|
The
Scottish Question
The
SNP’s
victory in
the Glasgow East by-election
has kept this irrelevant pot boiling
The Labour
Party has
always claimed to represent the interest of the worse off majority
but now finds itself deeply unpopular to the point of facing a
crisis. Labour has had untrammelled power for over ten years, and yet
now finds itself rejected because it has failed so spectacularly.
Bernard Shaw once wrote that any government that robs Peter to pay
Paul can count on the support of Paul. Labour has failed to achieve
even this modest level of vote buying.
Part of their
problem was
that Peter is just too strong to let himself be robbed – the
organised ranks of capital and the disorganised might of the market
are strong enough to see off any challenge that doesn’t seek to
remove them entirely from the picture. Labour tried to accommodate
itself with business in order to achieve modest social goals – but
this simply left it prey to the mood swings of the market, with
Paul’s position unchanged.
One noticeable
change
Labour did manage to get through was devolution. We’ve discussed
in these pages before how this was as much jobs for the boys and
girls – as well as providing a handy redoubt for Labour forces for
when they would eventually lose Downing Street. Their colossal votes
in Scotland and Wales would make them the permanent natural party of
government in those areas, and would allow them to circumvent to rock
solid Tory core in the English south east. It would, they hoped,
stymie the challenge from Welsh and Scottish nationalists to their
dominance in those areas.
After all, they
believed
that the desire for the retention of the United Kingdom is strong.
Hence why Gordon Brown has tried to wrap himself in Britishness – a
neat bit of stealing Tory clothes to win their supporters over, while
his own supporters have nowhere else to go. At least, that’s the
theory. The problem is, however they were wrong about the
Nationalists – the voters found they could go to them.
In 2007 Labour
lost
control of the Scottish parliament. They had never had a full
majority there (the proportional electoral system they introduced
makes that an unlikely event) but they had been the biggest party. It
was a close run thing, but they were beaten into second place by
one seat (and about 20,000 votes). Not only that, but a new PR
system for local government meant the smashing of the old Labour
family run fiefdoms throughout Scotland, with almost all councils
falling to no overall control.
A part of
all that
was the demise of the Scottish “Socialist” Party, one of the most
successful leftist parties of the last fifty years. It had had six
seats in the Scottish Parliament, before it had imploded over the
behaviour of its charismatic leader Tommy Sheridan suing the News
of the World over allegations on his
private life (plus a touch of SWP skulduggery). It had latched on to
regional nationalism, as a successful means to electoral success.
The
Scottish
Nationalists had tacked left, making social democrat noises to pick
off Labour supporters. There is nothing intrinsically left-wing
about nationalism. Being a nationalist does not necessarily commit a
person to any particular reforms or economic principles. Indeed,
technically, the SNP is a one-issue party – for an independent
Scotland. Their history, though, is marked by debates between the
minority of hardliners wanting to stand for nothing but independence,
and the dominant pragmatists who want to win political power by
offering to administer the current situation, and knocking the
maximum demand into the long grass. This allows people to safely
vote for the party of independence without necessarily voting for
independence. In truth, they stand for no principle different than
the other parties, offering to represent and work hard for “you”.
Having formed a
minority
government, they plan to use events in their favour. Just as
Labour’s first British government dressed up in Ruritanian Privy
Councillor’s costumes to prove that they weren’t revolutionists,
so too the Nationalists have accepted political responsibility within
the Union to try to show that they are trustworthy and to win people
to their cause while in power. Of course, they generate heated
debates between themselves and Westminster, and try to provoke
controversy. Of course, they intend to legislate for a referendum on
independence – but only after they have been in office some while. So,
even if that is rejected, they have a fair chance of holding onto
their jobs.
What some
commentators
look to, though, is after the next UK election. It seems increasingly
likely the Tories will end up ahead of Labour. It is even possible,
after the Glasgow East by-election result, that the SNP could take a
majority of Scottish seats. Following the death of John MacDougall
Labour MP for the Fife town of Glenrothes there will be another
by-election in the autumn. This is another Labour safe seat, and
losing again may be fatal for Gordon Brown’s premiership – and
spell almost certain disaster at the next general election.
David Cameron
has
announced that he believes that Scottish MPs should not be able to
vote on legislation in England just as English MPs cannot vote on
Scottish issues (because those matters are devolved to the Scottish
parliament). Considering that his party won a majority of English
seats at the last election, he would say that. If Scotland breaks
away this would make Labour’s return to power in Westminster that
much harder, and the SNP would have their cherished dream.
The indications
are,
though, that Scottish voters will not opt for independence. At
heart, then, the SNP, like Labour, has achieved political success at
the expense of its core project. At heart, in both cases this is
because they have sought power by telling people they agree with what
they think, rather than trying to change minds. The quick route to
power is to buy people’s votes with popular policies – but the
danger in that is that you attract people who support those policies,
but not necessarily your wider aims. They’ll simply up and leave
when someone offers them something better. Political time, effort
and consciousness are wasted arguing to and fro on such nonsense.
Ultimately,
such baubles
are thrown around by the political hacks in order to win for
themselves the major prizes. Workers have nothing to gain from the
redrawing of the boundaries, but regional entrepreneurs and
bureaucrats certainly do have a chance of making good if only they
can persuade the electorate to back them. Capitalism knows no
boundaries, money has no accent. Yet the Scottish question continues
to play a major part in the ongoing passing show of UK politics.
PIK SMEET
|