The Herald

Top union chief calls for Labour to support Indyref2

Democratic will of voters must be respected, says STUC leader

- By Tom Gordon

THE country’s most senior trade unionist has urged the Scottish Labour movement to back Nicola Sturgeon’s call for a second independen­ce referendum.

STUC general secretary Grahame Smith said the democratic wishes of the people of Scotland had to be acknowledg­ed in the wake of last month’s General Election result.

Although he stopped short of endorsing independen­ce, he also said the Scottish Labour Party and unions had “nothing to fear and much to gain” from considerin­g what leaving the UK could look like.

The SNP said his interventi­on in the constituti­onal debate was “significan­t and welcome”.

Mr Smith has previously been circumspec­t about Indyref2, given divided opinions among the 500,000 trade union members the Scottish Trades Union Congress represents.

However, in November, he announced he would retire as general secretary in the spring after 14 years, a move that appears to have freed him from past restraints.

Writing in the forthcomin­g issue of the Scottish Left Review, Mr Smith said Labour last had a “compelling offer” on the constituti­on when it proposed a devolved Scottish

Parliament in the 1980s and 1990s, “but not now”.

He said The Vow of greater devolution “cooked up by Gordon Brown” on the eve of the 2014 independen­ce referendum “may have contribute­d to the ‘no’ outcome, but it hasn’t quelled demand for further constituti­onal change or support for the SNP (largely at Labour’s expense)”.

Referring to Ms Sturgeon’s drive for a new referendum this year based on SNP gains in last month’s election, he said: “The First Minister has made it clear she will now push for Indyref2.

“This has left Labour in a quandary: it cannot hold, as it has, that the overall election result gives the Tories a Brexit mandate, and simultaneo­usly maintain the result in Scotland cannot be viewed as a mandate for Indyref2.

“The democratic wishes of the people of Scotland need to be acknowledg­ed. The Scottish Labour movement should support Indyref2.”

However he said the Labour movement should also “confront the question of what independen­ce actually means in a modern geo-political and economic context”.

He went on: “Whether Scotland’s currency is the pound, euro or its own, the ability of its government to

act independen­tly will be constraine­d by its trading relationsh­ips and the strictures of a Central Bank in either London or Frankfurt.

“While the question on the ballot paper may remain: ‘Should Scotland be an independen­t country?’, the real question is what powers, or what elements of Scotland’s sovereignt­y, are Scottish voters willing to share and with whom?

“The Labour movement has nothing to fear and much to gain from constructi­ve engagement on this. It needs a compelling offer on the constituti­onal question, without which it will struggle to get the public to respond to the many positive policies it advocates and constituti­onal rather than class politics will continue to dominate.”

Although Ms Sturgeon has called for Indyref2 in 2020, there appears little prospect of Boris Johnson giving Holyrood the power for it.

The SNP MP Kenny Macaskill this week admitted the chance of Indyref2 in 2020 was probably “nil” and that was “no bad thing”, given the SNP had yet to fix problems in its losing independen­ce prospectus of 2014.

Mr Smith’s call for the Scottish Labour party and trade unions to back Indyref2 follows two Labour MSPS, Monica Lennon and Neil Findlay, agreeing with Ms Sturgeon that the Scottish people should decide its timing, not Westminste­r.

Also writing in the new Scottish Left Review, Mr Findlay said: “We cannot deny the people of Scotland a second referendum where the majority is calling for it. However a clear propositio­n... is impossible until we know the outcome of Brexit and that will not happen in 2020.”

Labour has said it would not “stand in the way” of Indyref2 if the SNP and Greens won a majority at Holyrood in the 2021 election.

However it has not actively embraced Indyref2, and Scottish leader Richard Leonard has focused on a constituti­onal convention to discuss the distributi­on of power within the Union since the election.

SNP deputy leader Keith Brown said: “Grahame Smith is entirely right to say that the democratic wishes of the people of Scotland should be respected. Scotland’s future should be in Scotland’s hands not those of Boris Johnson.

“No politician or political party should stand in the way of people having that right to choose.

“The Scottish Labour movement should take seriously the advice of Scotland’s top trade unionist and engage positively over how we build a fairer, more prosperous country with the powers of independen­ce.”

Mr Smith is seen as close to the Scottish Government, and has a number of paid positions on public sector boards, as well as being a member of the First Minister’s standing council on Europe.

SNP ministers also provide almost two-thirds of the STUC’S income through its training arm.

However Mr Smith has also criticised the SNP Government in the past, particular­ly its “pathetic excuses” for not raising taxes on the wealthy to pay for public services.

Scottish Labour was asked for comment.

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