Trying to figure out WTF is going on There is, I think, general agreement across the independence movement that the 2026 Scottish general election must be used as a device to reset/restart the fight to restore Scotland’s independence. It was switched off by Nicola Sturgeon ten years ago. She just ‘forgot’ to turn it back on again. The 2026 election provides a chance to do this. But it looks very much as if this chance will be squandered, as so many were before. For all of those ten years I have been saying that the constitutional issue needs to be reframed and the campaign re-thought. For more than half that time I have been urging that we all accept some fundamental facts about Scotland’s predicament, and consider ways the situation might be satisfactorily resolved on the basis of this factual assessment of where Scotland stands now. Facts such as:
The nominally pro-independence parties will shortly be finalising their manifestos for the 2026 Scottish Parliament election. They may not be published just yet. But once the party leaderships have decided on the content of the manifesto, this is unlikely to change before publication. The speeches will all have been drafted for the party conferences taking place in September and October. The SNP is not the only nominally pro-independence party. But it is unquestionably the most important one. There is no way any effort to seize the opportunity of the 2026 election can succeed unless the SNP is part of it. This remains true even if - as some want but no authoritative source forecasts - the SNP is very severely punished by the electorate. It remains true because no matter how many seats the SNP loses, its remaining votes will be essential to any moves to progress Scotland’s cause. This is just another one of those facts about our predicament. We are stuck with the SNP even though the SNP has been taken by its leaders in a direction which is wrong in every sense of the term. If this is not rectified, the 2026 election will be another squandered opportunity. Possibly, the last one. There is the faint hope of this being achieved. We have seen the promise of a revolt by the SNP membership many times before. Our hopes have been dashed on every occasion. This time may well be different. The revolt against John Swinney’s abominable ‘independence strategy’ is gathering strength. Unfortunately, it’s not quite the revolt that we might have hoped for. But if it manages to break the leadership’s stranglehold on policy debate and formulation, that could lead to better things. It should have been a revolt in favour of the Newington Resolution. But this was a bit too radical for SNP branches. They are giving their support to a resolution that is better than Swinney’s - but still not strong enough. Did I mention that time is short? If the internal revolt at the SNP conference in October (11th to 13th) fails, then all is lost. Nothing being done or being proposed by the other nominally pro-independence parties will make any difference. They spin fantasies for electioneering purposes. But the best information we have is polling results and they show these other parties barely registering, if at all. Even if that changes between now and next May, it is not going to change an outcome which leaves the SNP in a dominant position and critical to any effort to progress Scotland’s cause. The non-SNP part of the independence movement must support the SNP ‘rebels’. (Although it’s a sad day when SNP members can be labelled ‘rebels’ on account of their commitment to the cause of restoring Scotland’s independence.) Although the ‘rebel’ resolution bears no relation to #ScottishUDI (as the Newington Resolution does) signing the Manifesto for Independence Petition is an effective way of demonstrating support for the ‘rebels’ in that it indicates huge dissatisfaction with the SNP leadership’s current offering. And, not at all incidentally, dissatisfaction with the offerings of the other nominally pro-independence parties as well. Scotland’s cause demands something far bolder and more radical that anything they are proposing. As things stand, there is nothing you can do for Scotland’s cause that is more important than the Manifesto for Independence Petition. The reasons for this should be obvious. But the level of support to date suggests that few understand these reasons. Which is my failure. But I am genuinely at a loss as to how to make people listen, far less grasp the reasoning behind the #ScottishUDI plan - in which the Manifesto for Independence plays a critical role. I shall persist, however, in the faint hope of getting the message across in the few weeks that remain. If, however, the SNP ‘rebels’ fail in October that will be the end for me. If the opportunity offered by the 2026 election is squandered - which looks highly likely - there will be no way for Scotland’s cause to make any progress before the next Scottish general election in 2031. Who knows what Scotland’s circumstances will be by then. We can be quite sure they will be no more favourable for Scotland’s cause. If I survive, I’ll be 80 years old by the time the next but one Scottish Parliament election comes around. I struggle at times now. I doubt if I’ll have the heart for active campaigning. 2031 will mark 20 years since I started giving all my time to the campaign. I’m tired. Time is running out in many ways. You're currently a free subscriber to Peter A Bell. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
Friday, 22 August 2025
Time is running out
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