|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Scottish National Party reelects Salmond as leader
By Steve James
15 October 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Three months after repeatedly denying he had any intentions
of standing for the leadership of the Scottish National Party
(SNP), Alex Salmond has been reelected to the post he resigned
from in 2000. Salmond immediately set out to revive the SNPs
flagging fortunes by simultaneously attacking Prime Minister Tony
Blair over the British occupation of Iraq and presenting the SNP
as Scotlands business friendly party.
Salmond, a former oil economist, was first elected leader of
the SNP in 1990.
Hostility towards the Labour Party, long the dominant party
in Scotland, meant that Salmonds combining of left rhetoric
on certain policy issues with the advocacy of Scottish independence
initially had some success electorally.
The SNP claimed that with independence, the decline of living
standards that had accelerated under Blair could be reversed.
At the same time, Salmond assured big business that the SNP would
cut corporation tax so as to enable Scotland to compete with Ireland
and other UK regions for investment.
With the advent of regional government in Scotland in 1999,
following a 75 percent vote in favour of devolution, the SNP was
expected to win a substantial number of seats in the Scottish
parliament, perhaps enough to form a government.
But Salmond drew bitter hostility from all quarters of official
British politics for his criticism of NATOs 1999 attack
on Serbia. He described the war as unpardonable folly,
advocating instead a policy of sanctions. Salmonds stance
was bound up with his partys orientation to the European
powers. He viewed the US-led attack on Serbia as a demonstration
of the overwhelming military supremacy of the United States and
a threat to Europe.
Partly as a result of a sustained media campaign against Salmond,
the SNP won far fewer seats than was anticipated. In 2000 he resigned,
to be replaced by the pedestrian John Swinney. Salmond went into
semi-retirement in his Westminster seat.
But the intervening years have not been kind to the Scottish
parliament, the SNP, or Swinney.
The regional parliament has become synonymous with the squandering
of public wealth. The new Holyrood building cost, at the last
count, a staggering £431 million pounds ($US773 million),
and has triggered a public inquiry.
Grotesque expenses on a talking shop for 129 members of parliament
and their attendant officials stands in sharp contrast to the
continuing pressure on health, education and social spending under
the ruling Labour/Liberal Democrat coalition. Under First Minister
Jack McConnell, the regional administration in Edinburgh has pressed
ahead with Labours policy of transforming every area of
social, education and health spending into a source of profit,
while social inequality has accelerated.
Many working people have concluded that Holyrood is as indifferent
to their interests as Westminster, corporations based in Scotland
are demanding radical measures to allow regional manufacturing,
finance and information industries to fight their corner on the
world market. Over the period of McConnells tenure, overseas
investment in Scotland has largely dried up.
Simultaneously, the SNP, which had hoped to use regional autonomy
as a springboard towards full independence has gone into decline.
Under Swinney, the SNP has played the role of loyal opposition
in Holyrood, seeking to stabilise the new institution. As a result
the SNP has found itself as discredited as Holyrood and the Labour/Liberal
Democrat coalition.
The 2003 Scottish elections were a disaster for the SNP. Despite
quietly demanding that the election should be turned into a referendum
on the war, Swinneys calls were lost amidst the emergence
of radical parties ostensibly to the SNPs left.
The SNP lost 10 seats, while between them, the Scottish Socialist
Party (SSP) and the Scottish Greens, picked up the same number.
The SSP and the Greens have filled a political space once occupied
by the SNP. Both promote the illusion that Scottish independence
can be a vehicle for social reform. Both rely on the long standing
confusion created by successive generations of Labour and Stalinist
parties that Scottish nationalism has a progressive component.
Both drape themselves in a Scottish flag that was once largely
the political property of the SNP.
The SNPs membership appears to have collapsed to as few
as 8,000 people, and its finances are in disarray. The party has
been wracked by repeated and bitter internal feuds between the
so-called fundamentalist wing committed to secession from the
UK, and those aiming to replace Labour as the reliable party of
corporate Scotland.
Matters came to a head after this years European elections.
The SNP vote slumped from 27 to 20 percent, barely ahead of the
Conservative Party. Pundits considered that this would translate
to around 14 percent in a general election, a figure that would
wipe out the SNP in Westminster. Leading figures pontificated
that their party was going down the plughole. Most
blamed Swinney who duly resigned, while a number of the SNPs
leadership nervously put themselves forward to replace him.
The SNPs crisis was summed up by George Kerevana
former member of the International Marxist Group turned Scottish
nationalist. Writing in his regular column in the Scotsman,
Kerevan complained that the leadership contenders had no policy
ideas and were unable to attract support from the business class.
They would be unable to manage the feuding wings of the SNP, and
unable to offer any political opposition to the Labour Party.
Fearing that the entire devolution project is in danger of
being completely discredited, Kerevan warned, The issue
now is not independence; it is maintaining the credibility of
Scottish democracy. The solution was for the SNP to aim
at forming a government in the next Scottish elections in 2007,
a task for which the party required a confident TV and parliamentary
performer able both to entice corporate support while dispensing
popular sound bites to the media.
Within a fortnight, Salmond put himself forward and rapidly
won support from all wings of the SNP and the media. Over the
summer he set about organising the two faces of his campaign.
For business, Salmond, and his deputy Nicola Sturgeon propose
a range of infrastructure and investment projectsrail links
to airports, an electrified railway line between Glasgow and Edinburgh,
a Scottish investment trust, Scottish embassies around the world,
a Scottish broadcasting authority, and a bid to host the 2012
European football championship. They call for lower corporate
taxes and new measures to force disabled workers into low paying
work. These measures are distinguishable from current Labour policy
only in details.
On the other hand, Salmond has sought to benefit from hostility
to Blair and the war in Iraq. He is one of the most senior political
figures to support a campaign initiated by Welsh nationalist MP
Adam Price to impeach the British prime minister on the basis
of his false claims over Iraqs supposed weapons of mass
destruction.
The impeachment campaign charges Blair with misleading
MPs and calls upon parliament to reassert its controla presentation
of events that is grossly misleading. Blairs war agenda
was overwhelmingly carried by 434 votes to 124 in the parliamentary
vote on February 26, 2003. This was in the face of mass international
protests against war on Iraq, including a demonstration of almost
two million people on the streets of Londonthe largest in
history. And despite all the revelations over falsified intelligence
reports, as well as numerous admissions by various agencies that
Iraq did not possess Weapons of Mass Destruction, the vast majority
of MPs continue to defend the war and insist that Britain must
continue its illegal occupation of Iraq.
Salmond hopes, however, to utilise the impeachment campaign
to put some distance between the Blair government and Holyrood,
so as to prevent the project of Scottish devolution being utterly
discredited before it has properly got off the ground.
See Also:
Scottish and Welsh
nationalism: self-enrichment masquerading as social reformism
[5 June 2001]
Scottish
Socialist Party fosters nationalist divisions
[24 October, 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |