A new poll reported in The National (for whom I am a columnist) last night showed that support for Scottish independence appears to be growing rapidly:
Only a month ago, another survey run by the same pollster only found a four-point lead for Scottish independence. The ratio of support was 52% to 48% at that time. Excluding don't knows, it is now 55% to 45%.
With Plaid Cymru having now won the Caerphilly by-election by a comfortable margin, the signs are that the demands for independence are growing by the day.
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Apologies for what follows: the ratios are similar to the brexit vote, which very succesfully divided the country, made it materailly worse off and has led to the rise of Deform. I’m not saying the same would happen in Scotland, merely that there might need to be wider support (60/40?).
For the avoidance of doubt, I support Scottish independence. There is still much the Scottish gov could do to use as examples to the people of Scotland: “we did this/delivered that, we could have done more but Wezzie stopped us” etc. Energy (nope won’t start that broken record) is one area, transport another, food etc. If a gov is delivering, doing its best, but is “stymied by Starmer” (did you like that?) etc then it will build support for indy ref. What won’t is endless infighting. If the SNP was a stable, solid party/gov perhaps support for independence would be even higher. Feel free to tear me to pieces.
Quite a lot to agree with
Although that margin is good enough for me
And you appear to be basing you comment on the odler data, not the latest
Mike, good points: the SNP is in better shape than any of the other parties, but it needs a more definitive plan for the route to independence. A lot of Indy supporters are rightly angry that little progress has been made, but on the other hand, the SNP has done a fine job of mitigating some of the worst policy choices of Westminster so-called governments. That, after all is what a decent government should do: protect it’s people in hard times.
What is urgently required is a coherent plan that gets the dissidents back on board, which will go a long way to rectify the anomaly of more people in favour of Indy than of the only party capable of delivering it. The 2026 Holyrood election isn’t far off, so another tactic would be to declare that an independent Scotland would be a republic. Polls suggest this would boost the Indy vote by 10 per cent and produce a Yes vote of c65 per cent. Westminster could scarcely brush that aside.
I like the sound of this but worry constantly that Scots will simply join the euro in which case………
I do hope that Scotland’s ‘elite’ are up to the job. It’s all very well wanting not to be in a union with of fascist state called ‘In-ger- land’ which is understandable, but what about afterwards?
I have a blog on Scottish currency coming
Joining the EU would commit Scotland to joining the Euro. However, there doesn’t appear to be a time frame for meeting the criteria. Sweden has been a member state for thirty years, and the Czech Republic, Poland and Hungary for over twenty, and each retains their currency. In the absence of pressure to comply, there’s no reason for the post-independence Scottish government to rush into it.
Precisely…
Couple of points, one in response to Mike Parr and the other to PSR. Mike first, the SNPs wins which you suggest should be trumpeted more are pretty trivial, largely due to the financial constraints of devolution (baby boxes, slightly lower taxes, better welfare payments etc.). The big wins can only come with independence, in particular through energy which as you suggest, the SNP and other pro indy Parties should be shouting from the rooftops (highest electricity bills in the UK despite being in energy surplus), the potential uses for that excess energy, e.g. hydrogen production and export. Second point to PSR, you say you ‘hope the Scottish ‘elite’ are up to the job’. That’s a canard that’s been thrown at countless emerging independent States over the years; think of the democracies that came out of the USSR, Singapore and Malta for example. Able people are plentiful in Scotland, particularly given our excellent Universities. Given the right circumstances I’m confident the ‘right’ people will emerge.
I am too
Yes, mind the Euro….
There is never a need for Scotland to join the euro. It just makes sure it never meets the convergence criteria.
There is no need for Scotland to join the EU. EFTA is a much better fit. We have more in common with Scandinavia, and Scotland is small enough to be a member of that club. It would be much better for us to trade on an equal friendly footing with our neighbour to the south than to be swamped by it as has happened for over 300 years. The control has worsened as we seek to escape.
EFTA is definitely the place to start