Wednesday 16 July 2008

SNP show their true colours


The Scottish National Party is attempting to diffuse accusations of duplicity following comments made yesterday by a candidate. John Mason, SNP candidate for Glasgow East, suggested that the party would keep on holding referendums on Scottish independence until consent was given for the split.

"When you ask someone to marry you, sometimes you have to persist" said Mason, Leader of the Opposition on Glasgow City Council, before hurriedly adding that if such a referendum was lost, the SNP would not hold a further one “the following day”.

Of course, what the SNP are proposing is not marriage but political divorce (and like many divorces, participants can occasionally indulge in exaggeration, speculation and occasionally outright deception). But the Nationalists should be cautious – on an appearance on BBC1’s Question Time earlier this month SNP Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon was jeered by the Musselburgh audience over her party’s refusal to hold the promised referendum due to fears over the result – i.e. that the majority of Scottish people do not support breaking up the Union. Confirmation that the party is really not that interested in representation so much as using the parliamentary process to reinforce private hobbyhorses is unlikely to go down well at the ballot box.

Still, refreshing to see the SNP show their true duplicitous colours for once.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi,

Apologies for posting this as a comment, but I couldn't find a contact form or email address.

This is just a quick note to let you know that your blog has been included as a Trusted Source on the Politigg news site.
http://www.politigg.co.uk

This means that Politigg will provide a direct link to every article you write, including a brief snippet to get readers interested.

Politigg aims to allow you access to the best political articles from across the web, as judged by other members. Many of the articles are gathered automatically from the extensive list of trusted sources, but users can also submit articles that they find interesting or useful. There are currently around 400 political websites monitored for new content:
http://www.politigg.co.uk/feeds.php

To get the most out of Politigg, I strongly advise you to read the one page Quick Start User Guide which covers all the main functions.
http://www.politigg.co.uk/html.php?id=guide

Suggestions for new blogs, news sites and political groups to include in the trusted sources list are most welcome.

If you would like to link to Politigg, there is a range of buttons and text links available here:
http://www.politigg.co.uk/html.php?id=links

Or, you can add a voting widget to each of your articles:
http://www.politigg.co.uk/html.php?id=widget

Cheers,

Anthony Butcher

Anonymous said...

Facebook coming to Sony PS3 next? Say it ain't so! ... Yesterday images of an upcoming Sony Playstation 3 interface update were leaked. Along with some fairly trivial tweaks, the images revealed ... itworld.com/personal-tech/84520/facebook-coming-sony-ps3-next-say-it-aint-so

david miller said...

what a pity this blog is not very active it was recommended by Iain Dale.