[Great Hall of Rockwall] Scottish Independence
Kelli Quinn
willowhare at hotmail.com
Wed May 2 07:37:17 PDT 2007
Dust off those clan badges and the reasonable facismile of the tartan!
Scotland's moment of destiny may be coming soon.
Say it with me: "Freeeeeeeedom!"
Incidentally, I'm writing this in the town of Bannockburn...
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-scotland2may02,0,2413759.story?page=1&coll=la-home-world
Scotland may go its own way
An election victory for nationalists could set the country on a course to
break from Britain.
By Kim Murphy, Times Staff Writer
May 2, 2007
KINGHORN, SCOTLAND It was on the low cliffs looming over the white-capped
Firth of Forth here that Alexander III, the last of Scotland's Celtic kings,
plunged from his horse to his death one inky night 721 years ago.
England backed a successor, and ultimately invaded, touching off the wars of
Scottish independence that inspired medieval verses about refusing to submit
to "the bonds of slavery entwined" and opulently tragic films such as
"Braveheart."
These days, Scotland's independence movement is still playing out on the
Kinghorn uplands. Here George Kay is making his way, house by house, to a
succession of doors ringed by pansy pots and "no milk today" signs. Kay is
running on the Scottish National Party ticket in elections Thursday that
could set Scotland on a course to break away from Britain.
"I was just wonderin' if you were considerin' castin' your vote for the
SNP," Kay says diffidently, and he often elicits a stern nod in the
affirmative. "Give us the next three, four years to show we can run things.
And then people may have the confidence to go forward with independence."
This week, Scotland and England celebrate the 300th anniversary of their
union under the treaty that ultimately created the United Kingdom. But the
SNP, capitalizing on widespread dissatisfaction with the 10-year-old Labor
government in London and overwhelming opposition to the war in Iraq, is
vowing to try to end the union if it wins, pledging to seek a referendum on
independence by 2010.
Party leaders are waving the prospect of seizing billions of dollars of
North Sea oil revenue and turning this hilly region of 5 million people into
a prosperous and independent northern European state, like Norway and
Finland, with England as a neighbor within the European Union.
Enough Scots are buying it recent polls show the SNP ahead that leaders
of both the Labor and Conservative parties are pulling out the stops and
combing Scotland to convince voters that they are citizens of Britain first.
Unionists and nationalists
Prime Minister Tony Blair, who has called the election "a defining moment
for Scotland," just made his fifth trip to the north during the campaign.
(The Scotsman newspaper said the prime minister "sounded like an ailing
emperor paying a last visit to one of his satrapies.")
Blair's likely successor, Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown, who grew
up a few miles from here, has been warning fellow Scots of dire economic
consequences if they listen to the siren songs of the SNP, hailing his own
Britishness, and cheering for the English football team.
Unionists argue that the 300-year-old marriage has been a resounding success
not just for Britain, but also for Scotland. The region's employment rate
and wages have been above the British average for most of the last four
years; it has a booming financial services industry, joined at the hip with
England.
"Nationalists conveniently forget that in 10 out of the 11 Scottish industry
sectors, trade with the rest of the U.K. is a bigger market than all our
trade with the rest of the world combined," Brown told business leaders last
week in Edinburgh, the regional capital.
SNP leaders say it's time for a divorce.
"I say to my students, think of it as a marriage of convenience," said David
McCrone, a professor of politics at the University of Edinburgh. "In 1707,
Scotland entered this marriage and got a lot out of it. It got access to the
empire
. But of course, by the middle of the 20th century, there was no
empire. The bargain disappeared."
Many Scots drew a blank last year when Brown, the chancellor, proposed
turning Remembrance Day, the equivalent of Memorial Day, into a new national
day of patriotism to celebrate British history, "an expression of British
ideas of standing firm for the world in the name of liberty."
But is that what it really means to be British?
These days, many on both sides of the border have a hard time defining what
"British" means. Does it mean you are able to use the National Health
Service? That you get misty when they play "Rule Britannia?"
Many Scots have the impression that the English seem to have co-opted
Britishness.
"I'll tell you something that gets up the noses of Scots," said Ross
Vettraino, a local council candidate for the SNP in Glenrothes, not far from
Kinghorn. "If you say to the typical English person, 'What does the English
flag look like?' They'll say, 'It's the Union Jack.' Well the Union Jack is
the flag of the United Kingdom of Britain and Northern Ireland.
"If you ask them what the English national anthem is, they'll say it's 'God
Save the Queen.' Well, it isn't. They're so bloody arrogant. The English
think they are the United Kingdom."
Alex Salmond, the urbane, combative leader of the SNP whose leadership team
bears no resemblance to the kilts-and-whiskey set of the nationalist past,
argues that Labor is defending a union in terms that are no longer relevant
at a time when countries such as Latvia and Bulgaria are entering the
European Union.
"Their vision of Britishness is narrow, bland and boring," Salmond told
supporters at his party's conference in the fall.
At party headquarters last week, a buzzing warren of offices on a side
street in Edinburgh, SNP leaders were soothing worried voters with the
message that an independence referendum is years down the road; even a
positive vote for independence would merely open the door to years of
negotiations, and possibly arbitration, SNP officials acknowledge.
Now, they said, is the time for ousting the Labor-led government in
Edinburgh, elected as part of the limited autonomy given Scotland under its
"devolved" government since 1999.
Scotland's proportional election laws make it nearly impossible for any
party to grab a strong majority. More likely, the winning party will have to
govern in coalition with another. The SNP promises that it will, if given
the chance, seek more control over taxes and services for the Scottish
Parliament, and will ask for a review of the billions of dollars in North
Sea oil revenue that flows out of Scotland into the British treasury.
"The problem in Scotland is not how bad things are. It's how much better
they should be," said Kenny MacAskill, the SNP's justice spokesman. "We want
to be represented ourselves in the U.N. Fundamentally, we want to decide if
our young men will die in a war."
Salmond likes to remind the English that they will be gaining a "good
neighbor" if Scotland departs, even as they lose "a surly lodger."
English enthusiastic
Many of the English, it seems, are ready to be persuaded, fed up with
perceived subsidies pouring from the Westminster treasury into Scotland and
increasingly suspicious of the substantial number of Scots in the Cabinet,
including Blair and Brown. Londoners periodically grumble that they don't
want to be "ruled by Scots." Indeed, in some polls, England is more
enthusiastic about Scottish independence than Scotland.
The SNP, which has 25 seats in the Scottish Parliament to Labor's 50 the
Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats each have 17 has picked up seat
after seat on local councils across Scotland in by-elections since 2005.
Kay, the nationalists' candidate here in Kinghorn, took a seat that year
that with a brief hiatus had been held by a Laborite for more than 20 years.
Now, he's running for a full term.
"We're a small branch of the party. We have only 22 members in this
constituency. And in the last two months, we've gained five new members, and
that has never happened in a campaign before," said Kay, 62, who once worked
as a manager at the local clothing manufacturing plant.
Plying a windy neighborhood of neat homes on the edge of a luminous yellow
field of rapeseed, Kay got two welcome expressions of support for every door
shut politely in his face.
"The only way we're going to make a change is to get Labor out," Kenneth
Gilroy, a 37-year-old explosives engineer in the nearby quarry, told Kay.
"We've got a number of very depressing social problems. There's growing
poverty in Scotland, and diminishing opportunities for a lot of people,
particularly young people. The Labor Party's had 10 years to make a
difference, and they've done nothing. The SNP seems to have some kind of
vision for the future."
Down the road in Glenrothes, SNP candidate Vettraino said he was amazed by
the support he was finding in local canvassing.
"Fife has been Labor-controlled for almost 40 years, and they think they can
do anything and get reelected. Well, they've got a surprise coming,"
Vettraino said.
He tells residents they aren't casting a vote for independence by supporting
the SNP. They're giving the party a chance to run things better, he says,
and, in a few years, letting themselves vote on independence.
"Labor, the Tories and the Lib Dems are all saying to Scotland, 'You're not
getting independence. It's not good for you,' " he said. "Well, the Scottish
people will decide what's good for them."
kim.murphy at latimes.com
"I imagine I was always writing. Twaddle it was, too. But better far write
twaddle or anything, anything, than nothing at all."
Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923)
Down the Rabbit Hole: downrabbit.blogspot.com
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