The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Case for independen­ce boosted by Westminste­r meltdown

- Jim Crumley column

An old Nat King Cole LP came to mind while reading some Scottish election coverage. It would stick in the middle of a track called You’re Looking At Me, and right after the phrase, “might I repeat”, so that what you heard was “might I repeat, repeat, repeat, repeat…”

The relevant election issue was Scotland’s post-covid future, specifical­ly the perceived need for a second independen­ce referendum if there is a majority for proindepen­dence parties.

Westminste­r’s familiar, airy dismissal that it was settled in 2014 “for a generation” was the “repeat” stuck in the cracked groove.

The trouble with that interpreta­tion of events is that events have since overwhelme­d the interpreta­tion, and now the case for a referendum is demonstrab­ly more unsettled than it has ever been.

Scotland’s recovery from Covid-19 is but one of the events that has made the natives restless.

The case for independen­ce, and therefore for a second referendum, strengthen­s with every day of a Westminste­r government in the process of a rare species of meltdown that would be funny if it wasn’t so alarming.

The principal reason for that new-found strength is staring the prime minister in the face every time he peers into a keekin’ glass.

His attitude towards Scotland (think flyswatter and pesky flies), like his attitude towards Europe (think Trump and Mexico), translates north of the border as a species of contempt we tend to reserve exclusivel­y for the inner workings of what we used to be able to call the Conservati­ve Party’s Nigel Farage tendency.

It seems the tendency lives on without him.

The independen­ce issue is one the prime minister doesn’t care to face up to: His own puffed-upness sits awkwardly alongside a legacy of being the PM who presides over the break-up of the UK.

Right now he was two Scottish problems in particular. One is that Scottish Conservati­sm’s only recognisab­le policy is to rubbish Scottish Nationalis­m – and, given that Scotland consistent­ly returns a Scottish Nationalis­t government, it is a policy that effectivel­y rubbishes the majority of the Scottish people, too.

The other is that the horror movie currently playing out in Westminste­r in which rich Tory chums scratch each other’s backs at your expense and mine goes down with a lead balloonish thud in this neck of the woods.

This means any ambition the Scottish

Conservati­ves harbour to make progress at Holyrood is further hampered by having to navigate around crash-landed lead balloons, while their erstwhile leader has just opted to abandon Scotland for the House of Lords.

Whichever way you look at all of that, it’s not a good look.

This is not a one-man party political broadcast on behalf of any political party, but rather an argument for fairness.

It is fair to expect a Scotland that consistent­ly elects a government diametrica­lly opposed to the philosophy of the British Government to be taken seriously and treated differentl­y.

It is fair to expect some kind of considerat­ion to reflect the fact Prime Minister David Cameron said in 2014 that a No vote was our guarantee to stay in Europe. Scotland was then, and is now, very pro-europe.

It is fair to expect to be listened to when we make the case for a Scottish nationalis­m that is outgoing, inclusive and internatio­nalist, and seek to turn away

from the current Westminste­r model of British nationalis­m which is insular, inward and unwelcomin­g by comparison.

And it is fair to be allowed to pursue our long-held opposition to nuclear weapons on Scottish soil.

I was not quite old enough to vote when I decided that independen­ce made sense to me, and in the intervenin­g 50-something years I have seen no reason to change that decision, and many, many reasons to affirm it.

But the main reason is that I have faith in my fellow Scots.

There’s also this: I remember Eric Mackay, then editor of the Scotsman newspaper, telling me about the 1979 referendum to create a Scottish Assembly.

His newspaper’s letters page became a forum for the debate. He said that in the run-up he was fielding phone calls day after day from leaders of business, science, arts, education and from all over the world, all of them Scots wanting to know what was happening and eager to return and be a part of it.

He spoke of how heartening that wave of enthusiasm was. He also said that on the day after the result was declared, every one of them disappeare­d back into the woodwork.

But new generation­s of far-travelled Scots are out there, and there is every reason to believe that many would return to be part of an independen­t Scotland, and their knowledge would grace and inform our new internatio­nalism.

At the very least, it’s a beautiful thought. Might I repeat, it’s a beautiful thought.

Policy that effectivel­y rubbishes the majority of the Scottish people

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 ??  ?? LEADERSHIP: Douglas Ross and Ruth Davidson – the Scottish Conservati­ves must navigate around crash-landed lead balloons.
LEADERSHIP: Douglas Ross and Ruth Davidson – the Scottish Conservati­ves must navigate around crash-landed lead balloons.

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