SCOTLAND
DECIDES
Labyrinth of division beneath Scottish
independence fight
The debate over Scotland’s future is more complex than
a simple ‘Yes’ or ‘No.’
BY ALASDAIR
LANE AND EMILIO CASALICCHIO
April 2,
2021 4:03 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/division-scottish-independence-alex-salmond-nicola-sturgeon-snp/
GLASGOW —
To the outsider, Scotland’s rival political camps may look as deeply entrenched
as ever. But the sands have been shifting.
The broad
dividing lines remain the same. On one side, proponents of independence, their
sights set firmly on a second referendum and the promise of self-rule.
Opposite, supporters of the status quo: a union with England, Wales, and
Northern Ireland dating back over 300 years.
However, a
labyrinth of new divisions lurks below. Brexit, coronavirus, the Scottish
National Party (SNP)’s internal meltdown over its handling of sexual abuse
allegations against former First Minister Alex Salmond; all are new
considerations since Scots rejected independence in 2014.
Seven years
on, and with May’s pivotal Scottish Parliament election fast approaching,
nationalist politicians are upbeat.
“The SNP
will work hard for every vote and take nothing for granted. [Backing the party
is] the only way to guarantee that Scotland’s future is in Scotland’s hands —
not Boris Johnson’s,” said SNP Westminster Deputy Leader Kirsten Oswald.
“A growing
number of people have moved from ‘No’ to ‘Yes’ and want to see Scotland become
independent so we can build the fairer society.”
Paula Kirby
is one such convert to the independence cause. Seven years ago, separation just
didn’t seem worth it to the freelance translator: The U.K. was fairly
prosperous, progressive, and stable. Brexit — a bolt from the blue that few
foresaw in 2014 — changed all that for Kirby.
“Britain’s
EU departure was always going to be a hugely regressive step, but the reality
is proving even worse than I anticipated,” says the one-time “No” voter, now a
fully paid-up SNP member.
“The
collapse of Scottish fishing, a deterioration in the range and quality of
supermarket fresh food, difficulties sending items to Europe, the small-minded,
shortsighted folly of not remaining part of Erasmus; it’s all terrible,” she
added.
Kirby is
far from alone in her Brexit ire. Almost two-thirds of Scots rejected European
departure in 2016, only for successive Westminster governments to pursue strict
exit terms. Spotting an open goal, the SNP doubled down on its anti-Brexit
position — a move that’s paid dividends in the polls. As of early 2021, a
majority of Scots indicated support for the party at May’s Scottish Parliament
election, with 63% endorsing a return to EU membership (something independence
would facilitate, nationalists say).
But Brexit
is a double-edged sword for the SNP. A fractious and often messy affair,
Britain’s withdrawal from Europe has shown the agony of grand constitutional
change, as well as its unintended consequences. It also raises unavoidable —
and, for some, unanswerable — questions on relations with England should a
sovereign Scotland seek EU accession.
“We’ve seen
with the Irish Republic and Northern Ireland how difficult it is to have a land
border between an EU and non-EU state. If Scotland were to become independent
and rejoin Europe, the border with England would be impossible,” says IT
specialist Heather Herbert.
Brexit
isn’t her only concern. In 2014, having recently moved north of the border,
Herbert was won over by the independence movement: It spoke to her progressive
values and liberal politics — or so she thought. In the years that followed, a
disturbing undercurrent of ethnonationalism and what she regards as LGBT-hate
began emanating from the edges of the separatist camp, says the trans activist.
“When it
comes to prejudice against marginalized groups, it was sort of like: ‘OK, just
brush it under the carpet’. There’s a lot of hate that’s masked by the campaign
for independence, one reason I can’t support it any longer.”
A wider
civil war also rages, including the sensational split between First Minister
Nicola Sturgeon and her one-time friend and mentor Alex Salmond.
Sexual
harassment claims dating back almost a decade were weaponized by Sturgeon’s
administration to remove him from public life, Salmond believes. In 2019, he
successfully sued the Scottish government over its botched investigation into
the allegations, before being arrested, prosecuted, and finally acquitted of
all criminal charges.
A free man,
Salmond went on the offensive, accusing Sturgeon of misleading parliament in
her account of events — a career-ending crime if proven true. A series of
inquiries probed the claim, and though it was deemed credible, Sturgeon did not
breach Scotland’s ministerial code of conduct, an independent arbiter ruled.
Yet for
many in the independence camp, the SNP leader hasn’t emerged unscathed.
“Do I
believe that Nicola was completely innocent in it all personally? No,” says
Alison Watters, an activist and campaigner.
She’s far
from the only one with misgivings, polling suggests. A sizeable chunk of Scots
— 40 percent — do not believe Sturgeon has been entirely honest about the
Salmond affair; and though a narrow majority said she shouldn’t have resigned
immediately, almost two-thirds surveyed before the inquiries returned their
findings said Sturgeon must go if shown to have lied.
Concerns
run deeper than the Salmond saga, however. The engine of independence is
sputtering under Sturgeon, Watters worries, pointing to the SNP’s focus on
priorities other than separation.
“She’s
delayed independence unnecessarily, I think, and she’s wasted too much time on
trying to delay a Brexit which England voted for, on interfering in another
country’s democracy.”
That’s one
of the reasons Watters has joined the recently formed Alba Party, a new
pro-independence outfit headed up by Salmond. She’s confident the group can
help deliver a super majority for independence at the Holyrood election — and
in doing so, “hold Sturgeon’s feet to the fire and speed things up.”
Others
though are wary of rushing into a referendum while the country is still dealing
with a pandemic. This point came up in a series of focus groups organized by
the right-leaning think tank Onward and shared exclusively with POLITICO.
“Queen Nic, as we’ve dubbed her in our household, actually needs to wind her
neck in and just deal with what’s going on at the moment,” one woman told the
researchers.
And even
voters in favor of leaving the U.K. say now is not be the time. “I think
Scotland needs to fix Scotland first — 100 percent. Scotland and all the people
need to be fixed and be ready and go into it with open eyes once everything has
healed,” said a woman in her 40s.
Others are
beginning to feel the SNP has simply been in power too long. John Donaldson,
also from Glasgow, is fed up with the current government. Having backed
independence in 2014, he’s now dead against it.
“I hate
this blaming Westminster for everything, always acting like the victim,” the
distribution worker says. “The Scottish psyche is all about being the underdog,
but there’s a difference between being an underdog and a victim. The whole
victim mentality is very unhealthy.”
While he’s
depressed by the acrimonious Salmond affair, his change of heart is more about
democracy: The referendum was only seven years ago, it must be obeyed. So, come
May, Donaldson will be voting tactically to end the SNP’s 14-year grip on
power.
By just
about any measure, that’s a long stint in office. While the party has made
progress in some key areas, like affordable housing and prescription charges,
its domestic record is patchy. Scottish schools have been slipping in
international rankings, and an unacceptable attainment gap persists. Accident
and emergency waiting times remain longer than promised, too, and Scotland
bears great shame as Europe’s drug death capital.
Yet, while
polling on the SNP’s domestic performance dipped in late 2019, it had rallied a
year later — a consequence of Sturgeon’s initially sure-footed handling of
COVID-19.
Still,
there’s work to be done for the nationalists. If they’re to win an outright
majority in May — fundamental in the quest for a second independence referendum
— floating voters like Sohaib Haseeb, an accountant, must be convinced.
“Before a
second referendum, I’d need to see a coherent strategy from the SNP detailing
how an independent Scotland could fund the current levels of social spending,”
says Haseeb, who rejected separation in 2014.
Elections
come and go, and voter allegiance sways — but that, ultimately, remains the
SNP’s biggest challenge: convincing a majority that independence won’t be a
historic mistake.


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