The US didn't so much elect a president as a personality disorder.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) February 28, 2025
A pro-independence blog by James Kelly - one of Scotland's three most-read political blogs.
Saturday, March 1, 2025
Starmer's cheerleaders need to make up their minds once and for all whether Trump is friend or foe
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.