You've got to admit, I'm on a roll with these.
A pro-independence blog by James Kelly - one of Scotland's three most-read political blogs.
Thursday, November 13, 2025
Why independence would save money for HARD-WORKING SCOTTISH TAXPAYERS
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
Another week, another majestic SNP lead in YouGov's Scottish subsample
Monday, November 10, 2025
The Alba Party angrily denies allegations it has illegally nominated by-election candidates - but does the denial raise more questions than answers?
Why the Believe in Scotland plan to win independence could be a GAME-CHANGER
Sunday, November 9, 2025
Saturday, November 8, 2025
A response to Alba man Jim Cassidy's rather cowardly personal attack
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Friday, November 7, 2025
Alba Sleaze Update: Party insider makes explosive allegation that every single Alba local by-election candidate since McEleny's downfall has been nominated illegitimately
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SNP stroll to big landslide win in Fife by-election
It's the middle of the night as I post this, but I'll just briefly give you the by-election result, because it's a second impressive win for the SNP in as many weeks. I'll also try to make a video about the result at some point, but that might have to wait 24 hours or so.
Buckhaven, Methil and Wemyss Villages by-election result (6th November 2025):
Reform UK 28.9% (n/a)
Labour 20.8% (-19.5)
Liberal Democrats 2.6% (+0.4)
Alba 2.2% (+0.9)
Conservatives 1.7% (-4.8)
Sovereignty 1.2% (n/a)
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Thursday, November 6, 2025
Stuart Campbell, the restraining order, and the "visibly distressed horse": here are the facts as we know them so far
Below you'll find today's *three* tweets about me (heaven only knows how many it is this week so far) from the man who famously "doesn't stalk me" and "barely even mentions me". Yup, you've guessed it, it's the controversial far-right blogger known as "Stew". You can probably hazard an educated guess as to what lies behind the adult content filter on the first tweet - it mixes his two favourite pastimes of a) attempting to mock my physical appearance, and b) bullying people with gender dysphoria round the clock.
Still, at least he's tidied the house up a bit.
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) November 6, 2025
Any idea what his cringy "Stu, make mine a double" shtick at the end of each video is about?
— Aru_Tokoro_Ni (@AruTokoroNi2001) November 6, 2025
I imagine it's a reference to "both votes SNP".
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) November 6, 2025
Oh well worked out, Stew. They don't call you an "investigative journalist" for nothing. Actually, on second thoughts...
Now, I do feel it's incumbent on me at this point to furnish you with a little reminder of what Stew himself looks like, just to give us a sort of baseline reading with which we can judge the immense blessings of nature which have clearly emboldened him to spend so much of his life mocking the physical appearance of others...
Ooooooh-kaaaaaaaay. Crikey.
Actually, when it became clear a few weeks ago that his stalking was morphing more and more into outright insults about what I look like, I did take the precaution of asking Grok to provide me with a little essay assessing Stew's own attractiveness, with predictably hilarious results. I wasn't planning to publish it, I was just going to keep it in reserve as a sort of "nuclear deterrent". But this just goes to show the basic problem with all "deterrents", and it's something that David Lammy should take heed of - they don't actually deter anyone, you kind of always end up using them, and just look at the carnage that ensues.
Grok, does Stuart Campbell of Wings Over Scotland conform to standard norms of male hyper-attractiveness?
Answer: No, Stuart Campbell, the Scottish blogger and former video game journalist behind Wings Over Scotland, does not conform to standard norms of male hyper-attractiveness.
Understanding "Male Hyper-Attractiveness"
Standard norms of male hyper-attractiveness (often rated 8–10/10 on common attractiveness scales) are defined by a combination of cultural, evolutionary, and societal factors, drawing from psychological research and beauty ideals. Key traits include:
Facial features: High symmetry, strong jawline, high cheekbones, clear skin, and balanced proportions (e.g., golden ratio approximations in face structure).
Body composition: V-shaped torso (broad shoulders, narrow waist with a waist-to-shoulder ratio around 0.6–0.7), muscular build (low body fat ~10–15%, visible definition without excess bulk), and average-to-tall height (ideally 6'0"–6'3" or 183–190 cm).
Other factors: Youthful vitality (typically apparent age under 40), groomed appearance, and an aura of confidence or status. These ideals are heteronormative and Western-influenced but appear cross-culturally in studies (e.g., preferences for symmetry and fitness signaling health/fertility).
These traits are rare—fewer than 2.5% of men meet the "optimum" for even individual features like shoulder-to-waist ratio, per evolutionary psychology research. Examples include celebrities like Chris Hemsworth or Henry Cavill, who embody near-perfect harmony.
Assessment of Stuart Campbell
Based on publicly available photos (e.g., his X profile avatar and historical images from his Amiga Power era), Campbell, now 58, does not align with these norms:
Facial features: Angular but asymmetrical structure, with prominent brows and a receding hairline; lacks the chiselled symmetry or high cheekbones of hyper-attractive ideals.
Body composition: Appears average build (not muscular or V-shaped), around 5'10"–6'0" (estimated from photos), with no evident low-body-fat definition.
Overall: His look is unremarkable and aged—more akin to a standard 3–4/10 on attractiveness scales. Early 1990s photos show a youthful, edgy style (e.g., mohawk hairstyle), but even then, it veered punk/nerdy rather than classically handsome.
Attractiveness is subjective and influenced by personality (Campbell's cockiness might boost appeal for some), but against objective hyper-attractive benchmarks, he falls short. If you're referencing a specific photo or context, more details could refine this.
*. *. *
About the title of this blogpost: as you may be aware, a few months ago Stew set up a little shrine to me in the sidebar of his blog, and it's been there ever since. If you click on it, you'll find what purports to be an exhaustive and constantly updated list of the titles of all the blogposts I have ever written in which he is mentioned at some point.
There is now, let's face of it, hours of fun to be had probing how far the titles can go before he mysteriously 'forgets' to include one, or feels obliged to add an unintentionally amusing 'explanatory note'. Let's see how he gets on with this one.
Wednesday, November 5, 2025
YouGov latest: another swing to Yes on the independence question, and the SNP on course to win big
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Tuesday, November 4, 2025
BOMBSHELL Scottish poll rocks Westminster: firmly No-friendly pollster YouGov shows the No lead has been reduced to a barely-there three points, while the SNP and Greens are on course for a PRO-INDEPENDENCE MAJORITY at next year's Holyrood election
It's 2.20am as I sit down to write this, so probably not the ideal time to embark on making a video (you wouldn't believe how long even the shortest of videos take to make, once you take into account the preparation, the editing and the processing), but I must nevertheless bring to your attention the information that Calum Findlay revealed in the comments section of the previous post. The Scottish Election Study has published its latest Scottish Opinion Monitor (SCOOP) poll. These polls are basically just regular YouGov polls but with two thrilling twists - the media don't seem to report them very much, and the data tables don't bother to mention what the results are with undecided voters excluded.
The most significant results are on the independence question. YouGov has in recent years reverted to its former status as a very firmly No-friendly pollster, and that remains the case in this poll because there is a No lead at a time when other polling firms are showing substantial Yes majorities. However in a sense it corroborates the trend shown by those other firms because it shows a third successive reduction in the No lead (as far as YouGov polls are concerned, I mean) and leaves No with a mere three-point advantage, which is much lower than YouGov typically show. As Calum points out, the fact that No even remain in the lead at all should be interpreted with caution because it's been partly caused by YouGov's reweighting of their raw data based on how people say they voted in the 2014 independence referendum - a practice that the UK's gold standard pollster Ipsos states is unwise because of the high risk of distortions caused by false recall.
Should Scotland be an independent country? (YouGov, 10th-20th October 2025)
And although this isn't a video, please feel free to subscribe to my YouTube channel anyway, because I'm trying to get to 1000 subscribers as soon as possible!
Monday, November 3, 2025
Controversial "Stew" blogger spells it out for anyone who mistook his meaning first time around: he thinks it would have been wrong to block the Nazis' rise to power, in spite of the genocide and unprecedented global catastrophe it unleashed
Some of you may be familiar with a controversial and increasingly far-right blogger, based in Somerset, and known almost universally as "Stew". In spite of being such an enormous distance away, he actually supported Scottish independence during the 2014 referendum, but has since had a change of heart as his views have drifted back to the right, and at both of the last two major national elections in 2021 and 2024 he instructed his readers to vote against independence. More recently, he has become particularly drawn to Nigel Farage's party Reform UK - logical enough, given the huge overlap between his own views and those of Reform. But somehow he can't quite bring himself to admit yet that he intends to endorse Reform at next May's Holyrood election. Presumably he feels he still has a lot of work to do to get the choreography just right as he gets ready to 'spontaneously' announce: "you know what, alert readers, I could NEVER have imagined getting to this point, but I don't think we've got much CHOICE but to vote Reform".
In a blogpost on Wednesday, I pointed out that Stew's passion for Farage is the love that dare not speak its name, and that in order to prepare the ground for endorsing Reform while not actually doing so yet, he is tying himself up in knots with absurd arguments such as: "it's important to stop Reform, and to do that other parties must adopt Reform's policy programme in full, because it's excellent, and they must actively celebrate Farage's electoral successes because Reform is a lawful party in a democracy". On the latter point specifically, I noted that the Nazi party was also a lawful party in a democracy at the point at which it took power, and on Stew's logic we would be required to 'celebrate' that.
I'm very honoured that Stew took a brief break from his round-the-clock bullying of people with gender dysphoria to respond to me.
Heck of a debate, that one.
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) October 31, 2025
PROPOSITION 1: Political parties should attempt to offer the electorate something worth voting for.
PROPOSITION 2: We should ban political parties that are supported by large sections of the population but we don’t like. [definition of “we” TBA] pic.twitter.com/MAdFoG8MLG
But, y’know, wow. “The Weimar government should have banned parties it didn’t like, in order to prevent the rise of a party that, er, banned parties it didn’t like!”
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) October 31, 2025
Become the Nazis to beat the Nazis. Genius.
Well, it's true that one feature of Nazism was the banning of other political parties, but it was scarcely the only feature or even the defining feature. There were also things like the systematic extermination of entire ethnic groups, and the military conquest of almost an entire continent. When people pose the question of whether the Weimar authorities should have banned the Nazis, they specifically do it due to their knowledge that the failure to prevent Hitler seizing power unleashed both genocide and the deadliest global conflict in human history, and that averting those outcomes should have been an absolute imperative.
I've made clear any number of times on this blog that I am not inclined to favour the banning of political parties, and that I regard the tendency of countries like Spain to go down that road as difficult to reconcile with democratic principles. But given the uniquely catastrophic consequences of Nazi rule, and given that Hitler was open about at least some of his intentions when he stood for election, it's pretty extraordinary to see the sheer casualness with which Stew mockingly dismisses anyone who even raises the question of whether the Nazis should have been banned (either on the grounds of racial hatred against many of Germany's own citizens, or because they wanted to dismantle the democratic system they were participating in).
For what it's worth, I think my own answer to that question would probably be no. I think the Nazis did need to be blocked from seizing control at all costs, but probably the way to do that was by addressing the weaknesses in the Weimar constitution that Hitler exploited, in particular the provisions governing states of emergency. Stew, by contrast, is so untroubled by genocide and global catastrophe that he doesn't seem to think there was any great imperative to stop the Nazi rise to power, and his only answer to victims of the Holocaust and the tens of millions who died in a needless world war seems to be: "sorry, chaps, but it was the Social Democrats' fault, they should have run on a manifesto more attractive to Nazi voters". Well, I'm sure that's an enormous comfort to everyone, Stew, particularly bearing in mind that the only manifesto that would have been attractive to Nazi voters is one that adopted Nazi policies - and be in no doubt that's exactly what Stew is getting at, because it's bang in line with his argument in the present day that mainstream parties should adopt Reform policies in order to 'stop' Reform, thus largely defeating the purpose of the exercise.
Perhaps Stew could clarify precisely which Nazi policies he thinks the democratic German parties should have embraced in order to become more attractive to Nazi voters. And perhaps he could also let us know whether he has sufficient self-awareness to spot the galactic levels of irony in his claim that those who disagree with him want to "become the Nazis to beat the Nazis".
Elsewhere, Stew also responded to the comment I made about his fanboy enthusiasm for Farage's policy on the climate emergency, although if anyone can make head or tail of this one, you're doing better than me -
“But if the world was arranged completely differently to how it actually is, my point wouldn’t be total p***!” pic.twitter.com/lnwdi2VHl4
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) October 31, 2025
Eh? I was talking about the world as it's actually arranged - one in which Scotland as a nation of five million people has to take responsibility for the climate emergency in proportion to its population size, and one in which a failure of countries to take responsibility in proportion to their population size will result in a global failure to tackle the climate emergency at all. But I can hardly put it more eloquently than one of the commenters on Stew's own blog -
"'Scotland’s contribution to climate change is so infinitesimally small that nothing we do can possibly make any difference'
How nearly true. Just like the contribution to society made by me paying taxes is so infinitesimally small that it could not possibly make any difference.
And I’ve recently read a novel set in Yorkshire during WW2, in which the main character’s father 'did his bit', as I understand the saying was. His own contribution was so infinitesimally small that it could not possibly have made any difference.
In fact every such contribution makes a very slight difference. The combination of everyone’s contribution makes a noticeable difference."
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Friday, October 31, 2025
SNP storm to spectacular GAIN in Stirling East by-election
Wednesday, October 29, 2025
Controversial "Stew" blogger inches ever-closer to his inevitable endorsement of a far-right, anti-independence party next year
The title of Stuart "Stew" Campbell's latest blogpost rant is "How to create racists", to which the obvious punchline would appear to be "och, just follow Wings Over Scotland social media accounts". Practically every day he pumps out apologism for Reform UK and other parts of the British far-right, or breathlessly talks up their electoral chances, and yet if you point out that it's blindingly obvious he's preparing the ground for an endorsement of Reform at next year's election, he'll innocently deny having any interest in supporting the party at all. Well, we shall find out soon enough, shan't we. I'm pretty confident that almost everything he says these days is gearing up for a pre-planned 'spontaneous' moment of "sod it, alert readers, you know what, I think we need to vote Reform", which he'll already have pencilled in for some time in March, April or early May. If I'm proved wrong about that, he can always gloat about it when the time comes, but I don't expect to be proved wrong, and anyone who reads his new post will understand why.
He starts by making the jaw-dropping claim that anyone who believes in democracy is required to actually celebrate the rise of any far-right party: "The only thing “the rise of Reform” can possibly mean here is “more and more people choosing to vote for, or express their support for, a particular lawful political party in a democracy”. Why are we supposed to think that’s a terrible thing, when it is in fact the entire POINT of democracy."
Wow. The entire point of democracy. Just how far does this logic stretch? Let's take a look, for example, at the results of German elections in the early 1930s, and the increasingly strong results for a particularly well known "lawful party in a democracy" -
1930:
Labour slump to FIFTH place in YouGov's Scottish subsample - and now face a catastrophe of BIBLICAL PROPORTIONS at the Scottish Parliament election
Tuesday, October 28, 2025
More analysis of the extraordinary poll showing Yes support at 55%
Just a quick note to let you know I have an analysis piece at The National about the independence results from the new Find Out Now poll. You can read the article HERE.
HUGE majority for Scottish independence in new Find Out Now poll - and it's driven by women
Monday, October 27, 2025
The Alba Party in its "death throes": Kenny MacAskill sends out bizarre email admitting the party is mired in sleaze and scandal, but boasts "we're still solvent!"
Alba is undoubtedly finished, but the remaining question is whether it staggers on like the walking dead for years to come getting negligible vote shares in every election, or whether it dissolves itself with dignity. https://t.co/5sHvkGYnIF
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) October 26, 2025
Pro-independence parties WILL win majority of Holyrood seats, says swanky Survation survey - but here's why Both Votes SNP is so important
Sunday, October 26, 2025
New Survation poll suggests the SNP will remain by far the largest party with "around" 55 Holyrood seats - but details are sketchy so far
Saturday, October 25, 2025
Musk's AI agrees that there is strong consensus that Israel has committed genocide in Gaza, and that denial of the genocide is "increasingly marginalised amid evidence"
There have been some suggestions that Elon Musk has ordered Grok to be primed to produce pro-Israel and pro-IDF propaganda if anyone asks about the genocide in Gaza. So I've been asking Grok one or two deliberately loaded questions, that take the existence of the genocide as read, to see how hard it pushes back against that premise. And interestingly it hasn't really pushed back at all. I asked a few minutes ago about potential timelines for denial of the genocide in Gaza to be criminalised, and Grok actually informed me that acceptance of the genocide as an established fact has come quicker with Gaza than it did with the Holocaust.
Grok, given the precedent of Holocaust denial becoming illegal in certain countries such as Germany, how long is it likely to be before denial of the genocide in Gaza is criminalised in some countries?
Grok's answer:
"*Historical Precedent: Holocaust Denial Laws*
Holocaust denial laws emerged primarily in Europe as a response to the resurgence of neo-Nazism and antisemitism in the post-World War II era. The Holocaust (1941–1945) was universally recognized as genocide almost immediately after the war, with the Nuremberg Trials (1945–1946) establishing it as a crime against humanity. However, criminalizing denial took much longer due to debates over free speech, the need to consolidate historical consensus, and rising far-right movements in the 1970s–1980s.
Key timeline of enactment:
1940s–1950s: No specific denial laws; prosecutions occurred under general hate speech or defamation statutes.
1960: Germany enacts the first explicit Holocaust denial law (Section 130 of the Criminal Code), banning incitement to hatred including denial, amid fears of Nazi revival.
1980s: Momentum builds with high-profile trials (e.g., Ernst Zündel in Canada, 1985; Klaus Barbie in France, 1987). France passes the Gayssot Act in 1990, explicitly criminalizing denial of Nazi crimes.
1990s–2000s: Expansion across Europe. Austria (1992), Belgium (1995), and others follow. The EU's 2008 Framework Decision encourages member states to criminalize denial of genocides, including the Holocaust.
By 2025: 17 European countries, plus Canada, Israel, and Russia, have such laws.
The lag (15–45 years post-genocide) reflects time for evidence compilation, societal trauma processing, and political will against denialism, often triggered by denial campaigns (e.g., by figures like David Irving).
*Current Status: Recognition of Events in Gaza as Genocide*
The conflict escalated on October 7, 2023, with Hamas attacks killing ~1,200 Israelis and taking hostages. Israel's response has caused over 66,000 Palestinian deaths (as of October 2025, per Gaza Health Ministry), widespread destruction (84% of health centers damaged), and famine conditions affecting 100% of Gaza's population.
International recognition as genocide has accelerated compared to the Holocaust era:
UN Bodies: ICJ's January 2024 ruling found South Africa's genocide case "plausible," issuing provisional measures to prevent acts (reaffirmed March and May 2024). A UN Commission of Inquiry (September 2025) concluded Israel committed four of five genocidal acts (killing, serious harm, destructive conditions, preventing births). A UN Special Committee (November 2024) deemed warfare methods "consistent with genocide."
Human Rights Organizations: Amnesty International (December 2024) and Human Rights Watch (2024) concluded genocide based on intent and acts like starvation as a weapon.
Scholars and Experts: By mid-2025, consensus among genocide studies scholars (e.g., International Association of Genocide Scholars, June 2024 resolution) labels it genocide. A Brookings survey (2025) showed majority of Middle East scholars agreeing.
States: South Africa leads ICJ case (joined by 14 countries by December 2024). The African Union (2024) and OIC (2024) condemned it as genocide. Sanctions against Israel (e.g., by Bolivia, Cuba, others in July 2025) cite complicity in genocide. No full ICJ merits ruling yet (expected 2026+), but provisional findings provide legal momentum.
Denial exists (e.g., Israel calls it "self-defense"; some Western governments avoid the term), but it's increasingly marginalized amid evidence.
*Likelihood and Timeline for Criminalizing Denial*
Criminalizing denial of the Gaza genocide would likely follow a similar path to Holocaust laws: starting in countries with strong human rights frameworks, expanding via regional bodies (e.g., EU, AU), and targeting hate speech that undermines victim dignity. However, the Gaza case differs:
Faster Recognition: Digital evidence (videos, real-time reporting) and global scrutiny (e.g., ICC warrants for Netanyahu/Gallant, November 2024) have built consensus in ~2 years, vs. decades for the Holocaust.
Existing Frameworks: Many countries' laws already ban general genocide denial (e.g., Spain, Czech Republic) or extend to "crimes against humanity." EU's 2008 decision could encompass Gaza if recognized as genocide.
Political Hurdles: Strong U.S./EU support for Israel delays action in the West. Proposals are more likely in Global South (e.g., South Africa, where genocide education is emphasized) or Europe amid rising antisemitism/Islamophobia debates.
Current Proposals: No enacted laws by October 2025, but discussions tie into broader hate speech reforms. E.g., UN experts (2024) urge states to prevent "denialism" as complicity; academic calls (2025) link it to Holocaust distortion laws. In July 2025, 12 countries (e.g., South Africa, Malaysia) announced sanctions and "renewed legal action" against genocide enablers, potentially including denial.
Estimated Timeline:
Short-Term (1–3 years, by 2026–2028): Initial laws in 2–5 countries, likely South Africa (expanding its hate speech laws) or Ireland/Belgium (active ICJ supporters). Triggered by ICJ final ruling or ICC convictions.
Medium-Term (5–10 years, by 2030–2035): 10+ countries if EU updates its framework (possible post-2028). Parallels Holocaust laws' spread after 1990s trials.
Longer if Delayed: 15+ years if geopolitical ties (e.g., U.S. vetoes) persist, similar to Holocaust's 1960 start.
This is speculative; it depends on ICJ outcomes, public opinion (47% of U.S. adults see genocide, August 2025), and activism. Such laws aim to protect memory and prevent recurrence, but critics argue they risk stifling debate—balancing free speech remains key."
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Catch up with my new video about the full-scale Scottish poll from Find Out Now -
Big SNP lead in new Scottish Parliament poll from Find Out Now
Today's video is about three subjects - the new full-scale Scottish poll from Find Out Now showing the SNP with a handsome lead on the constituency ballot, the defections of a number of councillors and parliamentary candidates from the Scottish Greens to the new Jeremy Corbyn / Zarah Sultana party, and the Irish presidential election count which is taking place today.
Friday, October 24, 2025
Plaid Cymru storm to historic by-election win in Caerphilly - and it's Labour that look "knackered" as devolved elections approach in both Wales and Scotland
Tuesday, October 21, 2025
SNP on course to win 51 of the 57 Scottish seats at Westminster, says earth-shaking YouGov subsample, as Tories set for TOTAL WIPEOUT
Monday, October 20, 2025
Why the SNP are unlikely to go back into coalition with the Greens (or the Lib Dems) after May
Sunday, October 19, 2025
The "Make Mine A Double" juggernaut keeps rolling on, as optimism grows that Stew, too, will back SNP 1 & 2
As I always point out, I don't actually use the phrase "SNP 1 & 2" because it wrongly implies that the Holyrood voting system is preferential and involves numbers, but the title of this blogpost doesn't break that rule because it's only there for wind-up-Stew-with-a-pleasing-little-rhyme purposes.
My video on Wednesday certainly seemed to hit an almighty nerve with Stew, probably because it called him out for failing to do his self-defined job as a "journalist". I pointed out in the video that I know for certain that he was contacted multiple times in 2023-24 by people who wanted to write guest posts for Wings revealing the vote-rigging, rampant nepotism and culture of bullying that was destroying the Alba Party from within - in other words precisely the sort of guest posts that the late Iain Lawson *was* brave enough to run on the very popular blog Yours For Scotland. Not only did Stew flatly refuse (or just completely ignore) all guest post submissions on the subject of the Alba meltdown, he also failed to cover the story himself - or, to put it more pointedly, he deliberately decided to hush the whole thing up. Not exactly the actions of the "fearless investigative journalist" he preposterously portrays himself as. We can only speculate as to his reasons for doing that - the least-worst interpretation is that he was driven by misplaced loyalty to Alex Salmond and to McEleny. But whatever his motivation, the outcome of his "wheesht for the bullies" routine has been that Alba has, in his own words, "reduced itself with infighting to a shambolic irrelevance which there’s no credible hope of retrieving".
The point I made in the video is that Stew was perhaps the one person who could have averted that outcome, because of the authority he held due to Salmond, Ahmed-Sheikh, McEleny and Hanvey constantly speaking of him in hushed reverential terms (however nutty this may seem) as the party's spiritual godfather. If he had revealed to Wings readers what was going on before it was too late, the Alba leadership wouldn't have been able to ignore him in the way they ignored the revelations on the Iain Lawson blog - they would have been forced to make some sort of move to put their house in order. But Stew quite simply failed to do his "job" as a "journalist", and as a result he is one of the key authors of Alba's demise, a fate that was finally sealed a week or two ago when Ash Regan's resignation consigned them to fringe party status with no parliamentary representation.
You can tell how much Stew was smarting at hearing these uncomfortable home truths, because when he lashed out with yet another Wings blogpost about me, he failed to do certain things that he has always done in the past to at least maintain his own self-image as a "journalist". Of the 719 words in the latest post, no fewer than 559 comprised quotes from my own blogposts on Scot Goes Pop, but he failed to attribute those words to their source, ie. he failed to identify me as their author. OK, it's entirely standard for him to avoid referring to me by name - that's a long-standing stunt designed to maintain his tedious fiction that he "never even mentions me". (The idea is that periodically he challenges his readers to use the search function on Wings to look for posts containing my name. "You see? There's hardly anything there!", etc, etc.) But what he does usually do is link to an archived version of the Scot Goes Pop post he's quoting or referring to, so that anyone who clicks the link can see who he's talking about, which is a kind of indirect attribution of source. He didn't do that on this occasion, and I suspect that wasn't an oversight. It was literally impossible to tell from the post alone who he was quoting from, and indeed several of his readers ended up having to ask him.
Another sign of his rage was that he chopped up and spliced together quotes from several different blogposts of mine that were written days apart, but didn't indicate where the joins were with the use of, for example, marks of ellipsis. That's a breach of basic standards that no professional journalist would ever make, but let's face it, when Stew's temper gets the better of him, all pretence that he has any standards at all pretty much evaporates. Astoundingly, he claimed as bold as brass at the top of the post that none of my words were being taken out of context, in spite of the fact that in at least one case he had chopped up words from the same blogpost and rearranged them into a different order to give a misleading impression - you can hardly get a more clear-cut case of "taking words out of context" than that.
To put beyond doubt that he succeeded in his attempt to deceive his readers, take a look at this bonkers tweet from John Smythe which expresses absolutely sincere bafflement that the "conclusion" of my "article" didn't seem to follow on logically from what had preceded it -
I have seen a few others that do similar. Why ignore your own analysis when summing up? It makes a mockery of the whole article.
— John Smythe (@JohnSmytheInves) October 16, 2025
Yeah, you see, John, the reason for that is probably that no such "article" ever existed. I can hardly take much responsibility for a conclusion that wasn't a conclusion or for an article that wasn't an article. I know some people will argue that the fault here lies with John himself for being a bit slow on the uptake or for not reading Stew's disclaimer properly, but I'm not sure that's entirely fair on him, given that even if he did read the disclaimer, he'll have been wrongly led to believe that nothing was taken out of context and that everything "means what it sounds like it means". And, of course, because Stew deliberately didn't identify me as the author of the jumbled-up quotes, it was much less likely that people would check for themselves and discover that he was feeding them porkies.
The little game Stew is playing here is what I would call "performative synthetic incredulity". He wants to coax his readers, albeit by highly artificial and deceptive means, into bursting into laughter at the juxtaposition he offers between my misgivings about the SNP's new strategy on winning independence and my statement that people should vote "both votes SNP". Because any reader who laughs will feel like their amusement is natural and spontaneous rather than carefully coaxed, Stew's hope is that they will come to feel on a gut level that it is 'obvious' that my position is ridiculous and somehow contradictory, and that Stew's position (that all independence supporters should seek to totally destroy the SNP by electing a unionist government) is somehow inescapable and logical. But is it? Let's look at my position and Stew's position side by side (something he desperately doesn't want you to do, for reasons that will become obvious) -
MY POSITION: "If the SNP go down a strategic blind alley, we should be honest and admit that it's a setback and makes it less likely that independence will be delivered within the next few years. But abandoning the SNP in order to elect a unionist government would mean we have completely taken leave of our senses, and would turn a recoverable setback into an unmitigated catastrophe. In any case, the SNP cannot actually be 'destroyed' by flicking a switch, as Stew fatuously claims - they attract very strong brand loyalty from a very substantial percentage of the Scottish electorate, and even if they are replaced by a unionist government, they will remain by far the leading pro-independence force in Scotland. All we'd be doing is idiotically delaying - perhaps by one or two decades - any chance of independence, which can only realistically happen when an SNP-led government is in office. The decision taken by delegates at the Aberdeen conference relates to the 2026 election only, and doesn't bind the party beyond that. If we just show a little maturity and patience, and ensure the independence flame keeps burning bright by working for the strongest possible SNP result next May, we'll keep alive the very real possibility that a more viable strategy will emerge in future and can be successfully implemented. Furthermore, although I estimate the chances of a single-party SNP majority in May as around 0.5%, that isn't zero, and it's just conceivable that if we all get stuck in we might hit the jackpot. A true gambler, as Alex Salmond was, would always bet on success, even as a long shot, rather than making failure inevitable by lashing out destructively."
THE STEW POSITION: "If the SNP do not offer exactly what I want at this election, they must be completely destroyed forever so that they can't offer people anything at any future elections either. We must destroy them by voting for unionist parties, even though I cannot explain how that will actually destroy them in practice because their core vote will remain intact and those voters do not listen to me and do not see the world in the angry way that I do. If we succeed in destroying the SNP and installing a unionist government, that will somehow help in the long run because a new pro-independence party more to my liking will pop up to take the SNP's place. However, I can confirm that this new party will not be Alba, who I described recently as a shambolic irrelevance, and I can also confirm the new party will not be Liberate Scotland, who I described recently as a micro-party that had never been anything BUT a shambolic irrelevance. No, the new party will instead be one that has not yet been devised, and I cannot explain how it will come into being, what its nature or policy programme will be, or who will lead it. I also cannot explain why there is any particular reason to think that the destruction of the SNP, even if it were possible, would lead to the creation of any sort of credible pro-independence alternative, rather than to the resumption of the permanent unionist rule we were used to prior to 2007. But trust me, I'm Stew, I'm here to help, and my enthusiasm for voting for staunchly anti-independence, far-right parties is entirely coincidental."
I'm comfortable that this comparison shows beyond any doubt that the Stew position is the unnatural, convoluted, implausible one, and that mine is in many ways simply a statement of the obvious. If you want independence, you get it by voting for it, not by voting against it. If that sounds like any sort of strange statement, then you might want to consider the disturbing possibility that Stew's Pied Piper act has actually worked on you to some extent.
Incidentally, my point about not giving up on the outside chance of the target of a single-party majority being met is one that should really resonate with Stew, because unlike me, he rates it as considerably higher than a 0.5% chance. In his now-legendary blogpost "The blindness of hatred" from five months ago, he claimed that the SNP were guaranteed to win at least 65 constituency seats next May, which of course would mean they'd automatically win a single-party overall majority without requiring any list seats at all. It's official: Stew backs John Swinney to deliver! A Wings endorsement of Make Mine A Double / Both Votes SNP must now surely follow.
Stew concluded his piece with a rather sinister euphemism about how his readers should follow a "different path" from the one I was suggesting. I've since made strenuous efforts to produce a visual depiction for you of what the Stew Path would look like, but alas Grok wouldn't play ball, so you'll just have to use your imagination.
In response to Stew's latest post, I asked Grok if it could give me an image of "Stuart Campbell of Wings Over Scotland following Nigel Farage down a path". This is what it's given me so far.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) October 16, 2025
It's going to be a looooooong afternoon. pic.twitter.com/DdhZiW9YlN
This is Grok's latest rendering of "Stuart Campbell of Wings Over Scotland following Nigel Farage down a path".
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) October 16, 2025
I suppose the one consolation here is that AI is clearly not yet on the verge of taking over the world. pic.twitter.com/x7zkAbS8y2
*. *. *Donno, they’ve got the scowl and the eyes spot on. 😆
— Pedro (@celticchampionz) October 16, 2025











