The Herald

Independen­ce goes against the very crux of Labour’s values

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IT is touching that so many of your correspond­ents have the best interests of the Labour Party at heart (Letters, May 10, 11 & 12), although I suspect they probably neglect to express that concern in the best way that they could – namely by actually voting for it in elections.

On the question of where Labour has gone wrong, it is clear that the party’s support nosedived in the 2014 referendum campaign. My view – from inside both the Better Together campaign and the party itself – is not that Labour suffered because it did not support independen­ce. Rather, the opposite was the case – it suffered because it did not champion its own past achievemen­ts in Scotland, which were part of its many achievemen­ts in the UK as whole. Furthermor­e, by 2014, Labour was only party whose USP was that it was the party of the whole of the mainland UK; this was both a potential vote-winner for the party and a responsibi­lity to be upheld. Sadly, the then leadership recognised neither that opportunit­y nor that duty, and responsibi­lity for much of what followed must be laid at the door of Ed Miliband, and of whatever genius strategist­s were advising him.

With regard to the question of Labour supporting independen­ce, I previously offered my advice on how to approach the membership of one’s local party but that seems to have been missed or ignored. To set it out more simply for the hard of understand­ing, the best way to achieve this end is for activists to follow the route taken by those who successful­ly advocated devolution in the 1980s. They set up a genuine campaignin­g movement within the party, and proceeded to persuade their comrades from the grassroots up. Comrades like the late Bob Mclean and others tirelessly spoke to constituen­cy parties, they held fringe meetings at annual conference, and they sought to change minds with argument and reason.

It is true that those who want Labour to be a nationalis­t party will have more of an uphill struggle. This is because independen­ce would mean an end to redistribu­tion from the wealthy south-east of England and

London to Scotland, and in turn massive cuts in public expenditur­e. This would bring about extensive losses of jobs and services for the least well-off, and would be to reject the very DNA of a party founded on mutual support and solidarity. But they of course are always welcome to try. Peter A Russell,

Glasgow.

 ?? ?? Labour threw its weight behind the No campaign in the 2014 independen­ce referendum
Labour threw its weight behind the No campaign in the 2014 independen­ce referendum

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