Despite
their defeat in the Scottish referendum, the SNP seem to have enjoyed
some recent success. Their membership has risen sharply in recent
weeks, and if the opinion polls are to be believed, they seem to have
gained electorally, at Labour's expense. Indeed, if those polls are
to be believed Labour faces decimation in Scotland, in the General
Election next May, at the hands of the SNP. I doubt things will turn
out that way, but even if the SNP does take a large number of seats
from Labour, it will find itself in a cleft stick, rather than the
driving seat some pundits are suggesting.
The effects
may not yet have been seen politically, but the sharp fall in the oil
price, must be making many Scottish “Yes” voters, very glad that
they were outnumbered by the “No's”. An independent Scotland,
today would not be facing the kind of prosperity and end to austerity
that the SNP was promising them, just a few months ago. The SNP's
economic strategy relied heavily on the continuation of high oil
prices, and an increased share of oil revenues going into the coffers
of a Scottish government. It was from the beginning the economic
policy of a gambler. With the price of oil now half what it was just
a few months ago, and heading for at least another 20% fall, and
possibly for as much, at least temporarily, for another 50% fall,
that gamble would have been exceedingly costly for the Scottish
people.
Instead of
an end to austerity, it would have meant that Scotland's finances
would have faced a massive black hole that it could not have filled
other than by austerity on a far more draconian scale than even
Osborne has so far implemented, or plans to implement. In fact, even
the proposal for giving Scotland more financial independence, ought
now to be seen by the Scottish people for the trap that it is, for
the same reason. The Scottish people should be highly indebted to Labour, and all those other socialists who warned of precisely that
kind of danger ahead of the referendum, and who thereby saved them
from the catastrophe that would have followed.
But, there
are other reasons why traditional Labour voters in Scotland, are
likely not to desert to the tartan Tories of the SNP, in the numbers
that are currently being predicted. There are reasons for voting for
minority parties in more local elections. In some areas, small
parties, like the Liberals, had some potential, to win enough seats, to
win control of local councils, particularly on the basis of small
turnouts. Even the BNP, at its height, came close to achieving that, in one or two councils. But, there is no chance of any of these
small parties winning even a sizeable number of seats, in a General
Election, especially given the much larger turnout of the voters of
the main parties, which thereby overwhelm the votes of the small
parties' core supporters, that are always overstated in low turnout
polls. Much of the votes for those small parties is then soft, and
always flows back to its natural base in a General Election.
If I were a
traditional Labour voter in Scotland, my main concern, whether I
voted “Yes” or “No”, in the referendum, would now be to
ensure that the Tories were prevented from being elected in
Westminster next May. In fact, given the political reality, that
Scotland will remain part of the UK, even were I an SNP voter, I
would be likely to take a similar attitude. No one, in Scotland, is
going to want to be seen, and be held responsible for, allowing
Cameron back into No.10, let alone Cameron backed by Farage, or the
Ulster Unionists. And, make no mistake, if the election is close,
and Labour is deprived of a majority, allowing Cameron back in,
because of a loss of seats in Scotland, those Scottish voters will be
held responsible, by workers in England, particularly by workers in
the north of England, who have suffered, if anything, more from
austerity, and without the concessions that Scotland has been given.
But, if
Labour is the largest party, its argued, they may be able to form the
Government, on the basis of “confidence and
supply” provided by the SNP. In other words, there would be no
formal arrangement between the two parties, but Labour would be
allowed to govern on the basis of SNP MP's voting for Labour's budget
proposals, and giving their support in any vote of confidence. This
its suggested would give the SNP great leverage, because they would
be able to demand further concessions from a Labour government in
return for such an agreement.
But, in
fact, the SNP would have no such leverage. They have already ruled
out the possibility of a coalition or similar agreement with the
Tories, because they know, for the reasons set out above, that any
such agreement would be toxic for them, for at least a generation,
and probably more. They only need to look at the coming liquidation
of the Liberals as proof of that. But, a Labour government would
have no reason to give any concessions to the SNP under such
conditions. The SNP would be holding a gun containing only blanks.
If the SNP
refused to support Labour, that would be tantamount to putting the
Tories back in government, and would be equally toxic for them, as if
they had just given open support to Cameron. In other words, if they
win they lose. If the SNP wins a large number of seats and finds
itself in this position, it will be forced to support Labour, and may
then be held accountable for any austerity measures that a labour
government implements. If they refuse to support such a government,
they will be held responsible for creating the conditions under which
Cameron, or someone worse like Boris Johnson, will be installed in
No.10. In any event, under such conditions, there would be another
election, in which the SNP would lose votes in Scotland on a huge
scale, and not only lose support for the Westminster Parliament, but
for the Scottish Parliament too.
1 comment:
Spot on. It has been amusing to see the London media insist that Scottish voters plan to "punish" Labour in 2015, as if the Scots are too small-minded to see beyond the end of their parochial noses.
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