It's odd the way history has this habit of repeating itself, over & over again.Biffer wrote: ↑Thu Oct 13, 2022 7:56 pm1) I think more people are realising that the UK is fundamentally Tory, when Scotland isn’t, and five or ten years of Labour won’t change that. They know the Tories will be back. Since we last voted Tory in Scotland, 40 years out of 63 have been Tory governments that we didn’t vote for.Jockaline wrote: ↑Thu Oct 13, 2022 7:13 pmI think the opposite is true actually:fishfoodie wrote: ↑Thu Oct 13, 2022 5:17 pm
Every Cloud has a silver lining.
It's a lot harder for anyone to take digs at the viability of an Independent Scottish Economy, with the shambles going on south of the border.
Much like the political institutions; if the local assemblies just project stability, & some degree of competence, then its one less argument for the Unionists.
1) Boris/Tories has been used as one of SNP selling points, but Truss has ensured this will end in two years min. The worse she is less threat they are as it lengthens the time they will be out of power.
2) Recent events have shown how vulnerable what we take for granted is, and there will be no BOE to bail out an independent Scotland..
3) SNP wanted to track the pound last time, so means all the big financial decisions made in Westminster will affect the Scots who will have no say whatsoever. Again recent events will have brought this into sharper focus.
4) Starmer doesn't look likely to reverse Brexit any time soon, and Brexit was a bit of killer for Indy since the security fallback of being in the EU is far more difficult achieve. While SNP tried to use anger at Brexit to their advantage, it really doesn't work if you take the emotion out of it.
2) valid point, but it doesn’t seem any of us are really being protected that much right now.
3) that was a policy to reassure people about stability. I know a lot of Indy supporters who would happily tie to the euro, and a different approach is more likely given the recent shitshow
4) Scotland would rapidly get access to the EEA and / or EFTA and look to rejoin the EU.
Overall question is there’s pain coming, do you want it as part of a petty minded little englander Uak or as part of the broad shoulders of Europe.
Republican / Secessionist movements seem to have a bad habit of cutting off their noses, to spite their faces; & as a result being Financially irresponsible, & naive.
When Ireland got it's Independence, we were naturally led by a Republican Party, & as a result the single most moronic Economic policy took shape, where we decided to ignore the massive export market we'd previously relied on for most of our income, because they also happened to be the Country we'd just declared Independence from.
As a result of this idiocy, the Irish economy was hamstrung for decades, until adults took charge, & then it was turbo charged when we joined the EEC.
If the SNP wants to gain peoples confidence, it needs to start laying out an economic development roadmap, that isn't based on fantasy, spite, or magic money trees, & build relationships, independent of the rest of UK, with political parties around the EU, so that if/when the moment comes, they have friendly voices in support. The EU is full of small Countries, & they provide a helpful balance against the big ones.
There are; especially since so many Eastern European countries have joined in the last few decades; roadmaps for how a country which is far less developed than Scotland, can become a full member of the EU. It's really just a case of deciding what the endpoint is to be, & putting forward a credible plan.