:pray: 25 % :laughing: 75 %
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#28397
Arrowhead wrote: Tue Jun 28, 2022 6:22 pm This all seems a bit odd. If I were an SNP strategist, I wouldn’t even remotely be thinking of Indyref2 until support for independence was polling consistently around the 55%-to-60% mark over a sustained period of time. Current polling is nowhere near that.
That's my basis for an Indyref but surely not surprising the SNP see it differently?

I don't know how this will go. Could wear thin with some. Even Labour leadership campaigns take less time than this. But also, it's making independence a central plank of the Scottish Government's programme, which it hasn't really been (explicitly) since 2014.

Probably about 50-50 then.
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#28398
Youngian wrote: Tue Jun 28, 2022 3:46 pm Will unionists turn up? A big legitimacy problem, if not. Perhaps that’s the game; Westminster ride roughshod over Scotland’s democracy. Sturgeon could even lose for bothering people with unnecessary voting.
Unionists very likely to boycott the vote, I'd have thought.
User avatar
By The Weeping Angel
#31086
Curious how many SNP MPs end up in court isn't it?

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-62589375
An MP has pled guilty to breaching Covid rules after travelling by train despite knowing she had the virus.

Margaret Ferrier spoke in parliament in September 2020 while awaiting the results of a Covid test.

She then took the train home to Glasgow after being told she had tested positive.

Ferrier admitted that she had culpably and recklessly exposed the public to the virus ahead of a trial at Glasgow Sheriff Court.

She was elected as an SNP MP but lost the whip and now sits as an independent.

Margaret Ferrier: Who is the MP who broke Covid rules?
The charge stated that she had failed to self isolate and had "exposed people to risk of infection, illness and death".

Sentence was deferred pending background reports until next month.

The MP for Rutherglen and Hamilton West took a Covid test on Saturday 26 September because she had a "tickly throat".

While awaiting her results, she went to church on the Sunday and gave a reading to the congregation, and later spent more than two hours in a bar in Prestwick, Ayrshire.
User avatar
By Watchman
#31095
I wasn’t sure of your direction of travel; are you saying:- the legal system is bias against MSP’s, or
more MSP’s are wrong ‘un’s compared to other political parties.
All this setting aside the fact that there are so many Conservative MP that should have had their collar felt but haven’t
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#31298
It's GERs day. Never the best day for the SNP. Here's an actual MSP. By this reckoning, Scotland leads the world in incompetent/dishonest/treasonous government statisticians who put the figures together.

Wouldn't it be better to accept the figures, and point out that they're only this way because of the Barnett Formula? "Do you trust Tories to keep that?" should be the argument. I can't say I trust them to do that.

User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#31330
Not content with telling the ONS and Scottish Government how to produce statistics, Richard Murphy's also been making a tit of himself by trying to lecture lawyers on law. His genius position seems to be that people he doesn't like shouldn't get legal representation.

Oboogie, Arrowhead liked this
User avatar
By Abernathy
#33514
The UK Supreme Court today has begun considering whether, on the basis of the last set of elections to the Scottish parliament (which again delivered an electoral endorsement of the governing SNP), First Minister Sturgeon therefore has the right to institute a further referendum on whether Scotland should become an independent nation, something which has already been forcefully denied by the UK government, as well as the UK’s official opposition, the Labour Party. The court is probably going to take a moth or so, apparently, to deliver their verdict.

It seems unlikely that the court will grant that Sturgeon has the right to run a second referendum, in which case Sturgeon has already said that she will treat the next election to Holyrood as a de facto second referendum on Scottish independence. The SNP may well win the next Holyrood election and return again to government, though not if Labour has anything to do with it.

So what then happens if this scenario comes to pass? Does Sturgeon go for UDI ?

Answers on a (virtual) postcard, if you please, Mailwatchers.
User avatar
By Arrowhead
#33526
I genuinely don't understand why Sturgeon seems so determined to rush into this. The polling isn't especially supportive right now (I mentioned at the top of the page about the dangers of revisiting this until polling is consistently rooted around the 55%-60% mark over a sustained time), and the very recent experience of Brexit may well have made a significant number of Scottish voters wary about the wisdom of massive constitutional, economic & political upheavals, especially when driven by nationalist sentiment.

Scottish Labour have just had their first discernible upturn in fortunes for what seems an eternity. Perhaps Sturgeon senses that the Tory bogeymen may finally be on their way out of power, which I suppose could in turn suck some of the momentum out of the push for Indyref2, at least for a while.

And as for UDI, I don't think this would be a good time to pick a bun fight with a grandstanding, populist Tory government itching to change the narrative from their economic blunderings. Truss, Braverman, Cleverly etc. are so profoundly cynical they'd probably use it as an excuse to shut down/delegitimise the Scottish parliament. They'd almost certainly spout a load of anti-Labour bollocks in the process ("Reversing yet another disastrous Labour-era policy"), just so English voters got the message loud & clear.
User avatar
By Arrowhead
#33597
Tubby Isaacs wrote: Wed Oct 12, 2022 7:28 pm The court case is pretty good political strategy, I think. If they win, the referendum (which the UK won't sanction, and which Unions will boycott) does look more real. And if they lose, then it's also good for the SNP.
Is that really the case, though? I would presume Scottish voters currently have very similar pressures and concerns to those in the rest of the country i.e. the cost of living crisis, spiralling interest rates, struggling public services etc. I’m not sure the Holyrood government constantly expending energy re a second referendum looks especially good in the present circumstances.
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