In its quest for middle England voters, Labour has for too long taken Scotland for granted.
In its quest for middle England voters, Labour has for too long taken Scotland for granted
‘Ten days to save the Union,’ declares this morning’s Daily Telegraph. ‘No campaign makes last stand to keep the Union,’ argues the Guardian. ‘Queen holds talks with David Cameron over fears her PM may be about to lose Scotland in referendum,’ screams the headline in today’s Daily Record.
Polls may come and go, but yesterday’s YouGov data for the Sunday Times, pointing to a two point lead for the yes to Scottish independence campaign, has electrified the chattering classes both north and south of the border in a way that no other poll has in recent times.
Make no mistake about it, if anyone felt at all complacent about next week’s referendum result they should shake themselves out of that mindset now. An independent Scotland is as real a possibility today as it has ever been.
In response to the crisis confronting the Better Together, and I don’t use the word crisis lightly, David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Ed Miliband will later this week unite to set out a timetable for further devolution to the Scottish Parliament and Government in the event of a no vote next week.
But therein lays the problem: it is but a timetable and not a united package of measures.
When David Cameron and Alex Salmond famously signed the Edinburgh Agreement in 2012, David Cameron vetoed any attempt to include so called ‘Devo Max’ on the ballot paper, arguing that it would muddy the waters – this despite the polling showing clearly that this is Scotland’s favoured option.
Yet, having kept it offer the ballot paper, Better Together are now arguing, somewhat convolutedly, that a no vote is actually a yes vote for further powers for Scotland. The problem is that with the Lib Dems, Conservatives and Labour having already set out their own, differing, plans for Scotland, what plans would voters in Scotland be supporting if they reject the SNP’s invitation to leave the Union?
Faced with such confusion, it’s little wonder that for many the clear message of independence seems more appealing than vague promises of unknown extra powers for Holyrood.
But with Labour Party supporters now increasingly attracted to independence, there remains a more fundamental question concerning Labour’s attitude to Scotland.
Under the days of John Smith, Robin Cook, Gordon Brown and Donald Dewer, to name but a few, the Labour Party had at its helm heavyweight Scottish politicians, providing assurances, as no other politicians have, to Scottish voters that their anxieties, their concerns, their hopes and their dreams were being articulated loud and clear at the very top of the UK political tree.
Yet for all the qualities they might have, today’s crop of Scottish Labour politicians – both at Holyrood and in the shadow cabinet – cannot be compared to the stature and respect that John Smith et al managed to command.
In its quest for middle England voters, Labour has for too long neglected Scotland and taken it for granted, with Scottish voters responding in kind by making clear that it is the SNP, rather than Labour, that is now their preferred party.
If Scotland votes to leave the Union next week Labour will have to shoulder as much of the responsibility as a Coalition Government so hated by Scottish voters.
18 Responses to “Better Together are in a crisis of their own making”
Lamia
It needs ordinary Scots who still want to remain in the union to try and persuade those around them, who seem to have lost themselves to the dreaming of small minds, to wake up and see that really they are better off as a people as part of the UK. It’s a great shame but politicians (of whatever party) and the rest of the UK population can do no more.
robertcp
The Labour Party is the problem for people in Scotland. If Scotland votes for independence, it will be an extreme disproving of the New Labour view that Labour voters had nowhere else to go.
Richard Honey
Ignoring the rude and unhelpful anti-Scottish comments, I thought Will Hutton’s plea for a federal Britain in last Sunday’s Observer shows a much better way forward than either the dismal and rather unpolitical Better Together campaign or the worrying scenario of the UK splitting apart. We could see the energy of the independence debate as an opportunity to offer a far more radical and powerful and engaging rebuttal of rule by the few that could eclipse the false promises of little Englander UKIP. But it would require a political courage and imagination that shows little sign of riding to our rescue in the short time left.
Guest
So ignoring everything outside your magically nice and wonderful anti-British comments…
Leon Wolfeson
Er? Labour’s bled millions to “not voting” over the last two decades, as it’s moved right.
This is not a secret.