Dear All
Nicola Sturgeon has reignited the Scottish independence
debate, along with another fairytale SNP blueprint, not because she has any
chance of winning, no, but to shore up her crumbling support as leader of the
SNP.
Sturgeon knows along with everyone else, there is no
appetite for a second independence referendum. People know this on the ground,
and Conservative MP Michael Gove knows it at the other end of the political
spectrum. Support for independence is dropping, support for Nicola Sturgeon is
dropping and support for the SNP is dropping.
This slide has been dramatic since 2015; the Nationalist
coupled with an angry independence support managed 56 seats at Westminster , a mere two years later that
dropped with the snap election of 2017 to 35 seats.
So, what is wrong with the concept of independence?
The answer is simple, no one, no one in their right mind
trusts the SNP to lead an independent Scotland , 2014 only brought into
the light of day what many suspected, the SNP are a bunch of liars!
The Scottish independence bid of 2014 was built on deceit
and showed the true face of the leadership of the SNP in all its glory. When Alex
Salmond jumped ship, you might have thought this brought ‘renew’ of the party
with the 2015 result.
It didn’t.
The same worthless, corrupt and rotten leadership remained
albeit a new ‘front man’ leading it.
Having hoisted the flag, Nicola Sturgeon hasn’t captured the
imagination of the public, the new indy marches are a joke in my opinion. They
are more an exercise to reassure those who follow the SNP line rather
attracting new followers to the cause, because the ‘cause’ is moral, ethically
and economically bankrupt.
In one fell swoop; Theresa May has slapped down Nicola
Sturgeon, insisting Scots have "no appetite" for a second
independence referendum. Sturgeon’s rallying cry ended more or less after it
left her month.
Gosh that was quick!!!!!!
Michael Gove claims the Union
was now "stronger than ever", however, this is more a political
statement rather than a fact, Ruth Davidson is right to warned fellow
Unionists about the “dangers of complacency”. If you don’t know what the
dangers are the elections of 2015 and 2017 spell it out for you in hard facts. Scotland still
remains in political flux at this time; the trick here is to manage change, not
an easy task.
The Scottish Labour Party didn’t get their act together,
they didn’t understand the “dangers of complacency” and hence they are now the
third party of Scotland .
A party which failed to change with the times, understand the needs of the
voters and didn’t represent the people, instead they brought in their agenda
which the people rejected. If the Labour Party doesn’t change from the notion
of federalism, they are sunk on both sides of the border.
Their problem not mine, I don’t condone stupidity, and fall
to see a reason to support it when it is presented to me.
As Sturgeon prepares for the publication of the SNP's
Growth Commission report on the economic case for independence, it is already
just a propaganda document, because it is all geared up to say one thing.
Everything is better with independence.
The same lie peddled in the White Paper which SNP MSP Joan McAlpine
said was a more important document than the American Declaration of
Independence. 650 pages of rubbish against a historic document…. Let me think……
bollocks!
The Commission’s report isn’t a vehicle to "restart the
debate" on Scotland’s future, it is a joke, everyone knows no matter
what deal comes from Brexit, the SNP will say it is not good enough.
In a clear signal that Nicola Sturgeon has missed the boat, the
Prime Minister’s spokesman said:
“Now is not the time for another divisive independence
referendum and there is no appetite for one. The people of Scotland voted decisively in 2014 to remain part
of the United Kingdom
and that should be respected.”
This raises a major problem for Nicola Sturgeon, if she
doesn’t deliver a second referendum, her position is untenable, and the SNP are
losing control the wider indy movement.
But don’t worry, Tommy Sheridan isn’t the heir apparent to
step in, he is still trying to find a narrative which rebuilds his career which
is toast, but hey, what else has he to do.
At a conference in London ,
organised by the Policy Exchange think-tank, Ruth Davidson was asked about a
second vote, she replied:
“My advice to the PM is: if the question’s the same, the
answer should be the same. No.”
It seems the no word is very popular.
Mr Gove also commented on indyref2, saying the SNP would
find “any excuse” to seek another independence poll; if it was not because of
Brexit, it would be something else.
Everyone knows the SNP all too well it seems, they are crude
petty and not very bright politicians.
Alistair Darling, the former Labour Chancellor
also told the conference:
“I do not believe there will be another Scottish referendum
in the foreseeable future; possibly not in my lifetime”.
He added:
“I’ll tell you why not…the public don’t want it. Most of the
British public, never mind the Scottish public, are heartily sick of
referendums. They divide, they turn people against each other; the scars are
deep; they’re still there in Scotland
and people don’t want to go through that again.”
Hmmm…… not sure if I can agree with his timeframe there,
politics is a tricky business; the benchmark for a second indyref appears to be
beyond the SNP at the present time. 2021, the Holyrood election is probably the
most important election since Holyrood opened its doors in 1999.
If the SNP can be kicked out and a new administration formed
the problem is in the long grass, an SNP minority doesn’t get a new Bill
through if the Greens do badly.
The question is who is in the bets possible position to
topple the SNP; this comes down to either the Labour Party or the
Conservatives. The current position of the Labour Party in third position doesn’t
bode well for them, Labour and the SNP both fish in the same voter pool.
Finally, here is an idea to rap your head around, we won’t
be having a General Election till 2022, if Nicola Sturgeon comes under intense
pressure, she maybe force to collapse her government and attempt to bet on
trying to get a majority. This is called ‘betting the farm’, it’s all or
nothing, of course that involves major risk as it could leave her in a worse
position at Holyrood. Alex Bell, former Alex Salmond recently said that Nicola
Sturgeon isn’t a ‘great’ politician’.
Question is does she have the ability to push ‘all in’ or is
the FM salary more important along with the status?
Yours sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University
5 comments:
She hasn't the bottle to try for it via an election George too interested in the perks of office.
At some level George, I think that all that people in Scotland, and elsewhere in the UK want, is change for the better in their state of affairs. Brexit potentially offers that now, and people will want things to turn back to the boring state of affairs after this happens.
As for Sturgeon, I'll leave you this:
"With trial-fire touch me his finger-end.
If he be chaste, the flame will back descend
And turn him to no pain. But if he start,
It is the flesh of a corrupted heart."
Merry Wives of Windsor, Act 5, Scene 5.
The only thing Nicola has achieved and believe me, it’s some achievement, is making life long socialist vote Tory.
vote tory
The only disagreement I have with the above is, "The answer is simple, no one, no one in their right mind trusts the SNP to lead an independent Scotland"
It will not be the SNP who will be running an Independent Scotland. Just as UKIP got their wish and no longer need to exist, so too will the SNP disappear AFTER they have achieved their goal. It will be up to the other parties to make of independence what they will.Sturgeon and Salmond will have done the damage and will be nowhere to be seen.
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