SNP executive: what now?
May 4, 2007 on 10:03 pm |Categories: Uncategorized
Tags: citizenship, election, eu, european union, schengen-agreement, scottish-national-party, scottish-parliament, snp
On the week of the 300th anniversary of the Union of the Parliaments, an explicitly separatist party came into a position of government in the mainland United Kingdom for the first time (Welsh parties are crap and don’t count).
Still, it wasn’t a clean victory for the Scottish National Party. My good friend C.B. Buckland was working as a canvasser for the SNP, and also as an electoral assistant at a polling place last night. He has this to say of the much criticised voting arrangements:
The BBC are massively overstating the problems with [the electronic counting] machines. As expected I suppose.
The management of the election was at fault for the lack of information, the poor ballots, the lack of knowledge amongst the polling clerks (some were telling people to fold them, contrary to the guidelines) and the general mess of the forms. The DRS company were at fault for their poorly tested and expensive machines (£4.3 million this is costing you, by the way). The public were at fault for simply not making an effort to understand their democracy. The media were at fault for misinforming once the disaster had had happened. Blokes with golf clubs didn’t help either.
Full post
As for the result, it remains to be seen how the SNP will take the independence argument forward, if at all, in the next few years. The election contest was very noticeably fought on issues other than independence, yet the SNP manifesto contains a commitment to hold a referendum on the issue in the lifetime of this Parliament (probably in 2010). The polls show a fairly clear trend against separation at the moment, but all that could change if Westminster and Edinburgh antagonise each other enough in the meantime.
The subject of independence poses numerous intractable questions about the modern state, citizenship and political obligation. The matter of establishing the citizenship of each person at such time as a separation should occur offers myriad challenges in itself, but could perhaps offer a unique opportunity to change the nature of citizenship itself. For example, it’s impossible to imagine any kind of border controls between Scotland and England, so why not use the opportunity to build upon the freedom of movement and cross-border working that this and EU citizenship in general imply. This could mean both countries joining Schengen. Or they could go even further, and establish transferrable or pooled citizenship.
Why? Because interdependence is going so far as to render the concept of national independence almost moot, and indeed independence is often now more of a contingent effect of peoples’ general desires for closer and more multi-level governance than anything autarkic or Westphalian.
The reality is that ‘independence’ in the contemporary world, and especially in the EU, means little more than more control over issues of ‘hard politics’. Not absolute control, but certainly enough to keep from being dragged into offensive wars with which the minority nation disagrees. I think it’s significant that it’s taken an issue exactly like that (Iraq) - among other things - to bring an independence party to the fore.
But if independence really did become something the people of Scotland wanted strongly, the trump card played by Westminster will be exactly that played three-hundred years ago - a good old-fashioned buy-off.
Or they might just let us go.
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Thanks for featuring that Graeme, much appreciated.
As for the subject of independence, I think full EU membership is an absolute must, which of course instantly renders large chunks of Scottish law in the grip of the EU and interdependece becomes prerequisite of existing as a state. That, I’m all in favour of. Schengen favours our open border policy thinking. The EU favours our economic situation. This is purely about getting a fair deal for Scotland and allowing Scotland to decide for itself to trade fairly and equally. For many people, independence is a “shortbread and kilts” idea as I like to call it, when in fact it is just about facing up to the reality of Europe, where we simply must have our own voice in the organisation.
And we won. Which was quite nice.
Comment by CB Buckland — 5th May 2007 #