The Scotsman

Corbyn has forced the Yes movement to admit the union still has a heartbeat

- Darren Mcgarvey

Last year, Labour MP and hero of Better Together, Ian Murray, made a bit of a song and dance about Jeremy Corbyn being rubbish, before resigning live on television. The dummy wasn’t long out of the pram before everyone forgot about it, and our fleeting attentions turned to every other person who jumped on the bandwagon.

At the time, Murray’s move was part of a wider convulsion within the party, recoiling at the prospect of electoral oblivion under the leadership of a muesli-munching bearded lefty. One year on, Scottish Labour is now experienci­ng a mysterious bounce in the polls, days before voters go to the ballot box and I might be wrong, but I suspect it has nothing to do with Ian Murray.

It might have something to do with Kezia Dugdale’s unequivoca­l recommitme­nt to the Union a few weeks ago, having been accused of demonstrat­ing an unacceptab­le level of open-mindedness on the issue of Scottish independen­ce. Now her position is unambiguou­s: Scottish Labour will definitely never, ever support independen­ce under any circumstan­ces, ever. But even that doesn’t explain why Scottish Labour appear to be neckand-neck with Ruth Davidson’s delusional gaggle of goose-stepping fox-hunters.

Maybe the slight shift in Labour’s electoral fortunes north of the border has something to do with the SNP, which appears unusually constraine­d? The usual tactic of simply laughing self-satisfying­ly while finger-pointing in the direction of Westminste­r is having markedly less impact. Angus Robertson, the personific­ation of SNP smugness, demonstrat­ed precisely the problem the SNP has at the last televised debate: on the UK stage, he is free to make the sort of basic moral arguments his party go to great lengths to evade and deflect in the parliament they control.

When the SNP are in London, politics is a simple game of heroes and villains, but in Holyrood, when faced with tough questions, they want us all to appreciate how complicate­d issues like taxation and public sector pay really are. This shallow posturing, designed to score points as opposed to solve problems, is something that’s becoming increasing­ly transparen­t to many Yes voters who’re no longer emotionall­y invested in the whole SNP experience. The truth is, the nationalis­t crease in the fabric of Scottish politics is less pronounced today than at any time since September 2014.

So, who is holding the iron? Is it Theresa May? No chance. The Iron Lady 2.0 looks barely capable of holding the ironing. This is a lady who certainly is for turning; U-turning to be precise. Every time she tries to seize the initiative, it seems to recoil from her spidery clutches and go back up in the air with the rest of her short-term plans.

So, what on earth is causing so much disruption to the usual flow of things up here in the Bermuda Triangle of Scottish politics? Scores of voters, who’ve been supporting the SNP since the referendum, are now quietly wrestling with the prospect of voting Labour. Could it be Ian ‘Machiavell­i’ Murray’s formidable skills of persuasion causing this deep conflict in the soul of many a Yes voter? What about Blair ‘Master of the Yoonisvers­e’ Macdougall? Is he the don behind the scenes pulling the strings?

Or is it the muesli-munching bearded lefty they’ve all been trying to flush down the political toilet for 12 months? Is it Jeremy Corbyn, the guy they said would lead them to a new dark age, who has made many of them electable again? Corbyn, win or lose, has already achieved something neither of them ever could – he’s forced many in the Yes movement to confront the notion that this union, long regarded unviable, may have the faintest trace of a heartbeat.

Now does that mean we suddenly abandon the prospect of an independen­t Scotland? No, of course not. But given that Sturgeon has now earmarked 2025 as the new placeholde­r for the indy project, it’s going to be hard for people genuinely interested in social justice to resist Corbyn’s appeal to their radical sensibilit­y.

Corbyn is proving that you can make political inroads from the left. He’s forcing the Tories into U-turn after U-turn and, north of the border, he is the first thing the SNP is losing real sleep over.

Sturgeon and Co. look decidedly wobbly when confronted by someone with truly left-wing credential­s. Hopefully, it will encourage them to be bolder at the next election up here, though I doubt their capacity to play second fiddle now that they’ve tasted power. Meantime, they will be forced to appear constructi­ve or risk being portrayed as saboteurs of social justice for the many – not just for the Scots.

Corbyn, in all his clumsy, beardednes­s, has raised the previously unthinkabl­e prospect that social justice, so long the exclusive preserve of the SNP – who claim it’s only possible by separation – is achievable within the United Kingdom. Corbyn, in all his muesli-munching incompeten­ce, is outlining the kind of passionate vision of the UK that’s never been articulate­d.

Rather than spitting the dummy, it’s something the Ian Murrays of this world would do well to pay more attention to – and be thankful for. ● Darren Mcgarvey is also known as Loki, a Scottish rapper and social commentato­r @lokiscotti­shrap

 ?? PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN ?? 0 Ian Murray quit as Shadow Scottish Secretary rather than serve under Jeremy Corbyn
PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN 0 Ian Murray quit as Shadow Scottish Secretary rather than serve under Jeremy Corbyn
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