The Herald

Forget Woke. The SNP faces a much more age-old problem

- MARK SMITH Read more: Mark Smith appears in The Herald every Monday and Thursday

THE Grumpy Old Men of Scottish nationalis­m have been talking about what’s going wrong with Scottish nationalis­m and, surprise surprise, they do not agree. Kenny Macaskill says the SNP has become too authoritar­ian and is underminin­g women’s rights. Jim Sillars says the party is moving too fast and should wait until independen­ce is at 60%. And Mike

Russell says the problem is nationalis­ts are too hectoring towards people who do not support them. The independen­ce movement, it’s got to be said, is pretty dis-united.

But who’s right? Mr Macaskill, newly elected Alba’s deputy leader, is obviously giving vent to the frustratio­n felt by many nationalis­ts – particular­ly those of an older, male, heterosexu­al variety – that the SNP is obsessed with hate crime and trans rights; that it has become “woke”. Mr Sillars, on the other hand, is talking the logical sense of a warhorse who’s been through many battles: the SNP has little chance of winning a referendum any time soon but, to assuage the pushier wing, the leadership must appear to be constantly willing to head out over the bags into No Man’s Land.

As for Mr Russell, I have never knowingly agreed with the man, but the director of the SNP’S Independen­ce Unit appeared to be dishing out a bit of common sense this week. Hectoring rhetoric by nationalis­ts, he said, can be off-putting (uh-huh) but he then said that to convince the doubters, the party needs to “inform not insult.” Note the assumption there: Scots who aren’t Yes just need to be “informed”, a premise that has all the casual over-confidence of that irritating meme that was around a few years ago: “You Yes Yet?” Perhaps Mr Russell should remember that being hectoring is a problem, but so is being arrogant.

Anyway, the real issue here may be that none of the Three Grumpy Men have quite put their finger on the actual problem. If the SNP really is “woke”, as Mr Macaskill suggests, why has it still not introduced a reform on trans rights which has been establishe­d in other countries for ages? Could it be that, rather than being woke, the SNP’S real issue is it’s not woke enough and is, in fact, pretty conservati­ve? Mr Russell alluded to the cause of this in his speech: the party needs to retain its existing supporters and attract new ones. Hence, woke and conservati­ve at the same time. Hence, simultaneo­usly in the trenches and overthe-top into No Man’s Land.

Mr Russell also said something else in his speech which points to an even deeper, and more profound dilemma. Until Scotland gains independen­ce, he said, Scotland will not be able to fulfil the potential of the people who live here. “That becomes more important with every passing day,” he went on, “and I become more impatient for it every passing day too. Age does that to people – as those who don’t know will at some stage discover.”

I’m pleased to say we’re back on familiar territory here, with Mr Russell confidentl­y saying things I disagree with. People often get grumpier and more impatient as they get older (or so my friends and family tell me). But the problem the SNP really faces isn’t wokeism, or hectoring supporters, it’s the demographi­cs of age that are totally unavoidabl­e in Scotland. In the past, there’s been talk among over-excited nationalis­ts of a Corbyn-style youthquake in Scotland and the inevitably of old people dying off and young people being more likely to vote Yes. The theory goes that Yes will triumph because No is going to end up six feet under.

But there are a couple of trends that point in a different direction, the most obvious being the actual make-up of Scotland and its direction of travel. Scotland’s population isn’t just old, it’s getting older and it’s getting older faster than the other countries in the UK. Indeed, the number of over-60s is projected to increase by 50% in the next ten years as the number of under-16s falls.

In other words, the oldies ain’t dying off, they’re thriving.

This has a number of consequenc­es. First, there are going to be more old people at the next referendum. Second, old people are more likely than young people to vote. And third, old people generally become more conservati­ve as they age leading to a population that is skewed in favour of the more conservati­ve option, or the status quo. To put it another way: the demographi­cs point to Scotland becoming more No than Yes as our hair turns grey. Of course, there may be a chance that young people wooed by Yes in their youth stay Yes as they age, but that’s not what the evidence suggests: you get old, you get more cautious, you get more likely to say No Thanks.

But there’s yet another trend that’s worth considerin­g which may cast further doubt on any youthquake, and it’s the economic realities. Scotland’s ageing population not only means more oldies, it means more people depending on the state, in hospitals and care homes and so forth, and – as the Tories’ decision on national insurance proves – that’s likely to mean more taxation on the young. Combined with a lack of housing, it means a young population that’s economical­ly fairly insecure – certainly, they won’t have the wealth their grandparen­ts had. Which leaves an important question: will economic insecurity make Yes more or less likely? What do you think?

Obviously, I’m projecting into the future a bit here, which is always tricky, but we saw the roots of these trends in the result in 2014. Older voters were overwhelmi­ngly in support of the union – in the over-70s, it was as high as 67% – but the curious fact is that the youngest voters, those aged 16 to 24, also voted No. If a youthquake is coming, it isn’t even registerin­g on the Richter scale.

Perhaps it’s because young people have no money. Perhaps it’s because teenagers can be surprising­ly conservati­ve. Or perhaps it’s because of another trend that is likely to get stronger. Young people talk about independen­ce – of course they do – but they are more likely to talk about the environmen­t and climate change. And if that’s what they care about most, what are they likely to conclude? Are they likely to think that the answer is to break up the union and work more independen­tly? Or are they likely to think that, in an increasing­ly inter-dependent world, the best answer is to work together?

The problem the SNP faces isn’t wokeism, or hectoring supporters, it’s the demographi­cs of age that are totally unavoidabl­e

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 ??  ?? Kenny Macaskill, newly elected deputy leader of Alba, says the SNP has become too authoritar­ian
Kenny Macaskill, newly elected deputy leader of Alba, says the SNP has become too authoritar­ian

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