There’s been much hot air unleashed in Holyrood in recent weeks over various “wastes” of money by the Scottish Government. First the opposition accused the SNP of spending £100,000 (which turned out to be a wild piece of back-of-a-fag-packet guesswork vastly overestimating the actual £4,000 cost) in fighting a Freedom Of Information request over EU legal advice. Then there were complaints about £48,000 spent sending a team to the premiere of Brave, despite the obvious benefits to be had marketing Scotland’s tourism industry on the back of the movie.
And finally, Labour in particular screamed themselves hoarse (and were still doing so as recently as yesterday’s FMQs) about the £470,000 the Scottish Government delegation to the Ryder Cup cost, even though it was a contractual obligation, encompassed numerous other business engagements which generated Scottish jobs, and in fact represented a 30% saving on comparable trips by the last Labour-led Holyrood administration. (Which weren’t contractual obligations.)
But still. If just for the sake of argument you were to accept the Unionist parties’ line, that’s a whopping £522,000 the Scottish Government has cavalierly thrown away in recent months. Meanwhile, how has the UK government in Westminster been doing?
This was the “Education” page of the Scottish Labour website this morning:
After Alex Salmond referred to it at FMQs, the page has now been deftly amended to fall in line with the rest of party policy, as you can see in the image below:
Okay, so here’s a fun teaser you can try out around the table after your Christmas dinner. What do the following far-flung countries have in common: Canada, Togo, Uzbekistan, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Gabon, Panama, Zambia, Haiti, Libya and the Cape Verde Islands? Give up? Here’s a clue:
Yep – all of them, and 60 other nations too, are now officially better at football than Scotland. Entirely coincidentally, in the same week this dismaying fact was revealed, it was confirmed that former national coach Craig Levein was to sue the SFA for only offering to pay him £35,000 a month for the next year-and-a-half to sit around and scratch his arse in front of the Jeremy Kyle Show.
We don’t often get to see Johann Lamont on the telly, so when she made one of her rare appearances in a five-minute interview with STV’s excellent Bernard Ponsonby this week we couldn’t only do half a job. As we’re still stuck in the house fighting off this year’s unusually-horrible and persistent germs – and as Lamont repeated most of the speech at today’s FMQs – we steeled ourselves, sat down with a large medicinal hot toddy and transcribed the rest of the piece.
What with it being Christmas and everything, though, you’re probably busy, so if you’re in a rush we’ve condensed all of Johann’s umming and aahing and stumbling and waffling down to its essence, where there is such a thing. The parts highlighted in red below are all you really need to read.
The Herald was the daily newspaper in our house when I was a child. My parents took both it and the Evening Times. When I started to outgrow the Bunty I eschewed the Jackie and its like and graduated straight to the newspapers. My father cancelled his Evening Times subscription when I was coming up to my Highers because he thought reading two newspapers every evening was interfering with my homework.
We’ve spent the last 90 minutes watching an incredible video someone linked us to in a reader comment earlier today. It’s a public meeting of the Clydebank Trades Union Council on November 29th, headed by a panel comprising Gil Paterson (SNP MSP for Clydebank and Milngavie), Jackie Baillie (Labour MSP for Dumbarton), chairman Tom Paterson (secretary of Clydebank TUC), Stephen Boyd (assistant secretary of Scottish TUC) and Cathy Leach (Scottish Pensioners’ Forum).
Throughout the meeting the sense of anger and hurt coming from the traditionally-Labour audience and directed mostly at Baillie is overwhelming. Time and again the party’s betrayal of its core audience is bitterly attacked. But an hour and 25 seconds in, there’s a particularly remarkable exchange.
To be honest, we’re still trying to work out what happened here. The Secretary of State for Scotland was well and truly slapped up and down the room yesterday by a panel of peers in the House Of Lords Economic Affairs Committee, every one of whom was a Unionist. One after another lined up to lambast the hapless minister with stinging attacks and rebukes in a session that caught most observers used to the Lords’ normal cosy atmosphere of mutual Nat-bashing completely unawares.
It seems far too late in the day for Westminster’s second chamber to present itself as the heroic defender of the people of Scotland. It would be much too ironic for the unelected Barons and Earls and whatnot to be doing it in the name of democracy. And there seems little chance this one-day aberration will suddenly convince anyone to buy the implausible notion that the Committee is an impartial investigator into the issues surrounding Scottish independence.
So frankly, readers, your guess is as good as ours as to what the noble lords were up to. A momentary outbreak of conscience? One too many sherries at the office Christmas do? If you’ve got any suggestions, we’re all ears.
Supporters of independence often level the accusation at Unionists that they think Scotland is “too wee, too poor and too stupid” to thrive on its own. Unionists generally affect great insult at the suggestion, and have taken to being much more circumspect about the first two, nowadays tending to claim that Scotland could survive without Westminster control, just that it shouldn’t, because of all the positive aspects of the Union such as [SUB FILL IN LATER PLEASE].
Accordingly, the “too wee, too poor” element of the argument against independence has taken something of a back seat in the last year or so, and the “too stupid” part has been correspondingly pushed to the foreground.
Firstly, we’re simply told that – for some reason – Scotland does better if all its big decisions are taken in London, leading inescapably to the conclusion that we’re not as bright as our betters to the south. But more crudely, we’re also shown on a regular basis just how bad independence could be.
We’ve added a couple of new sites to the UK Politics section of our links column. The Green Benches is a resource we’ve kept an eye on for a few months now, and while its direct relevance to Scotland is quite small, its informed insider view of the true havoc being wreaked on the National Health Service in England and Wales is a warning of what we can expect in the future should we choose to remain in One Nation Britain and let any of the London parties take control of Holyrood.
The Void is a site we’ve been reading for even longer, and fulfils a similar purpose to The Green Benches, except covering welfare reform rather than NHS reform. The language can be a little adult, but the level of hard data is phenomenal, reporting things that never get near the mainstream media. With welfare still reserved to Westminster, there’s stuff in here you simply have to know if you are, or might one day become, or know anyone who is, unemployed, low-paid or sick.
Check them both out. Don’t have anything breakable to hand.
As Johann Lamont celebrated her first year as Scottish Labour “leader” by signalling the party’s intent to abandon the principle of free university tuition today, Nick Clegg completed the Lib Dems’ own sellout to Tory values with a despicable speech promising to back the Conservatives’ plans for welfare reform. The narrative was set earlier this month by the Chancellor, who justified the government’s proposed real-terms benefits cuts with a carefully-prepared line:
“We have to acknowledge that over the last five years those on out of work benefits have seen their incomes rise twice as fast as those in work. With pay restraint in businesses and government, average earnings have risen by around 10% since 2007. Out of work benefits have gone up by around 20%. That’s not fair to working people who pay the taxes that fund them.”
Terrible, isn’t it? Hard workers paying to lose ground to those layabout skivers who watch Jeremy Kyle all day. But let’s leave aside for a moment the issue that with an average of 23 applicants per vacancy (and sometimes far more), the huge majority of unemployed people are in fact desperate to find work, not lazy spongers. Let’s instead just take a simple look at what those figures mean in real life.
Nick Clegg completed the Lib Dems' sellout today with a despicable speech promising to back the Conservatives' plans for welfare reform. The narrative was set earlier this month by the Chancellor, who justified the government's proposed real-terms benefits cuts with a carefully-prepared line:
"We have to acknowledge that over the last five years those on out of work benefits have seen their incomes rise twice as fast as those in work. With pay restraint in businesses and government, average earnings have risen by around 10% since 2007. Out of work benefits have gone up by around 20%. That's not fair to working people who pay the taxes that fund them."
Terrible, isn't it? Hard workers paying to lose ground to those layabout skivers who watch Jeremy Kyle all day. But let's leave aside for a moment the issue that with an average of 23 applicants per vacancy (and sometimes far more), the huge majority of unemployed people are in fact desperate to find work, not lazy spongers. Let's instead just take a simple look at what those figures mean in real life.
Nick Clegg’s speech on demonising and punishing the poor and sick (in which he displayed a heroic willingness to take one for the coalition team by declaring “the Liberal Democrats are now the party of welfare reform”) brought the issue of the “something for nothing” culture back to the forefront today.
Scots, of course, are already familiar with the leader of the Holyrood opposition standing up and angrily telling the chamber how unsustainable and morally wrong it is that well-off people such as herself are entitled to universal benefits at state expense.
Yet numerous reports emphasise that universality is a solution that’s practical as well as desirable, because it’s economically efficient as well as solving the problem of people suffering because they’re unable or unwilling to claim benefits they need and ultimately costing the state far more money in remedial care.
It’s a tricky old pickle and no mistake. So entirely free of charge, we’ve had a wee think and come up with a policy that squares the circle, so that Johann Lamont can offer to solve the problem without condemning hundreds of thousands of vulnerable Scots (and Labour MSPs) to lives of unending misery.
Fearghas MacFhionnlaigh on The Invisible Rabbit: “And of course that particularly wunderbar Weimar-esque line will not have escaped you: « Alice was not much surprised at…” Jul 15, 16:56
Cynicus on The Invisible Rabbit: ““….you can’t help that,’ said the Cat, ‘we’re all mad here. I’m mad. You’re mad.’” ===== As you say, it’…” Jul 15, 16:27
agentx on The Invisible Rabbit: ““This will be my last answer from this despatch box. Every prime minister knows when they take up the torch…” Jul 15, 16:21
robertkknight on The Invisible Rabbit: “Come on Watson! The game’s afoot!” Jul 15, 15:07
100%Yes on The Invisible Rabbit: “Have a look at this!!! Might be more money missing that just the Independence Referendum Fund. youtube.com/watch?v=Y7REz7A-Sh0” Jul 15, 15:01
Fearghas MacFhionnlaigh on The Invisible Rabbit: “Had to look up the word “Leporine”: “Of or characteristic of rabbits or hares” It’s all coming together… ——— «…” Jul 15, 14:58
Young Lochinvar on The Invisible Rabbit: “Starmers commons exit today was quite bizarre.. Standing ovation given when he said “To my wife and children, I love…” Jul 15, 14:51
Cynicus on The Invisible Rabbit: ““Redactor” rhymes with “Tractor”… Its synonym , “expurgator” rhymes with “traytor”” Jul 15, 14:39
Breeks on The Invisible Rabbit: “You’re lucky Stu that you’re still getting answers. Many years ago, I held similar well documented grievances against corrupt and…” Jul 15, 14:37
100%Yes on The Invisible Rabbit: “We’ll let me be the first to say, your commitment isn’t half cocked. Youtube Vid below “The Bell Is Tolling…” Jul 15, 14:25
Cynicus on The Invisible Rabbit: “If so, then following the feline precedent , there be a leporine grin for us to see.” Jul 15, 13:58
Colin Hope on Blue In The Face: “Please dont be ground down. Theyre counting on it.” Jul 15, 13:51
Mark Beggan on The Invisible Rabbit: “If this society is so bad why don’t you piss off to tea towel land and feel at home in…” Jul 15, 13:51
Andrew Morton on The Invisible Rabbit: “It’s only madness if he wasn’t doing what they wanted.” Jul 15, 13:48
Alf Baird on The Invisible Rabbit: ““The smell isn’t going away, it’s only getting worse” Indeed, and what is being revealed to us more and more…” Jul 15, 13:47
Fearghas MacFhionnlaigh on The Invisible Rabbit: “And as it happens, “Redactor” rhymes with “Tractor”…” Jul 15, 13:34
Spartan 117 on The Invisible Rabbit: “The smell isn’t going away, it’s only getting worse. Your investigative journalism should win awards Stu. It shames the rest…” Jul 15, 13:04
Kate on The Invisible Rabbit: “Socrates MacSporran I too am old enough to remember the profumo scandal, and yes, it was his lying to Parliament…” Jul 15, 12:53
Socrates MacSporran on The Invisible Rabbit: “I am now old enough to remember ‘The Profumo Scandal’ of over 60 years ago. John Profumo was not forced…” Jul 15, 12:28
Fearghas MacFhionnlaigh on Blue In The Face: ““Scottish Sun: Campaigners claim SNP ‘Criminal cabal’ & believe Murrell had ‘close control’ of Yes Scotland funds” www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7REz7A-Sh0 « Claims…” Jul 15, 12:19
Fearghas MacFhionnlaigh on The Invisible Rabbit: “Or could it be a “Cheshire” rabbit, perhaps?” Jul 15, 12:06
Cynicus on The Invisible Rabbit: “Enigmatic headline. Was the, “invisible rabbit” pulled from a visible or invisible hat?” Jul 15, 11:44
joolz on The Invisible Rabbit: “Thank you for all your work on this important matter. I can’t believe that the mainstream media doesn’t seem to…” Jul 15, 11:40
Bono bunny on Blue In The Face: “Why don’t you fuck off somewhere else, ya unionist twat? Nobody is interested in anything you have to say.” Jul 15, 11:16
Alf Baird on Blue In The Face: ““Westminster would break ANY law (and probably has already) to hold Scotland tight” Yes Northcode, it disna tak a genius…” Jul 15, 10:52
Captain Caveman on The Unstoppable Lie Machine: ““Support who you want tomorrow, it’s just a game of 20 men chasing a ball about while 2 guys get…” Jul 15, 09:43
Northcode on Blue In The Face: ““…Scottish voters were denied their right to an Independent Scotland by the non-Scots living in Scotland.” Indeed so, Robert. Which…” Jul 15, 09:31
TURABDIN on Blue In The Face: “All this navel gazing is no doubt therapeutic but 10 billion quid spent on useless medical equipment by an English…” Jul 15, 09:12
BH on Blue In The Face: “It seems they think this can do better than the original ‘gold-plated’ reply.” Jul 15, 08:45
Nicky T Naquetti on Blue In The Face: “Thanks for your diligence in this fiasco, Rev… another financial bit of Sturgeonomics exposed by your site was the “IT…” Jul 15, 08:44