SCOTLAND
DECIDES
How the Scottish National Party became the only
show in town
Barring a major upset, the pro-independence party will
win big next week.
No ministerial code breach by Scottish MP Sturgeon,
investigation says
BY JACK
BLANCHARD AND ANDREW MCDONALD
April 30,
2021 7:18 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/how-the-scottish-national-party-became-the-only-show-in-town/
LONDON —
The history of the past decade has been the history of political earthquakes —
but few countries have been shaken quite like Scotland.
Rewind 15
years and Scottish nationalism was a relatively fringe pursuit. The Scottish
National Party (SNP) was stuck in opposition in Scotland’s devolved assembly,
just as it had been ever since the Parliament was created in 1999. Support for
independence was a long way off any kind of majority. The party had never sent
more than a large handful of MPs to Westminster.
Next week
Scottish voters go to the polls and — barring a miracle — will elect the fourth
successive SNP government at Holyrood, in yet another landslide victory for
leader Nicola Sturgeon. The party holds almost every Scottish seat at
Westminster, and opinion polls show support for independence is nudging toward
a majority view at around — or just beyond — 50 percent.
On this
week’s Westminster Insider podcast, POLITICO’s Jack Blanchard looks back at the
history of the Scottish nationalist movement, and explains how it shifted from
a fringe pursuit to perhaps the majority view in Scotland.
“I would
say the 1990s were the decade where the SNP became relevant,” says Alex
Salmond, who — funnily enough — became party leader in 1990. “And basically the
fundamental decision that the SNP made under my first term leadership was to
start assuming a place in the social and economic spectrum. So instead of just
saying, ‘we’re on the side of Scotland,’ be prepared to take sides within
Scotland … and therefore building up its credentials as a social democratic party,
one that could be relied on by groups in Scotland to defend their interests.”
The
creation of the Scottish Parliament in 1999 gave the SNP and Salmond an
electoral focus. Eight years later they were in power, beating the Scottish
Labour Party by just a single seat. Scottish Labour was hamstrung by the
increasing unpopularity of the Labour government in Westminster, particularly
in the aftermath of the Iraq war.
“Alex
became the most significant Westminster opponent of the war,” says Jack
McConnell, Labour first minister of Scotland until his party’s defeat of 2007.
“It give him a big, big platform. The Labour government was having problems
with scandals and so on, and again, the SNP became very prominent in opposition
to some of those scandals. So they went from being in a pretty hopeless
position, very quickly — in the course of 12 months — they moved up in the
polls.”
Salmond
capitalized on the platform the first ministership offered, and won a further
victory in 2011 — this time a landslide, giving him the authority to demand an
independence referendum. And although that was narrowly defeated in 2014,
support for independence has only solidified — especially in the aftermath of
the Brexit vote, and the chaos in Westminster which followed.
“There’s been
a huge structural change,” says Torcuil Crichton, a veteran Daily Record
journalist who has covered politics for the past 20 years. “The earthquake of
2014, the 55/45 split [in the independence referendum] in Scotland, which came
about as a result, I think, of the deeper earthquake of the mistrust in
politics and the rise of identity politics — that’s a structural change that’s
there for a long time to come. There’s no sign of people who voted ‘yes’ to
independence changing their minds very much … Everything that happens in
Scotland is seen through the prism of independence.”
Salmond,
who has now left the SNP in acrimony following allegations about his personal
conduct — all of which he denies — is running for a separate pro-independence
party, Alba, in next week’s election.
He insists
the case for an independent Scotland is stronger than ever and denies the harsh
realities of Brexit — which would require some sort of border between Scotland
and England were Scotland to re-join the EU — have wrecked his chances of
success.
“You don’t
have to have a hard border between England and Scotland,” he says. “Firstly,
there won’t be a people border — I mean, that’s just stupid. The Common Travel
Area [between the nations of the U.K. and Ireland] was initiated in 1922 … So
we’re not talking about borders for people. But there will be some form of
administrative border if Scotland goes back into the European Union.”
His
immediate solution for Scotland would be to rejoin the EU’s single market via
the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), and then to agree a customs union
with what remains of the U.K.
“You can
get back into EFTA in weeks,” he insists. “And then through EFTA [join] the
European Economic Area, which will take a bit longer — but not that long. And
you can offer a customs union with the rest of the U.K., which should be
attractive to England, given that [in terms of] manufactured goods they sell
far more to Scotland than Scotland sells to them.
“So that
would soften the border administratively, but a sort of border it is going to
be. And you cannot just wish it away, unless, of course, you want Scotland to
stay part of a U.K. trading bloc, and shut out of other trading blocs. I think
that would be very foolish, because the U.K.’s decision to leave the single
market place is the greatest act of self-destruction of any major countries in
the post-war period.”
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