Scots Independent
November 1996 - 70th Anniversary Issue
Owned, Edited and Printed in Scotland - First Published in November 1926
It all started 70 years ago in November 1926 .... 


...and continues today...
UNIONISM - "The dust of creeds outworn" (Shelley)
The greatest single inhibitor of Scotland's crossing
the millennium threshold as a prosperous and progressive nation is her people's inherited sense of inferiority born of generations of political manipulation.
There can be few other people with such an international reputation for inventiveness, application and
financial acumen who have fallen so low in their own
self-esteem that they would rather others should rule
them from outside than that they should take charge
of their own destiny. What is it about the creed of
Unionism which, despite its archaism as a political
dogma, can still prevent its victims recognising its false
pretensions and keep them paralysed in limbo like rabbits under the weasel's gaze?
If we look back over the last two centuries we can
perceive certain patterns that have all contributed to
our current senses of inadequacy, disillusionment and
political cynicism. Unlike most other small European
nations (but like the Irish) we Scots lost, to the lure of
riches and self-aggrandisement in England, those who
in their time should have provided national leadership.
In earlier days of Whigs and Tories under the Union
Scotland was already governed by remote control from
London whilst various factions at home began exploiting ordinary folk in fast developing industrial ghettos; or by clearing them abroad either in exchange for
more profitable sheep or as soldiers to further the expansionist cause of England's empire. Scotland thus
had no resident ruling class in the then contemporary
sense; and its small middle-class of local burghers, budding industrialists, teachers and ministers was far too
comfortable, rather like some of them to-day, to wish
to challenge Scotland's constitutional arrangements.
This was the essence of early Unionism and a shaming
manifestation of how a national character, capable of
the erudition of Hume and the egalitarianism of Burns,
can be traduced by craven leadership into the epitome
of servile resignation.
Moving forward and nearer to our times there was
a brief period of hope when the Liberals took up the
cause of Scottish Home Rule. But then, as now, the
declarations of noble Liberal intent were unmatched
by action and subsequent Liberal Governments, when
they did gain office, conveniently forgot their Scottish
promises. Suddenly however Scotland was electrified
by the arrival on the scene of the Labour Party and
its charismatic leader, Keir Hardie. Foremost on the
agenda, as far as Scotland was concerned, was the formation of a Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh for, at
the time, this was seen as being fully consistent with
the Labour movement's wider international socialist
aspirations. But once again, as soon as Labour gained
office the Scottish parliament was forgotten and the
party's direct political descendants today feel embarassed by the notion of an independent Scottish parliament. For ordinary Scottish people in our generation
here is where Unionist history has cruelly repeated
itself: for the very people they have trusted to provide
Scottish leadership have taken the identical route of
those earlier betrayers of Scotland at the time of the
Union. They too have settled in Westminster where
everything is comfortable and civilised, to run Scotland
by remote control through the established processes of
cabal, quango and Unionist patronage.
Of course Labour supports a puppet Scottish parliament now--because it knows that if it betrays Scotland
again even its blindest adherents will abandon it. But
its heart is not in the project--and never will be until
it is forced to raise the full Scottish Standard either by
SNP pressure; or by rediscovering its own soul.
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Here we go Again - Colin Campbell
I would like, now and again, to be able to praise some of BBC
Scotland's undoubtedly good points, but its downside is so
damaging to our national interests that in a monthly column like
this the priorities must remain as before.
It is difficult to comprehend the apparent inanity of programme
producers who decide that it would be fitting to have on our "national`' airwaves a mere seven days dedicated to ''Scots Tongue
Week''. The ivory tower from which they exercise their planning
can rarely have been more translucent than in this demonstration
of a complete misunderstanding of what Scottish national broadcasting properly demands. Where Radio Scotland is our specified
broadcasting provider, not by grace but by right of Scottish licence
fees, it is an absurd notion that the main tongue of its listeners should
be so treated--just as it is absurd to talk about 'Scottish National
weather'', or ''Scottish National travel''. What is subliminally being displayed here is the Unionist inference that nationalism, uniquely in a Scottish context, equals triviality. But would you believe
it, there is worse--far worse to come?
''Scots Tongue Week'' was made to coincide exactly with
Gaeldom's annual festival of international renown--the Mod (concurrently taking place in Blairgowrie) which, as far as Radio
Scotland is concerned, merited not one single minute of coverage.
Could this simply too have been crass insensitivity? Well, from the
record this is just possible but I would be inclined to think that even
BBC Scotland could not have plumbed such depths of ineptitude.
So what's going on?
With the entry of Michael Forsyth into Highland and Gaelic
politics the plot seems to thicken. The oldest Unionist trick in the
book has been to encourage antagonisms between Scotland's various
cultural and social traditions in order to rule us, untroubled by unified
revolt, from Westminster. One area thus exploited has been the
historic difference between Highlander and Lowlander--or more
appropriately in to-day's terms--Gael and non-Gael. There are
commentators who already suggest that Forsyth is looking beyond
a likely Tory defeat at the next Election and preparing the ground
for a defence of the Union by destabilising Scottish society in advance of any devolved or independent parliament. His assiduous
support for Gaelic, the new University of the Highlands and Islands,
though warmly welcomed in themselves, and his own idea of a
Highland Convention presided over by himself in the first instance,
undoubtedly lend credence to such speculation. It all follows on
quite naturally from the recent reform of local government--a
reform based not on democratic need, but on political manipulation of massive proportion. But where might BBC Scotland and
its ''Scots Tongue Week''--and its boycotting of the Mod--fit
into to all this? Well, you see, like Michael Forsyth the BBC fears
both devolution, and even more, independence--for its role would
in the first instance be greatly diminished, and in the case of independence Auntie would be made to pack her bags. As with Forsyth's activities there have been other straws in the wind that indicate
a similar policy of ''divide and rule''. There has been the reduction in Radio Scotland's status to the equivalent of a tabloid journalism--thus driving more serious listeners on to the BBC's main
London output. There is the small and aesthetically disagreeable
input of Scottish programmes into BBC TV. There has been the
editorial takeover of BBC regional stations in Scotland which has
had the effect of controlling and denaturing their output--and there
has been the divorcement of Gaelic broadcasting from mainstream
Scottish broadcasting--even though this has deprived many Gaelic
speaking heartlands of any service in the language at all. One effect of all this is to introduce a sense of ghettoism in which both
Gaelic and Scots have become estranged from one other and in
which there are already early signs of jealousy and recrimination
between them.
If events are indeed being trained in this direction my opening
criticism of BBC Scotland's ''inanity'' is clearly unjustified. What
we would have instead would be a degree of deviousness and duplicity that would make Machiavelli look a mere amateur. I wonder
which diagnosis is more correct. don't you?
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We are 70 this month - and we need your support
The Scots Independent is celebrating its 70th anniversary--from November 1926 to November
1996.
We are of course essentially a political organ. In
order to operate successfully we require a stable and
viable financial structure. In the earlier decades of the
paper's existence the record shows that its maintenance
caused the Party much heart and pocket searching.
Subsequently, the formation of a limited company laid
the groundwork for a self-sustaining enterprise. That
has provided the independence cause with ongoing ancillary support without calling on the resources of the political arm of the movement.
The publishing business continues to be very fragile,
however. The vast television industry means that mass
readership is a thing of the past. This means that an
organ such as the SI has to rely on more than the kind
of casual readership support which is the bane of national papers. We hope that what we need can be
described not just as unquestioning loyalty from our
readers, but rather sustained understanding of the
technical problems we have to meet month on month.
Against that background some of those readers have
already been asking what kind of anniversary present
they might give us. The answer is that they can consider one--or all four--of the following ways of say-
ing "Happy Birthday":
- Take out a personal subscription;
- Send a friend (or a school, or a hospital, or a
library) a year's subscription;
- Have your CA/branch, if its SI monthly order
has lapsed--for whatever reason--start up again.
Many branches find the SI is a good way of making
contact with lapsed members, immobile members,
sleeping members or even so-called closet Nationalists;
- Become a patron of the Scots Independence
Trust, set up to guarantee the paper's future in the
longer term--either yourself or perhaps a well disposed Party member who has a bit of spare cash.
So if you really want to say "Happy Birthday" to
us in a meaningful way, contact us to-day:
Write to: HAPPY ANNIVERSARY, Scots Independent, 51
Cowane Street, Stirling FK8 1JW
Or email Scots Independent- NOW !!
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James Halliday - Don't Believe All You Read in the Papers
"Don't believe all you
read in the papers''
must be among the earliest
pieces of advice that each of us
receives as we grow up. It's
not bad advice either although
it can lead to an unwillingness
to believe anything, which is
just as silly as readiness to
believe obvious nonsenses.
We are not telling one another
that the papers are always telling lies or passing on misinformation, only sometimes, and
the frequency varies from one
branch of the Media to
another.
As often as not no great
harm is done. Most papers today do not deal in news of any
significance, but rather with
daily gossip, romances, fantasy, tragedy, idiocy and so
on. Few stories have a life
span of more than a day, and
each new day brings a new
crop of enjoyable trivia.
The trouble is that somewhere at the back of our mind
there is a kind of folk-memory
that newspapers were once
part of the public record; that
reports and articles by responsible and well-informed
writers could be used as
evidence by students and
analysts in later times. We still
have such excellent journalism
which best informs us about
the wider world. Alistair
Cooke continues to provide his
incomparable insight into
American society and politics.
Charles Wheeler does for
America what Mark Tully has
done for India; and our
understanding of Eastern
Europe derives largely from
the writings of Neal Ascherson
and Misha Glenny. Those
writers inspire confidence. We
feel entitled to use their information to guide us in reaching
our opinions and we are seldom left to regret our trust.
Sometimes writers who
usually seem reliable are guilty
of misleading their readers not
from any desire to deceive, but
because they have become
careless in what they think
they have learned. From the
past few days comes the assertions that the turnout at US
Presidential elections was
"usually'' less than 50 per
cent; that the Taff Vale judgment was somehow unfair to
trades unions and had to be
repealed; and that the battlecruiser Repulse took part in
the sinking of the Bismarck.
The truth is that the turnout in
US elections has ''sometimes"
been less than 50 per cent, but
not in a Presidential year; that
the Taff Vale judgment gave
to the unions the same rights
and freedom of action as are
permitted to individuals and was therefore a landmark in
extending the rights of
workers; and that the Repulse lay at the bottom of the sea off the Malayan coast while the
Renown joined in the hunt of
the Bismarck.
So what? If we were dealing
with mere conversations or
quiz programmes, there would
be no great point in criticising,
but in future times some
earnest searcher after truth
will turn to the Herald or the
Scotsman preserved in the archives, and will quote such errors as accurate evidence. We
should beware of leaving any
record uncorrected. because
otherwise future understanding can be hopelessly
confused.
It doesn't get any easier to
be accurate as time passes and
the generation which remembers events dies out. For fifty
years now we have all tended
to judge political movements
and behaviour in the light of
the events of the Second
World War. The merit of men
and parties has been judged on
the basis of their response to
Hitler and the Nazi regime,
and much that was evil has
been excused because its
perpetrators at least were
anti-Nazi.
No journalist now under 65
has any personal understanding to remind him that many
people in public life all over
Europe sought Hitler's protection, not because they
themselves were Nazis but
because they thought they
were thereby attaching
themselves to the winning
side. They thought that they
were thus serving the best interests of their country and
their people. Most people after
all believe that what they are
doing is morally defensible
and politically wise.
Quisling thought Germany
would win and that Norway
would best be on her side.
William Joyce thought Germany would win and worked
for her rulers in the expectation of reward and status in
the future. Petain and Laval
believed that the future of
France lay in coming to terms
with the victorious Germans.
For their pains, in due
course they were executed, all
but Petain, and thousands
unremembered shared their
fate. Those were stern times,
and most rulers and communities have calmed down since
then. The ousting of hated
governments In recent years
has not been accompanied by
firing squads except in Roumania. Tempers are, and should
be, under better control, and
without the background of war
and its horrors we should have
learned to disagree with civility. But there is still a duty
upon all interpreters of behaviour, including journalists, to
be aware that we once agreed
that all those who, in accordance with their own conscience and their own
judgment, were prepared to
surrender their country's
freedom, had made a wrong and blameworthy choice.
Return to the index
Cuir às dhan Wabaid ! - Alasdair MacCaluim
Ged a tha iomadh gaisgeach ann an eachdraidh
na h-Alba mar Uallas. Brus
agus lain MacGilleathain,
chan eil teagamh ann gur e
Elmer Fudd am fear as ùra
agus as neònaiche dhaibh. 'S
e Mgr Fudd an duine glic a
thòisich an abairt fheumail
''Cuir às dhan wabaid!'' An
turas seo, cha b' e Bugs Bunny a bha chuir dragh oirnn ach
''Calum Coinneanach'' nach
maireann, rabaid a' Phàrtaidh
Nàiseanta.
Tha Calum air a bhith
marbh o chionn trì mìosan a-
nis ach chanainn gu bheil à
thaibhse fhathast còmhla ruinn
ann am poileataigs na h-Alba.
Nuair a nochd Calum coir airson a' chiad uair ann an Dùn
Deagh air 26mh den Ghiblean
b' e fior chulaidh mhagaidh a
bh' ann. Bha móran nàiseantach dubh an aghaidh samhla
ùr a' phàrtaidh seo a chionn 's
gu robh e a' coimhead cho
gòrach. A bharrachd air seo,
rinn na Laboraich fanaid
oirnn, ag ràdh gu robh Calum
bochd a' dearbhadh gu robh
''poileataigs Mhickey Luch"
aig a' PhNA. A dh' aindeoin
seo, 's ann againne a bha an
gàire mu dheireadh.
Nuair a thuirt am pàrtaidh
gum biodh referendum ann
gus samhla a' phàrtaidh
thaghadh, thuirt na Laboraich
gu robh am PNA neo-chinnteach agus gu robh sinn air
tionndadh-U mór a dhèanamh
Bidh deagh chuimhne agaibh
air na thachair greiseag a
déidh sin. Seadh, 's e sin
tionndadh-U air leth na
Laborach a thaobh sgaoileadh-
cumhachd. Tha e soilleir
cuideachd gu bheil iad fhathast
neo-chinnteach air a' chùise
seo.
Ged a bha am PNA a' coimhead gòrach airson greiseag,
chanainnse gun do dh' ionnsaich sinn agus sluagh na
h-Alba tòrr mun phàrtaidh
bhon chùise seo. Anns a'
chiad dol a-mach dh'
ionnsaich sinn gu robh am
pàrtaidh deamocrasach
agus gu robh iad deònach
a bhith ag éisdeachd ris a'
bhallrachd aca agus a
bhith ag aideachadh nuair
a tha lad air mearachd a
dhèanamh. Chan ann mar
seo a tha am Pàrtaidh
Laborach !
Tha mi a' smaoineachadh gun do dh' ionnsaich am pàrtaidh leasan
bho Chalum cuideachd.
'S e sin an leasan gu bheil
beachdan agus poileasaidhean a cheart cho cudromach ri lomhaighean ann
am poileataigs. Bha
iomadh duine an aghaidh
Chaluim a chionn 's nach
robh iad a' smaoineachadh gu robh feum air
samhla ùr gach bliadhna
no dhà. Tha iomhaigh
agus "soundbite politics"
ro chudromach ann am
poileataigs an latha an-
diugh. Tha seo air tachairt
airson gu bheil na Laboraich agus Tóraidhean
mar na pàrtaidhean ann an
Ameireagaidh, cho coitach ri chéile. Mar a thuirt
sanas a' PhNA o chionn
ghoirid: Na Laboraich
Ura--Na seann Tòraidhean. A chionn 's nach eil
diofar mór eadar na poileasaidhean aca, tha sanasan mar suilean olca
Bhlair agus samhlaidhean
mar leòghann nan Túraidhean ''Albannach'' a' fàs
nas cudromaiche ann an
iomairtean nam pàrtaid'.
Cha do chòrd Calum ri
ballreachd a' PnNA air sgàth 's gu bheil am PNA
gu tùr eadardhealaichte
bho na pàrtaidhean eile.
Tha poileasaidhean diofraichte againn air neo-
eisimealachd, rocaidean 7
cumhachd niùclach, cùisean sóisealta, a' Ghàidhlig agus air cha mhór a h-
uile rud eile. Bidh iomhaigh agus samhlaidhean
cudromach dhan PhNA
anns an taghadh ach cha
bhi Mgr Salmond a'
cluich geam falamh nam
Blaireach/nan Toraidhean. Cha bhi am PNA a'
cluich ''Rocaidh sinn
thu'' le Queen agus a'
cleachdadh sholas-disco
ann an coinneamhan-naidheachd mar a rinn Kinnock ann an 1992. Tha
fior-phoileasaidhean
againn agus cleachdaidh
sinn iad ann an iomairt an
taghaidh.
Return to the index
1820 Martyrs Remembered
Jimmy Reid, a hero of
the 1971 UCS 'work-
in', was in fine fettle in his
address to this year's annual Sighthill Commemoration, held by The 1820
Society.
He paid tribute to 'our'
1820 martyrs as pioneers in
the struggle for the work-
ers' social and economic--
as well as political--rights
--whose efforts posthumously bore some fruit in the
'successes' achieved by the
Labour Movement in our
own century--in terms of
the recognition of trade
union rights and the establishment of the Welfare State. He also expressed his
indignation at the extent to
which the legacy from the
past struggles of the Labour
Movement had been progressively undermined by
our recent experience of
Thatcherite Tory rule --
together with his growing
personal concern that in its
desperation to win power
the so-called 'New Labour'
Party of Mr Blair had itself
--already--sold out to
'Thatcherism` and was
therefore in danger of comprehensively betraying its
own principles and its own
roots.
Judging from the warmth
of his reception from the
50-strong crowd at the end
of his address this was a
view which was widely
shared, by most of those in
attendance.
Our other guest speaker
--John Brady, the SNP's
PPC for Springburn, who
had spoken earlier--naturally argued that only an independent Scotland could
adequately guarantee trade
union and welfare rights
thereby articulating the
martyrs' simultaneous commitment to an essential
'Scottish dimension' as well
as to social justice.
Once again the Society
was fortunate in the fine
weather which graced the
occasion. Lily Love--who
recently made a substantial
contribution towards the
cost of leather shoulder-
saddles for the Society's
banner--laid the wreath,
and we were also grateful to
one of our other stalwarts,
Peter Wright, who had
come all the way from Fife
only to find himself being
press-ganged into giving the
financial appeal -- which
raised the very respectable
sum of £62.
Membership of The 1820
Society is £5 waged/£2 unwaged,
Membership secretary
William Douglas, 252 Nether
Auldhouse Road, Glasgow
G45 1LS, would welcome a
surge in new members.
See also 'The Radical Rising' on THE Scots Independence Tour.
Return to the index
Tory Lies and Fiddled Figures - Andrew Wilson
Andrew Wilson joined the HQ staff in August as the Senior Researcher/
Economist, having previously worked as an economist in
the Scottish Office. This month he tells SI readers the truth
about Scotland's finances and exposes the Tories' fiddled
figures, put out under the guise of impartial Scottish Office Information.
In late October the Scottish Office published its
latest "Government Expenditure and Revenues in
Scotland'' report. This supposedly impartial exercise
has rightly drawn fire as a
politically motivated sham,
and abuse both of the Civil
Service and of taxpayers'
resources. Both issues are
being pursued by SNP
Members of Parliament.
What interests me, as an
economist, however, is the
cynical attempt to mislead
that is implicit in the entire
published document.
How many times have we
heard Tory politicians
quoting the line that
Scotland is subsidised by the
UK to the tune of £8 billion?
In fact the Scottish Office
report says nothing of
the sort -- even on their
own dodgy methodology
-- but relies on the
smokescreen of jargon and
"official statistics" to confuse. They rely on the view
that Government budget
statistics to most people are
like King James VI's
thoughts on Dr Donne's
verses--"They are like the
peace of God, they pass all
understanding ".
Even sadder is the fact
that the smoke-screen exercise not only tried to confuse
politicians, but it actually
confused some of the Scottish Press.
Take as an example the
headline in the Herald that
said ''£8200 million subsidy
for Scots".
In fact--although you
wouldn't know this
without an inspection of
the fine print--this was
NOT what the Scottish Office document said. The
UK of course ran a
massive deficit of £47.9
billion, although this isn't
mentioned until page 32 of
the report. This is crucial
because part of the £8.2
billion is Scotland's proportionate share of the UK
deficit which should be
subtracted if one is looking
to find out how much
Scotland is being "subsidised". This would leave
£4.0 billion and thus the
£8.2 billion 'subsidy' is
quickly halved.
From that £4.0 billion we
must then subtract
Scotland's share of
privatisation proceeds and
North Sea revenues. Many
journalists were under the
impression that privatisation
proceeds and oil revenues
had been included. This was
understandable because the
report did devote a lot of
space to both these issues--
half a page on privatisation
proceeds and two pages on
oil revenues.
It was not clear until footnote 4 on page 32 that
privatisation receipts were
not in the figures. Other fine
print deal with the actual exlusion of oil revenues. If
these two factors are included--as they must be--the
''subsidy" drops again--
now down to £2 billion--
a rather different figure
from the headline £8.2
billion.
It is at that £2 billion
figure that there can start a
real debate about the
minutiae of the economic argument - a debate on
matters such as the treatment of income tax and
''unidentified" expenditure.
The SNP figures on these
matters are sources from a
range of documents and
stand up to any scrutiny.
These figures have the effect
of disposing of any subsidy
whatsoever.
It is quite appalling that
Government Ministers are
using officials to produce
documents which use
cynical presentational tricks
to mislead the very people
that they are supposed to
serve. Michael Forsyth is
now using statistics rather
as a drunk man uses a
lamppost--for support
rather than illumination.
Instead of employing the
very substantial talents of
the Civil Service and their
professional economists
and statisticians, to inform
and assist people in coming to a considered judgment, they are used
shamelessly to obfuscate.
This will of course come
back to haunt the Tories.
One area where they have
already begun to produce
problems for the Tories lies
in the work the SNP has
recently undertaken using
Scottish Office figures and
methodology.
The SNP has applied such
techniques to every fiscal
year since 1979. We find
that using their own method
--not ours--Scotland contributed a relative surplus of
£80 billion over the period
to the London Treasury,
£16,000 for every man,
woman and child in
Scotland. Asked to respond
to this figure at their news
briefing last week, the Scottish Office official could only say that ''it would not be
appropriate for me to
comment''.
However, comment they
will as an answer will be
required to the Parliamentary Question that Alex
Salmond has now tabled.
When the answer comes it
will mark the beginning of
the end of the fiddled
figures trick that Forsyth
and his predecessors have
used to try and bamboozle Scottish voters and the Scottish Press.
Return to the index
David McCarthy takes Forsyth to Task
As an Englishman who has
spent the last eight years in
Scotland, and would not live
anywhere else, I was sadden-
ed by the venom in Mr Forsyth's speech to the Conservative Party Conference in
Bournemouth attacking the
SNP. He seemed to get more
and more furious like a golfer
thrashing about in the rough.
He claims that "over the past
quarter-of-a-century the SNP
has cynically generated an atmosphere of anti-English sentiment" and has "orchestrated
hostility'' against the English.
Really? I have travelled far and
wide in Scotland, have knocked on thousands of doors, have
the most obvious English accent--and have never met any
anti-English sentiment. Nor
have I met any anti-English
sentiment within the SNP.
None.
What does exist in Scotland
is something entirely different.
There is a strong feeling that
the UK Government doesn't
care much about Scotland and
that we would do better with
control of our own affairs.
Some version of this view appears to be held by at least
three-quarters of the population
in Scotland, just as it was
strongly held in the past by people like Mr Lang and Mr
Rifkind. It has nothing whatever to do with being "anti-
English" .
Mr Forsyth attacks SNP
claims that the Scottish
economy would do very well
with independence. "Fantasy". "Extravagant creative
accounting '' . ''Naivety''.
"Fraudulent prospectus". (The
spit must have been flying all
over the stage by this time).
The SNP's argument that
Scotland is not subsidised by
the rest of the UK, and would
be more prosperous with independence, is all set out in
detail with statistics taken
from quoted Government
sources. We welcome reasoned analysis of our view. Mr
Forsyth only invites ridicule
by shouting abuse. Perhaps
he can't sustain a discussion
on economics? Surely the
Tories must have someone
who can?
The SNP's "Independence in
Europe'', he tells us, ''would
reduce Scotland to Third World
status and hand over the governance of our country to
Brussels".
Well, the UK has "Independence in Europe", --
doesn't it? Has Mr Forsyth's
party handed over the governance of our country to
Brussels? I don't think so.
Those that do would of course
say Mrs Thatcher, Mr Forsyth's mentor, took the fatal
step by signing the Single European Act.
All the SNP wants is the
same ''Independence in
Europe'' for Scotland that the
UK now has. We envy the
position within the EU of countries like Ireland and Denmark
and wish we could have the opportunity to manage our own
affairs as successfully as they
do. For the future, we are
"pro-Europe"--like many of
Mr Forsyth's Tory colleagues.
Perhaps the central theme of
Mr Forsyth's speech was supposed to be where he accuses
the SNP of being "narrowly
socialist''. ''The arrogant
assumption of the Salmond
school of Nationalism is that to
be a true Scot you must first be
a socialist; if you do not embrace that neanderthal illusion,
you forfeit your Scottish
identity".
We make no such assumption. I quote my own introductory leaflet to the electors
of East Lothian: "No-one can
say what Government Scotland will have after independence. With proportional representation all four parties in
Scotland will be well represented. Very likely there'll be
a coalition. Then we shall
have the politics of consensus
instead of the childish shouting match you see at Westminster".
After independence there will
be plenty of room for the
Tories. In fact I expect we shall
see a rather more attractive,
and, with the benefit of proportional representation, more successful Tory party in Scotland.
It will be free of the laager
mentality that results from having control of no councils, having no MEPs and only a handful of Scottish MPs. Certainly,
if the SNP ever were to become
a "narrowly socialist" party embracing
"neanderthal illusions" etc, I might need to find
another party myself!
As to ''socialist" SNP policies, I don't really mind what
Mr Forsyth calls them. We
support, among other things: a
first class NHS stripped of the
commercially oriented ''reforms" that have only produced expensive bureaucracy, free
nursery places for all 3 and 4
year-olds, well-funded comprehensive education. higher
pensions and a cold climate
allowance for the elderly, action to kick-start council house
building and some redistribution of the burden of taxation
in favour of those earning less
than f26,000 a year, Neanderthal? Come, come, Mr Forsyth. These proposals would be
regarded as mainstream in
other European countries.
I suppose if we really wanted
to be neanderthal we would be
following the Tories by proposing to abolish inheritance tax,
which after all only cuts in at
f200,000, while forcing elderly
people with assets of £16,000
to sell their home to pay for
residential care.
Concluded Mr Forsyth in
Bournemouth: ''The true
flower of Scotland is the genius
and the generosity of our
people''. Mr Gerald Warner--
Mr Forsyth's eccentric Right-
wing adviser, who presumably
wrote the speech--certainly
isn't a genius. A little more
generosity from Mr Forsyth
might help the political debate
in Scotland.
It might even help the
Tories. After all, however
you read the polls, nothing
Mr Forsyth has done so far
has troubled the scorers.
Even Neanderthal Man
knows that 13 per cent is
within a grunt or two of--er
--13 per cent.
Return to the index
Scots Independent - Seventy Years Old this Month
Seventy years ago the founders, William and
Iain Gillies alongwith Tom H Gibson, set in
motion what has proved to be, the longest surviving political newspaper in Scotland this century. Not only is the SI still alive and well but
their offspring are still active in the Nationalist
cause. Anne Lorne Gillies, SNP PPC for the
Western isles, is the daughter of Iain and grand-
daughter of William Gillies. Tom and Elma
Campbell Gibson's daughter Isabel is a stalwart
member of the Dumfries Branch of the SNP and
a valued supporter of the SI.
As I said at this year's SI Lunch and Oliver
Award Presentation, I don't know for certain
what was in the minds of the founders in 1926,
but I am sure that Tom H Gibson, in particular,
recognised that it would be a long hard struggle to convince our fellow Scots of the need for
and merits of the case for Independence.
The Scots Independent was to the fore in
calling for the formation of "a Scottish
National Party" and the Scottish National
League was among the bodies which came
together to form the National Party of
Scotland in 1928. A move well described by
Elma Campbell Gibson in the columns of the
SI in May 1955. Thus Scotland had in 1928,
for the first time ever, both a newspaper
which championed the Independence cause
and a political party prepared to seek an electoral mandate for Scottish Freedom.
It has been a long haul since 1926. The ups
and downs of the National Movement have been
well documented in two recent books. 'Independent and Free' by Richard J Finlay (John Donald
1974) recounts the history of Scottish Nationalism to 1945 and James Mitchell's
'Strategies for Self-government' (Polygon 1996)
expertly analyses the various strategies and
methods used to secure a Scottish Parliament
over the past 100 years.
But real progress has been made. To-day, in
comparison with 1926, Scotland now has a
political party thirled to securing Independence.
The SNP has for the past 20 years contested
every Scottish constituency at General Elections.
I joined the National Party following the 1959
General Election when only five seats were contested by the SNP. The number of seats contested rose to 15 in 1964 and to 23 in 1966 as
the Nationalist cause surged forward in the
Sixties.
Since Dr Winifred M Ewing's magnificent
victory in the 1967 Hamilton By-Election, the
SNP has had a continuous presence in the
English House of Commons. From a high of
eleven MPs in 1974 the Party now holds four
seats, controls three local authorities with
Council seats held throughout Scotland, and
has a voice in Europe through two excellent
Euro MEPs, Dr Winifred M Ewing and Dr
Allan Macartney. Recent opinion polls indicate that the National Party could repeat
the electoral success gained in the two 1974
General Elections. But, of course, only time will tell.
Over the years the Scots Independent has been
served by some outstanding Scots as Editor,
from William and lain Gillies in 1926 to the present indefatigable incumbent, W Kenneth Fee.
In between, men of the calibre of Arthur
Donaldson, Dr Robert D Mclntyre, Tom H Gibson, Alasdair MacDonald, Michael Grieve,
Albert D Mackie, Dr David Murison, Douglas
Stewart, Alwyn James and Colin Bell have
ensured that the Scottish cause has been well
backed in print.
Contributors over the years have included
literary figures such as Neil M Gunn, Hugh
MacDiarmid, Lewis Spence, Alexander Scott
and Donald Campbell. Indeed the SI has chosen
to celebrate its 70th Anniversary by publishing,
in conjunction with the Scottish Cultural Press,
a selection of the 'Around The Arts' -columns
penned by Alexander Scott from 1968 to 1970
(the SI was then a weekly). Edited by Neil R
MacCallum, the present Arts Editor of the Sl,
'Sing Frae The Hert' is a must for all those
interested in Scottish Culture.
Another two past contributors merit special
mention. The exceptional Scottish cartoonist,
the late Ewen Bain, contributed an outstanding series of political cartoons from the
January 1978 Sl, on Devilution (as Compton
MacKenzie aptly summed up Devolution).
The SI published a selection of Bain's political
cartoons, edited by David R Rollo, in 1991.
Over the decades, the late W Oliver Brown
contributed a pithy column which was the first
item read by many SI devotees. Once again
David R Rollo did sterling work in editing a
splendid selection of Oliver's comments and
aphorisms under the title of 'The Wisdom of
Oliver Brown'. It was appropriate when Dr
James C Lees proposed that the SI should honour
a Scot each year that the award should be named
after W Oliver Brown.
The Oliver was first awarded in 1983 to the
writer and climber Tom Weir and is now regarded as the Scottish equivalent of the 'Brits (so-
called) Honours List'. The roll call of winners
indeed does read as a list of outstanding Scots--
Tom Weir, Prof Derick S Thomson, Ewen Bain,
Mary Marquis, David Stephen, Jimmie
Mcgregor, Muriel Gray, George Rosie, Norman
MacCaig, Dr John Purser, Gordon Wright,
Dorothy-Grace Elder and Colin Bell. The
nomination list for the award is now open again.
The SI volunteers, from Business Manager
Tom K Preston, a task he has fulfilled since
1958, Editor Kenneth Fee, since 1985, the
dispatch team to the many contributors, all give
of their time and effort willingly to further the
Scottish cause. The team associated with the SI
look upon their service as a trust, a duty to be
carried on until the day Scottish Freedom is
achieved.
But the production of a Nationalist
newspaper would be pointless without the existence of a political party to secure the goal
of Independence. That is why, although the
SI is independent of the Scottish National
Party, it urges electoral support for the Party. The SI welcomed, for example, the recent
approach from SNP Chief Executive Mike
Russell to run a double page election fixture
in the lead up to next year's General
Election.
For monthly sales the SI is grateful to all participating SNP Branches (Branches receive a
20% discount on the cover price), individual
agents such as top salesman Robert Halliday and
the growing number of postal subscribers. From
Auchtermuchty to Australia, from Zetland to
(New) Zealand the Sl is distributed world wide, every month by the 51 Cowane Street
volunteers. Our newest international postal
subscription has just arrived from Bermuda.
That we can celebrate the 70th Anniversary
of the SI is due solely to the loyalty of the many
helpers and readers over the decades. Unlike
most political newspapers the Sl receives no subsidy from a political party, but relies on sales
and the generosity of its readers.
In addition the Scots Independence Trust,
which aims to guarantee the paper's future
economic well being, has already attracted over
30 magnificent patrons--and is of course looking for more!
Our thanks are extended to current teams
of helpers and readers with the hope that Independence will have dawned before the SI's
80th anniversary. Until then we will continueto do our best to live up to the vision of our
founders--to promote all that is best in Scottish Nationalism and all that is best in our
beloved Scotland.
All books referred to below are available by post from--
Scots Independent (Newspapers) Ltd, 51 Cowane Street,
Stirling FK8 IJW.
"Independent and Free" £13.50 (Special rate incl p+p)
"Strategies for Self-govermnent" £13.00 incl p+p
"Bain's Cartoons" £3.00 Special price--post free
"The Wisdom of Oliver Brown" £3.00 Special price--post free
"Sing Frae The Hert" £5.95 incl p+p
Return to the index
CONTACT:
Scots Independent, 51 Cowane Street, Stirling, SCOTLAND, FK8 1JW
Tel: 01786 473523 (24 hr), FAX: 0141-427-4030
If you have any comments (good or bad) on these pages contact
hamish@rmplc.co.uk.
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