility for the failure of Alba in particular, and therefore for ending any realistic hope that next year's Holyrood election will be used as a de facto referendum. To some extent that's a feature not a bug - Stew doesn't even want the election to be about independence, and instead wants it to be about a breakthrough for the soft-fascist and ultra-unionist Reform UK, and by extension some sort of 'cleansing destruction' of the independence movement as we know it. "To win independence we must first kill independence" is the preposterous, if thus far unspoken, Stew motto de jour.
It's all very well for anyone to say that Alba are right to propose that independence parties should use the Holyrood election to seek an outright mandate for independence, and that the SNP leadership are wrong to reject that idea. But in circumstances where the self-appointed elite of Alba (and the true elite centred around Ahmed-Sheikh, Wilson, Donoghue, Cullen, etc, are very much appointed and not elected) have idiotically squandered any chance of taking a leadership role in the independence movement by behaving like a poundshop Mafia for the last four years, it's a bit redundant for them to complain about being on the losing side in the battle of ideas over strategy. When you've left the pitch clear for the SNP to monopolise the leadership role, it's a statement of the obvious that the SNP leader will have the discretion and space to make his own strategic calls, however dubious the rest of us might be about them. "It shouldn't be like this, it should be like that" is the plaintive wail of Stew, which a) constitutes a loss of contact with the real world, and b) evades his own partial responsibility for creating this situation in the first place.
No, Stew, if you don't get your own way on strategy and policy, the answer is not to "destroy everything and start again", because there'll be nothing left to start again with. Even if Swinney turns out to be wrong in his strategic choices, and he may well do, we have to conserve and protect the strengths we have as a movement if independence is ever to be won, and to a large extent that does mean preserving the SNP in the here and now. "I have been spurned, so the movement must be purified in flames" is narcissistic twaddle that we should have no time for at all.
Stew is on particularly weak ground in his "Build Indy Support (FAILED)" point, because it was only yesterday that I set out in detail how his graph showing the evolution of indy support under different SNP leaders was totally fraudulent. You're entitled to your own opinions, Stew, but not to your own facts. The first step is to admit the graph was a lie, and then by all means a discussion can be had based on the actual facts.
Sunday, July 20, 2025
Alba have blown it, "Liberate Scotland" are a bad joke, so however sceptical anyone may be about John Swinney's independence plan, he has to be given his chance to make it work - that's the only game left in town
For the last few weeks (probably months, actually), I've been receiving Mike Small's Substack email newsletter - which is basically Bella-style articles in email form. I presume my details must have been imported from the old Bella mailing list, because I didn't specifically sign up for it. However, I found today's article really helpful, because it quotes extensively from John Swinney's new independence plan, so I'm now much clearer in my mind what it actually is - and yes, there's a big plot hole in the middle of it, but the good news is the SNP are at least talking about independence and talking about putting it at the forefront of their election campaign.
One thing I actually agree with John Swinney about is that the SNP need a big statement win at next year's Holyrood election if independence is to be achieved. I've found it quite curious that the SNP's critics have been making exactly the same demands of the party after last year's general election result as they did before it, thus taking no account of the fact that as far as many people were concerned, the SNP's defeat last year took independence off the agenda for an indefinite period - or "until further notice" might be a better way of putting it. It should be a statement of the obvious that there has to be a clear demonstrative moment of "independence is back in business", achieved in a major election, before anything can actually be progressed. That's not to say that you can't also seek a more specific mandate next year, because more than one objective can be pursued simultaneously, but the reality is that independence is currently tucked away in a box and can only break out of that box with a good election result - which means the SNP remaining the largest party and remaining the party of government, and the SNP and Greens between them retaining a pro-independence majority. The latter bit is going to be tough, although polls suggest it's certainly not unachievable.
A complicating factor is that even if all of the above happens, the SNP are likely to lose seats simply because they had such a stonking landslide last time around. That will obviously detract from any statement win, but perhaps the problem can be offset if the combined SNP/Green seat haul exceeds the 2021 result. Again, that's a very tall order, but it's not totally impossible that Green gains could make up for any SNP losses. (And no, the clusterbourachs that are the Alba Party and "Liberate Scotland" have no role to play in any of this, because they're not going to win any seats at all.)
So absolutely, John Swinney is correct that if you want independence, you need the SNP to do really well next year. That will be an unalloyed Good Thing in its own right. Where I part company from his independence plan is in its insistence that only an agreed referendum can win independence, on the grounds that there needs to be "international legitimacy" and "recognition". That's a form of sophistry, because Scotland will automatically acquire legitimacy and recognition as soon as it concludes an independence agreement with the UK government. It doesn't actually matter a damn how you get to that agreement. Yes, one way of doing it would be to win a pre-agreed referendum, but there are several other possibilities. You could use a scheduled election as a de facto referendum and then pressurise the UK to accept the legitimacy of the outcome retrospectively - that's exactly how Ireland achieved independence and international recognition. (And who knows, if Ireland hadn't forced the issue in that way, and had instead waited forever and a day for an "agreed referendum", perhaps it would never have become independent and would have become trapped within a devolved framework.). A third possibility, which I think is the most likely, is that a majority vote in a de facto referendum could be used as leverage to bring the UK government kicking and screaming to the negotiating table, and to coax a compromise from them on holding a confirmatory referendum.
So given that a pre-agreed referendum is self-evidently not a prerequisite for legitimacy or international recognition, it can only be concluded that we're not being told the genuine reason for the SNP leadership insisting independence can only be done that way. Cynics might suggest that the main attraction is that it's the only option that actually requires permission in advance from London, permission that everyone knows will not be granted, thus neatly getting the leadership off the hook of ever having to do anything about independence, and allowing them to get on with their alleged true love of running a devolved government in peace and quiet. But it might not be that. It might just be a form of strategic timidity, and a craving for the goal to just fall into our laps rather than us having to force the issue by doing anything too noisy. Alas, the world doesn't work that way. Not usually, anyway.
On the other hand, we do live in a world where the likes of Alba and Liberate Scotland have completely screwed up and thrown away any conceivable chance of bringing about independence from outside the SNP, which means that however sceptical we may be about John Swinney's plan, he has to be given his chance to make it work. That's realistically the only game in town, and at the end of the day nobody actually gives a monkey's whether a plan seems to work in theory, only in whether it works in practice.
The big plot hole I was referring to is Mr Swinney's insistence that a great election result for the SNP will force the UK government to grant a referendum, when we all know that great election results for the SNP in 2016, 2017, 2019 and 2021 did not impress London in the slightest. But if he defies the odds by converting an election win into a 'gold standard' referendum, no-one will be complaining. He'll be judged on the results he's promised, and it's only if and when he fails to produce those results that SNP members will perhaps tap him on the shoulder and say: "John, you've done us a tremendous service by steadying the ship after the Yousaf era and winning a key election that has re-established the credibility of the independence cause. But you've now taken us as far as you can, and the time has come for you to hand over the reins to someone with the skills and ideas to actually take us to independence itself."
By the way, I couldn't help but raise a smile when Mike Small interjected to say "I don't really know what that actually means?" about one of John Swinney's remarks. Now you know, Mike, how the rest of us feel when we read Bella Caledonia articles about postmodern cacophonic spaces nurtured by surrealist hyper-ideological anarchic gender-capitalism, or whatever.
Exploding the myth that Alex Salmond "doubled independence support when he was First Minister"
One of the most obvious signs of the contempt that Stuart "Stew" Campbell has for his own readers was the way he kept using his fraudulent "independence support is flatlining" graph for years on end, even after it had been debunked umpteen times. Basically he had cherry-picked a tiny number of polls from the hundreds of independence polls that had been conducted since 2014 to make it look as if support for Yes had remained absolutely static at 47%, thus completely misrepresenting the fact that an average of all polls showed a steady year-on-year increase for Yes until 2020, and that even in 2021 and 2022 support remained higher than in any year up to and including 2019.
At some point, however, he finally got bored with that graph and replaced it with a new one, which has now had several outings. I can't even call the new one misleading - it's a downright lie in most respects. It claims the following -
* That support for independence stood at around 25% at roughly the time Alex Salmond became First Minister in May 2007. (No exact number is given, but it appears to be halfway between 20% and 30%.)
* That support had doubled to 50% by the time Salmond was replaced by Nicola Sturgeon in November 2014.
* That the Yes vote had dipped slightly to the high 40s when Sturgeon was replaced by Humza Yousaf in May 2023.
* That the Yes vote remained unchanged in the high 40s when Yousaf was replaced by John Swinney in May 2024.
* That the Yes vote remained unchanged in the high 40s in May of this year.
The idea, of course, is supposed to be that Alex Salmond dramatically increased support for independence but that all of his successors have failed to build on that golden legacy. And it's not hard to see why Wings readers find that narrative so seductive, but there's just one little snag - there's not actually a shred of truth in it.
The claim about May 2025 is the easiest to deal with because it's so recent. There were exactly two independence polls in that month: one from Survation that had Yes on 49% and one from Norstat showing Yes on 54%. So what has Stew done to produce his high 40s figure for the month? He certainly hasn't used an average of the two polls, because that would have got him to around 51% or 52%. So has he just used one and ignored the other? If so, what possible justification does he have for doing that? Before anyone suggests that maybe he's been sticking to Survation polls throughout the graph for the sake of consistency - nope, Survation didn't even exist in 2007.
And it's that 2007 figure which is by far the most problematical. Unsurprisingly Stew doesn't give any source for it at all, but unlike the figures for the other years it clearly doesn't come from a straight Yes/No poll on independence with Don't Knows excluded, because that would imply the numbers were around Yes 25%, No 75%. No poll even remotely like that has been published at any point in the 21st century. By far the most likely explanation is that he is instead using the Scottish Social Attitudes Survey for that year, which had a complex multi-option format and did not exclude Don't Knows. To say that he's made an apples-and-oranges comparison does not adequately convey the absurdity and fraudulence of what he's done - it's more like an apples-with-tractors comparison.
So what were the directly comparable Yes/No polls on independence showing in 2007? There weren't very many independence polls being conducted back then, and most that did take place were conducted by TNS / System Three (last heard of under the branding Kantar). It looks like there were two polls from the firm in 2007 - one showed Yes and No level on 50% apiece, and the other had No ahead by around 57% to 43% if Don't Knows were excluded. So if we're ultra-generous and use the more favourable poll for No as the baseline, Alex Salmond increased support for independence by around seven percentage points during his tenure as First Minister - light-years short of the 25-point increase implied by Stew. If we're not generous, and if we use the more favourable poll for Yes as the baseline, Salmond as FM did not increase support for independence at all.
Some people may be genuinely astonished to learn of this, because the mythology of Salmond doubling independence support has been so deeply ingrained into them. But that's mainly because Salmond himself was such an effective propagandist, and it wasn't in his own interests to draw attention to the existence of several polls showing an outright Yes lead before he even became First Minister. During the period of Labour-Liberal Democrat coalition rule from 1999 to 2007, it was in fact reasonably common for TNS / System Three to show a majority for independence.
What actually happened was that Yes support remained high until it became clear that the referendum was really going to happen, and then it was as if reality hit home for a lot of people and the Yes vote dropped like a stone, falling to as low as 33% at one point in 2012-13 (although never going close to Stew's fictional 25% mark). Over the course of the referendum campaign there was an impressive recovery, but that essentially just got us back to where we started. The best that can be said is that the 50% Yes vote in late 2014 had a lot more depth and substance to it than the 50% Yes vote of 2007, because people had properly thought about the issues by then.
Saturday, July 19, 2025
The gaslighting from the commentator class has reached its peak with the Diane Abbott incident
In 1996, a youthful Andrew Marr (at the time he was either the editor or political editor of The Independent) interviewed Noam Chomsky, who spoke about the narrow range of opinions that are permitted within the mainstream media. Marr protested against any notion that he was self-censoring to please establishment paymasters, to which Chomsky famously replied:
"I’m not saying you’re self-censoring. I’m sure you believe everything you say. But what I’m saying is if you believed something different you wouldn’t be sitting where you’re sitting."
There could hardly be a more conclusive demonstration of the truth of those words than the behaviour of the mainstream media over recent days, which has failed to reflect the common sense view held by millions of people that what Diane Abbott said was just a statement of the obvious, and that of course people whose skin colour is not white will experience racism very differently from ethnic groups that are not visually distinguishable from the majority of the population. Instead we've been gaslighted, in a way that looks highly organised but as Chomsky said probably isn't, by a tiny and wildly unrepresentative commentator class that wants us to swallow the contrived, convoluted and downright weird narrative that by refusing to agree that white ethnic groups experience racism just as severely as non-white groups, Abbott must have been saying that Jewish people do not experience racism at all, and that she is therefore anti-semitic and her suspension from the Labour parliamentary group is natural and unavoidable.
My blogpost the other day about the implications of all this for anti-Scottish racism was tongue-in-cheek, but nevertheless the point is a genuine one. Anyone who has ever raised the issue will know that the response is generally that Scots are not a race requiring protection, because we are a 'mongrel people' descended from Britons, Gaels, Picts, pre-Celtic populations, Scandinavians, Anglo-Saxons, Norman French, Flemings and others. It's also usually pointed out that we look no different from anyone else in the UK and that it's ludicrous or offensive to suggest that we suffer from a racism problem that is in any way equivalent to the racism subjected to the Afro-Caribbean or South Asian populations. And yet all of those objections are identical to Diane Abbott's comments, which we are being invited to regard as repugnant and unsayable and as having no place in our politics. Unless our commentator class intend to be hypocrites, it is therefore totally unacceptable from this point on to sneer at or even question the idea that Scots require protection from racism in exactly the same way as any other ethnic group - including Jewish people, who just like Scots are usually white and have a mixed ancestry. Ashkenazi Jews, for example, have mixed European and Middle Eastern ancestry, with the European component being predominant.
If anyone is tempted to say that any of this trivialises anti-semitism, well I'm sorry but you're not allowed to say that. It means you believe in hierarchies of racism, that you are an anti-Scottish bigot, and that you have no place whatsoever in civilised society.
Which of course is ludicrous, but these are the problems that kick in when you properly jump the shark and try to mess with people's sense of reality. To look at the issue of hierarchies of racism more seriously, let me return to the story I recounted on Twitter about when I was on a bus with a group of lads who were singing violent anti-Catholic songs. I didn't feel under any sense of threat, for the obvious reason that they had no possible way of telling that I was a Catholic just by looking at me. I looked exactly like them. That is not a luxury open to black people on a bus full of racists.
Does that mean anti-Catholic or anti-Irish bigotry isn't or can't be a problem in Scotland? Well, no it doesn't, and in fact my dad apparently reckoned he was denied a place in Glasgow School of Art because he was a Catholic. I've no idea what led him to believe that, but he wasn't usually given to paranoia so I presume there must have been some substance to it. But that kind of discrimination is only possible once you actually see someone's surname and the name of their former school on a piece of paper. That creates a higher bar that protects white Catholics from the kind of instant racism that Diane Abbott might suffer from on the streets. For someone like Robert Peston or Rachel Riley, the level of protection is probably higher still, because there might well be nothing in their CVs at all that would indicate a Jewish background. (Incidentally, that also gives them higher protection against discrimination than Scots in England, who are usually instantly identifiable, not by their appearance but by their accents.)
Of all the gaslighting commentators, the most preposterous of the lot has been James O'Brien, who used method acting to make himself look really angry, and said that Diane Abbott must either be a liar or an idiot - there was no "third path". I presume what he meant was that her new comments indicated that her previous apology for causing offence to Jewish people the first time around must not have been genuine. Well, here's a third path for you, James - she made that apology under intolerable pressure and in the midst of a hysterical McCarthyite atmosphere. If you think politicians under that kind of pressure don't sometimes have to tack a little and say things they shouldn't really have to say or that they may not entirely believe, then you don't understand politics and you're not living in the real world. It also means you're a hypocrite, because you were one of the people who helped cultivate that McCarthyite atmosphere in the first place, and thus practically compelled certain forms of speech from Diane Abbott.🤔Peston thinks this is a tough one! 🤔 pic.twitter.com/rD6De9UImR
— The Daily Politik (@DailyPolitik) July 19, 2025
Do you know what a commentator class plugged in to the real world would be saying right now? They'd be hammering Starmer for totally losing the plot, and they'd regard his reasons for suspending Abbott as obviously risible. They'd point out that he and his advisers have clearly learnt nothing from the catastrophic error of suspending her for such a long period before, and would question whether someone with such poor political judgement can survive as Prime Minister much longer.
Friday, July 18, 2025
Now that Starmer is taking a zero tolerance approach to any suggestion that there can be hierarchies of racism, it seems clear that Labour must disband itself for its racist refusal to accept Scotland's right to exist and to defend herself
Wednesday, July 16, 2025
Hammerblow for Starmer as YouGov poll shows he is less popular than Jeremy Corbyn, Reform UK's lead has trebled, and the SNP have yet another handsome lead in the Scottish subsample
Stew told you about Rachel Reeves
Don't say we didn't tell you about Rachel Reeves, because we told you about Rachel Reeves. pic.twitter.com/7fc1VU3NId
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) July 15, 2025
It's quite true, you know - Stew did tell you about Rachel Reeves. Alas, the main thing he told you was: "it's 4th July 2024, it's general election day, and you know what you have to do, alert readers - vote for the party of Rachel Reeves and make her Chancellor of the Exchequer for the next five years".
I'm sure Stew will be putting the flesh on the bones of his top-secret masterplan, and explaining exactly how helping to elect this wretched Labour government has brought us closer to independence, very soon. Like, you know, any day now.
Oh, I know. It's for my own amusement, because I'm very bored atm and lord help me, I enjoy watching him squirm and fume. But from tomorrow there's the Peggie case to cover, so yay.
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) July 15, 2025
Yay! Get in there! SANDIE PEGGIE! NHS FIFE!
OK, so it turns out the explanation of the top-secret masterplan will have to wait a while, because Stew has nabbed himself actual TICKETS.
It's the HOTTEST TICKET IN TOWN and Stew has GOT IN. Do NOT mention the genocide to this man over the coming days, because he has a lifetime dream to fulfil and he intends to ENJOY it without distraction.
We're all so happy for you, Stew. I mean, SANDIE PEGGIE and NHS FIFE. It's like being able to say you were at Woodstock.
Oh, and I'm glad to hear that you've only been relentlessly stalking me to keep yourself amused, because I've heard it suggested in some quarters that stable individuals probably wouldn't write two thousand word articles, with borderline-psychopathic headlines like "Anatomy of a Lunatic", in which they tie themselves up in knots trying to frantically explain how demanding that people must vote tactically on the list is simply their way of expressing their opposition to tactical voting on the list. Calm individuals in full control of themselves, I've heard it suggested, probably wouldn't shriek "you are IDIOTS if you don't vote tactically on the list, and you are IDIOTS if you somehow think what I've just said means I've reversed my opposition to tactical voting on the list".
So it's a relief to hear that appearances have been so deceptive on this occasion and that it's just been a purely recreational thing for you. A bit of fun, rather than something you've felt compelled and driven to do because you're, y'know, a bit rattled. Just goes to prove what I've always said - perceptions of who is "squirming" and "fuming" are very much in the eye of the beholder.
In any case, that's all behind you now, Stew, because from this day forth you are officially LIVIN' THE DREAM.
SANDIE PEGGIE.
NHS FIFE.
It's not just the top tier of entertainment, it's the top tier of human experience.
I know I speak for all Scot Goes Pop readers when I say I am green with envy.