A pro-independence blog by James Kelly - one of Scotland's three most-read political blogs.
Sunday, March 9, 2025
"Mad Dog" is Primus Suspect for yet another leak to the Sunday Mail about the chaos within the Alba Party
Saturday, March 8, 2025
Labour's uncertainty transformed into despair using empirical strategies: Reform UK take the lead for the first time ever in any "Freshwater poll" (nope, me neither)
Friday, March 7, 2025
Reform UK lead in Find Out Now poll for EIGHTH time in a row
Reform UK went "Full Alba" today by removing the whip from one of their five MPs and referring him to the police. In a small way that's good news for the SNP, because it now becomes slightly less likely that Reform will overtake them as the fourth largest party in the Commons during this parliament due to by-elections or defections.
It's obviously too soon for any impact of this incident to show up in the opinion polls, but I wouldn't automatically assume there'll be one. Pretty much every parliamentary grouping Farage has ever been part of has fallen apart to some extent, and yet he always seems to come bouncing back as if nothing really changed. In the meantime, a Find Out Now poll published today showed Reform with an outright lead yet again, albeit a sharply reduced one, which was perhaps inevitable due to the bounce for Labour caused by the Trump / Ukraine crisis.
GB-wide voting intentions (Find Out Now, 5th March 2025):
Interestingly only watched one, Oppenheimer, and was very bored and bitterly disappointed that it didn’t really cover any of the engineering https://t.co/lk6mS0zQco
— Christopher McEleny (@ChrisMcEleny) March 8, 2025
As the film is actually largely about a kangaroo court with a predetermined outcome, I'd have thought it would be right up your street, Chris. Or are you less enthusiastic about such things now the shoe is on the other foot? https://t.co/fKnnlfOQDF
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) March 8, 2025
Thursday, March 6, 2025
Some genuine good news for the independence cause: it seems that Alba will *not* be splitting the Yes vote in constituency seats next year, no matter who wins the leadership election
On Monday night, a commenter on this blog asked for my objective verdict on the STV mini-debate between Ash Regan and Kenny MacAskill for the Alba leadership. I was planning to write a blogpost giving my thoughts, but that plan was overtaken by other events. However, one of the things I had been intending to pick up on was that Ash Regan was surprisingly direct in saying she wanted Alba to be a "list-only party" in the Holyrood election next year. Kenny MacAskill said something very similar, although his language wasn't quite as unambiguous, which arguably left him a get-out clause if he had a change of heart.
Nevertheless I was initially very encouraged by this. Alba can only do harm if they stand in first-past-the-post constituency seats, because it would split the Yes vote and make it easier for unionist parties to win, and yet until recently there was every indication that was exactly what they planned to do. In August, I directly heard Chris McEleny suggest that Alba would be standing in at least one constituency seat per electoral region, which would mean a minimum of eight across Scotland. I know others heard him say exactly the same thing on other occasions. And famously, Christina Hendry told the newspapers that her much-vaunted "Salmond Blood" gave her the right, Game of Thrones style, to stand in her uncle's former constituency seat in the north-east. So Monday's debate implied there had been a very welcome change of heart on both sides of the Alba divide.
But I was much less encouraged after I then took a look at Chris McEleny's blog. (That's the kind of crazy thing I force myself to do sometimes, just so no-one else has to.). There's a post from around a week ago in which he states that he wants Alba to be a "list-only party", but weirdly he then goes on to say -
"Alba should at most only defend the new seat of the constituency incumbent Alba Party MSP Ash Regan currently holds and potentially at most a small handful of other seats"
Whatever else that might describe, it self-evidently does not describe a "list-only" party. In fact it suggests that Mr McEleny has an extremely complex relationship with the word "only". So my heart sank again - I assumed the plan was still to stand in several constituencies, but to dishonestly package that as a "list-only strategy" for window dressing purposes.
However, tonight I had a totally unexpected opportunity to clarify matters. The National hosted a leadership hustings on YouTube, and viewers were able to submit questions via the live chat. So I tried my luck and put forward a question asking whether "list-only" meant standing in no constituencies at all, because Mr McEleny's blog suggested otherwise. I'm very grateful to Hamish Morrison, who was moderating on behalf of The National, for reading the question out, and the answers did actually take us forward. Ms Regan was extremely specific that she didn't want Alba to stand in any constituencies, including her own. Mr MacAskill essentially said the same thing, although once again he maybe left himself with just a touch more wiggle room than Ms Regan did.
So that's really good news for all independence supporters, no matter which party you support. It'll make it easier for the SNP to hold off the Tory / Labour challenge in marginal constituencies and thus increases the chances of retaining the pro-independence majority at Holyrood.
I don't think there's much doubt Ash Regan "won" tonight's hustings. She's a much more relaxed and fluent speaker than Mr MacAskill and as a result she came across as more sincere - even though on several points I knew perfectly well she was being disingenuous. But sadly, sounding sincere when you're actually being insincere seems to be an indispensable skill for politicians these days.
I don't think her relatively strong performance will make any concrete difference, though. All that matters in the Alex Salmond Memorial Party is who has the backing of Alex Salmond's widow and family, and that lucky designated winner is Mr MacAskill. However, he had a bit of a shocker tonight and there was one point in particular where he totally lost the plot. The question after mine was asking about the people who had been bullied out of the party and what could be done to bring them back, and Mr MacAskill responded by just flatly denying that anyone at all had been bullied out - which at this stage is a Comical Ali level of denialism given how well-documented the bullying and subsequent resignations have been. He then went on and on about how awful it was that the question had been anonymously submitted, as if anonymity on the internet is a far more heinous affair than actual bullying and harassment.
In fact, the question wording was perfectly polite, and I think most people would feel that anonymity is only a problem if somebody hides behind it while being abusive. My guess is that the questioner simply happens to use a pseudonym for their YouTube account, and therefore wasn't being anonymous just for the purposes of the hustings. Mr MacAskill making such a song and dance about the questioner's anonymity thus looked like a rather weak and desperate attempt at deflection. I also got the distinct impression that he may have got the questioner mixed up with me, because he called him or her "an anonymous former party member", whereas in fact they hadn't identified themselves as a former party member. (Hamish Morrison had introduced my question as being from "former member James Kelly".)
By contrast, Ash Regan did acknowledge that some former members, particularly women, had felt unhappy at the way they had been treated. The problem is, of course, that her ally Chris McEleny was the guy responsible for a lot of that ill-treatment.
The bottom line is that there is no good outcome to this contest. A MacAskill win would probably keep Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh and Corri Wilson in harness and would maintain the paranoid bunker mentality that the only problem Alba have got is that people keep having the temerity to speak out about their horrific experiences in the party. But a Regan win would probably mean a senior role for Chris McEleny, who has been the single most baleful influence within Alba. Ms Regan made clear she would accept Mr McEleny's resignation as General Secretary, but very noticeably didn't rule out appointing him to a different role.
Incidentally, YouTube lets you know how many people are watching at any given time, and it seemed to hover at around 40 or 45. That's perfectly respectable for a small party's leadership hustings, but the snag was that you could see from the live chat that a lot of viewers were not current Alba members, but disenchanted former members such as Fiona & Neil Sinclair and Leanne Tervit. Poor old Mr MacAskill and Ms Regan - they slog their guts out trying to win votes, and the only people listening (virtually) are what Zulfikar Sheikh calls "the Wee Gang of Malcontents". There's some sort of poetic justice in that, I feel.
The SNP must ignore the siren voice of Ian Blackford and hold fast to the principle of unilateral nuclear disarmament
Wednesday, March 5, 2025
Is Donald Trump just a cosplay fascist, or does his threats to conquer Greenland and parts of Panama make him the real thing?
I was just watching a "highlights" video of Donald Trump's speech to Congress (if that's not a contradiction in terms) and I found it genuinely chilling when he said he was going to get his hands on Greenland "one way or another" and JD Vance started chuckling behind him. It instantly called to mind Goebbels or Goering having a little snigger on the stage of a Nazi rally while Hitler taunted whichever country he had decided to invade next.
In Trump's first term it was always said that he couldn't really be considered a full-blown fascist because he didn't tick enough of the boxes, such as opposition to democracy and territorial expansionism. The insurrection at the Capitol building obviously called into question the assumption that he wasn't an opponent of democracy, although that incident almost seemed like 'cosplay fascism' because he didn't have the steel to actually see through a proper coup attempt. And the only vague talk of expansionism in the first term related to buying Greenland - I can't recall any suggestion of an invasion after Denmark said no to the proposal.
The Netanyahu regime in Israel actually fits in with the textbook definition of fascism much more comprehensively - it's militaristic, ethnonationalist, perpetually expansionist, genocidal (which only occurs in the most extreme forms of fascism), and its democratic status is questionable due to the apartheid nature of the state. So arguably the main relationship of the US to fascism has been an indirect one via its enthusiastic enabling of Israeli fascism.
But that may be changing if the conquest of Greenland is a serious prospect. Again, the only real question is whether this will prove to be cosplay fascism or the real deal. The Panama Canal, Gaza and Canada are also apparently on Trump's shopping list for an expanded US empire. The threats to Canada are generally taken less seriously than the ones against Greenland and Panama, but it strikes me that Greenland is not exactly contiguous with the US - there's a large expanse of Canada in between. If the strategic location of Greenland makes it so irresistible to Trump, and if the fact that Denmark is a friendly country that already allows US military activity on its territory isn't sufficient for him, it's hard to see why the same logic wouldn't also apply to northern Canada.
Of course there isn't a cat in hell's chance of Canada becoming part of the US, whether Trump realises it or not. But if that's his ambition, it means he's an expansionist on a Napoleonic scale, just as Hitler was. The Empire he envisages would be more than double the geographical size of the present-day US (Canada is actually the larger of the two countries) and it would encompass the vast bulk of a whole continent. That's a fascist prospectus, at the very least.
The Alba Party's relentless war against its own members continues despite McEleny's sacking - the NEC sticks two fingers up at the dozens of members who warmly welcomed the popular Leanne Tervit back to the party by crassly decreeing that, actually, she is FORBIDDEN TO REJOIN
Wee thread. 1/. Well it seems I was premature in thinking I'd rejoined Alba. After my welcome email I realised I couldn't log in as my account was suspended. I sent an email asking for it to be lifted so I could buy my conference ticket...
— Leanne Tervit (@LeanneTervit) March 4, 2025
2/ I got an email back stating that I had to submit a formal application to the NEC which was discussed on Saturday. My formal application is below. Im not sure why I had to submit this as Scott Fallon, who also publically resigned while giving members abuse didnt have to. pic.twitter.com/YLjBiU0DFV
— Leanne Tervit (@LeanneTervit) March 4, 2025
3/. Ive just recieved an email back with the decision of the NEC stating that my application to rejoin has been refused. Id like to know who was part of this NEC who made this decision, and chaired it, given that my resignation was due to the actions of certain NEC members. pic.twitter.com/LpXcA6CIyE
— Leanne Tervit (@LeanneTervit) March 4, 2025
4/ If theres any honest NEC folk with independent minds who'd like to privately message me, you have my word that your name will not be mentioned. HONESTY is what's needed in our Independence Parties. My reply is below.
— Leanne Tervit (@LeanneTervit) March 4, 2025
Cheeky? A wee bit
Deserved? 100%
Up Yours. For Scotland pic.twitter.com/AJrFb2Ayc7
The Alba NEC have refused Leanne Tervit’s membership!
— Denise Findlay 💚🤍💜 (@gracebrod1e) March 4, 2025
Does Alba have a death wish?
If the NEC thinks this helps Alba they are deluded
And this is on Kenny’s watch
If members want less vicious infighting and more winning complete change is needed https://t.co/ZAwbO0scof
You gotta love Brian's deadpan delivery there.@ChrisMcEleny can you assist?
— Brian Robertson (@brobertsonnews) March 4, 2025
Tuesday, March 4, 2025
New YouGov poll suggests Labour's hopes of a "Falklands moment" for Starmer are so far proving delusional - and the SNP have an 11-point lead in the Scottish subsample
Monday, March 3, 2025
The latest betrayal of Alba members is the most shameful - it's game, set and match to Tasmina as the party's unelected Tyrant-Queen gets her way on the retention of the discredited pay-per-vote system - her ruthless and callous tactics to crush all dissent appear to have SUCCEEDED as rumours strongly suggest members will *NOT* be given the option of introducing a democratic one member, one vote system for NEC elections
The issue you have when you surround yourself with snakes is there is always a bigger one willing to turn. 🐍
— Shannon Donoghue (@shannon_talks_) March 2, 2025
Some people will only love you as much as they can use you. In this case, Craig you help the narrative. Shame they didn’t think that about you last year.#Receipts 💥 https://t.co/zxkxsDI2bo pic.twitter.com/xlIR3gONpz
* * *
Denise Findlay has a new post on her blog about how Alex Salmond pressurised her to withdraw her candidacy for Organisation Convener in 2023 - you can read it HERE.
Sunday, March 2, 2025
Craig Murray's shock revelations about Alex Salmond add to the mountain of evidence that Alba's internal democracy has been a sham from day one
I have owed an explanation and I now feel free to give it.
— Craig Murray (@CraigMurrayOrg) March 1, 2025
I was elected to Alba national exec last year and declined to take up the post - thus disrespecting my nominators and voters.
In truth, Alex phoned me and asked me to decline. He said there was somebody else he needed to…
Craig did you witness my public resignation? Did you witness me then being called a bitch a witch, a troublemaker and a racist? All for posting that the NEC had been engineered and asking for the results in full. Alba needs a massive reset.
— Leanne Tervit (@LeanneTervit) March 1, 2025
I did, and not only you Leanne. A number of people left the party, with more or less noise, at that time. I was very sorry for it.
— Craig Murray (@CraigMurrayOrg) March 1, 2025
Alex had asked me to stand down in a conversation he had specified was confidential. At that moment I knew nothing about the much wider problems…
Are you kidding?? Rejoin that? No way Craig. You missed the bullying out of many candidates? Maybe you didn’t care but some of us did care an awful lot, yet we were smeared for asking for our results and raising the alarm. I can’t believe you turned a blind eye to cheating
— 💚🤍💜 Can’t Wheesht, Won’t Wheesht (@m1lllavvies) March 1, 2025
I did care a lot. Alex asked me to stand down in a conversation he said was confidential. I did not know at that moment about what had happened to other candidates, I thought it was just me. But when I gound out I still felt bound by the confidentiality.
— Craig Murray (@CraigMurrayOrg) March 1, 2025
It was all strange but I…
Handy there’s nobody to corroborate.
— Middle class woman of a certain age, can be stern (@ipa1869) March 1, 2025
I believe Tasmina was with Alex at the time. And I told a couple of people at the time in confidence - I think Barrhead Boy and Wings.
— Craig Murray (@CraigMurrayOrg) March 1, 2025
Can confirm.
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) March 2, 2025
The same thing happened to me. I was standing for Organisation Convener two days before voting reopened Alex phoned me and asked me to withdraw.
— Denise Findlay 💚🤍💜 (@gracebrod1e) March 1, 2025
Like Craig I did as Alex asked.
He didn’t tell me the reason but asked me to do it out of loyalty to him. https://t.co/5tGHmvPvvZ
Although I believe this is the first time Denise Findlay has spoken publicly about the pressure Alex Salmond put on her to withdraw from the re-run of the Organisation Convener election, it won't be a surprise to readers of this blog, because I touched on it in my post about the rigging of the 2023 internal elections. As you'll recall, when the elections were first held in October 2023, Ms Findlay was re-elected as Organisation Convener and Jacqui Bijster was re-elected as Membership Support Convener - but those results were 'unacceptable' to Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh, who had seemingly given Mr Salmond an ultimatum that the election of both women had to be stopped somehow. So Mr Salmond stepped in to prevent the results being announced, and then simply nullified the results - which he had absolutely no power under the Alba constitution to do, but he somehow bluffed his way through with a ludicrous cock-and-bull story about a non-existent "black dossier". He then announced the elections would be re-run in December, but the intention was always to ensure that Ms Findlay and Ms Bijster weren't even candidates second time around, because they undoubtedly would have won again. So Ms Findlay received a phone call from Mr Salmond putting totally inappropriate pressure on her to stand aside, and exactly the same would have happened to Ms Bijster if she hadn't already long since withdrawn in disgust by then.
What's new to me, though, and I think new to most people, is the revelation that Craig Murray received a similar phone call from Mr Salmond putting pressure on him to step aside after he had already been elected an Ordinary Member of the NEC, and that like Ms Findlay he had reluctantly gone along with the demand. This is entirely consistent with what I was told in early 2021 about Mr Salmond wanting to model his new party on the Brexit Party with himself in total control, and with no internal democracy. I believe he had a rethink after reflecting on how bad a look that would be for any left-of-centre party, so he eventually accepted a system of internal elections, but he never intended that to be anything more than window-dressing. The plan was always to get the people he wanted "elected" by any means necessary, no matter whether fair or foul.
The 2023 elections were manipulated and distorted from top to bottom. The sheer scale of the fiddling looks almost comical in retrospect. The office bearer elections were rigged by the means set out above to overturn the legitimate victories of Ms Findlay and Ms Bijster. The elections for Ordinary NEC Members were initially rigged by means of the notorious pay-per-vote system (and it was done in such a cack-handed manner that the exact results had to be hushed up to prevent people bursting out laughing at how implausible they were), but it seems even that wasn't enough for Mr Salmond and Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh, who quickly got rid of several of the people who had been elected, with Craig being the most high-profile victim (albeit a semi-voluntary one).
I have to say I think Craig is being astoundingly naive in his repetitions of the article of faith that Mr Salmond must have done what he did for good reasons and in the best interests of the independence cause. The reality is that we already know with a high degree of confidence that Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh's jealousy was the reason for the ousting of Ms Findlay and Ms Bijster, and with all due respect to the Sheikh family (like others, I'm a huge fan of the Great Zulfikar Sheikh), who Tas feels jealousy towards has got absolutely nothing to do with whether or not Scotland becomes an independent country. I don't know what the reason was in Craig's own case, but I'd be amazed if it turns out to be any more legitimate. To be blunt, I very much doubt that Mr Salmond told him the truth at the time - I don't think the reason had anything to do with wanting a specific person on the NEC, because if you look at who replaced Craig, there's no real logic for Mr Salmond being so desperate for that to happen. I think it had much more to do with negative reasons for not wanting Craig on the NEC - and those reasons are more likely to have been Tasmina's rather than Mr Salmond's.
As someone who was elected no fewer than six times to various internal roles within Alba, including once as an Ordinary Member of the NEC, I've thought at some length about how I would have reacted if after being elected I'd received the dread phone call from Mr Salmond telling me to withdraw out of personal loyalty to him, simply because he preferred to have someone else in the role. I've written many times about how Mr Salmond was my political hero from the age of 16 until very recently, but frankly if he'd done that to me, no matter how much charm he'd deployed, I'm pretty certain I'd have told him to take a running jump. I'd have said to him that what he was asking was absolutely bloody outrageous, and that he appeared to have no understanding of what democracy is meant to be all about - or no true belief in the concept, at any rate. It's not supposed to be about one man making de facto appointments (under severe pressure from one woman) and everyone else dutifully rubberstamping them for him.
No wonder I was expelled - it was only ever the truly obedient and subservient who were welcome in the Alba Party. It's just a pity that wasn't explained to us in 2021, rather than all the endless guff about a "member-led party". It would have saved so many of us a great deal of stress and upset. We didn't sign up to be used and dumped like that.
I say in all seriousness to the decent Alba members who have not yet been expelled or bullied out of the party that they have literally one last chance to save their party from oblivion, and that will be later this month when the issue of constitutional reform comes up at the party conference. Nothing less than full democratisation and one-member-one-vote will do - and even that won't be enough, you'll need to build in safeguards to ensure transparency and to prevent behind-the-scenes manipulation of elections. Squander this last opportunity, as the leadership will be pressuring you to do, and I truly believe your party will be finished forever. It might stumble on indefinitely as a sort of "zombie party" (like the SDP did after 1990, or as the SSP did after 2007) but in electoral terms it will be an irrelevance and the public will forget it even exists.
Saturday, March 1, 2025
Starmer's cheerleaders need to make up their minds once and for all whether Trump is friend or foe
The US didn't so much elect a president as a personality disorder.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) February 28, 2025
Friday, February 28, 2025
Spain had the "Caudillo". Italy had "Il Duce". Is Chris McEleny planning to set himself up as the "Primus" of a new Alba Party (Continuity Salmondite)?
A number of seasoned McEleny Watchers set up a quiet vigil yesterday to try to pinpoint the exact moment that the great man gave in to the inevitable and altered his Twitter profile to acknowledge that he is no longer General Secretary of the Alba Party. That's now happened, but perhaps more significant than the timing is what he's replaced the old wording with -
"Chris McEleny. General Secretary Primus of Alex Salmond’s Alba Party."
"Primus" of course means "first", so this could just be a particularly ungracious way of acknowledging that there is now a second General Secretary and it's not him. Alternatively, he could be drawing a distinction between what he sees as "Real Alba" or "Salmondite Alba" and the version of the party that he regards as having been overrun by interlopers (you know, interlopers such as Moira Salmond). Perhaps in some strange, metaphysical, almost 'telepathic' way, he regards himself as *still* the General Secretary of the Alba Party, authentic Alba, Salmond Alba.
Maybe this novel distinction will even become formalised, and an "Alba Party (Continuity Salmondite)" will soon be registered with the Electoral Commission, and with one Christopher McEleny listed as the party's "Primus". Such fascist-sounding titles are perhaps not quite as outlandish as they sound given the ongoing flirtaton between McEleny's faction and Reform UK. I know some Alba members were determined to believe yesterday that Sky had stitched up Ash Regan, but actually if you watch the video of her comments in their proper context, it's obvious that they were permeditated, well-rehearsed, and carefully calculated to generate an "I will work with Farage" headline. The intention seems to be to get Reform voters, or Reform-curious voters, to look at Alba afresh and realise that it's the one party that doesn't sneer at the far right or its values. If this was Germany, Alba would look very much like the guilty party that has "broken the firewall".
Contrary to the perceptions of some, there are quite a number of old school socialists within Alba, and they are absolutely furious with Ash Regan for what she did yesterday. But admittedly there are also other Alba members who have some growing sympathy with Donald Trump because of his stance on protecting women's spaces and women's sport, and who see Regan's comments as a welcome recognition that left/right distinctions are becoming less useful. That cultural divide within the party is arguably unbridgeable - and it occurs to me that Ash Regan can count, that she must know Kenny MacAskill is going to defeat her for the leadership, and that her flirtation with Reform is therefore going to make it hard for her to play a prominent role in a MacAskill-led party. So why is she doubling down and making the rift even worse?
I still can't escape the conclusion that she's looking beyond her time in Alba and is preparing the ground for when she and McEleny strike out on their own in some form.
Thursday, February 27, 2025
Alba civil war escalates into total carnage as McEleny's suspension is upgraded to an outright SACKING for gross misconduct, with strong hints he will also face EXPULSION from the party - this could mean his desperate attempts to stand for depute leader will count for nothing as his nominations are likely to be NULLIFIED
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
The horrors of the Alba dystopia continue as Christina Hendry seemingly bullies a former party member with threats of legal action if a perfectly legitimate tweet is not deleted
Labour slump to new post-election low of 23%, and a dismal third place, in new More In Common poll
GB-wide voting intentions (More In Common, 21st-24th February 2025):
Tuesday, February 25, 2025
The day that Labour and the Tories both moved to the right - and Scottish independence arguably became more likely as a result
FOURTH YouGov poll in a row shows a Reform lead - but SNP have massive 22-point lead in the Scottish subsample
Labour 24% (-1)
Conservatives 22% (+1)
Liberal Democrats 16% (+2)
Greens 8% (-1)
SNP 3% (-)
Plaid Cymru 1% (-)
Scottish subsample: SNP 39%, Labour 17%, Conservatives 15%, Reform UK 14%, Liberal Democrats 10%, Greens 4%
I hate to disappoint our resident Reform-supporting troll, but in one key sense Reform are not AfD - they are not popular with the young. The poll shows just 9% of 18-24 year olds would vote Reform, compared to 30% of over-50s.
And in spite of the hype about Reform's breakthrough in Scotland, support for the party north of the border remains only half of what is being seen in both England and Wales. One very simple explanation is the continuing massive correlation between support for Reform and support for Brexit. Across Britain, 48% of Leave voters from 2016 are now in the Reform column, compared to just 6% of Remain voters - and of course in Scotland there are simply far fewer Leave voters than there are elsewhere in the UK.