John McKenna wrote:Would you agree, Alistair, that the results in general in the recent UK-wide elections were a kind of 'potpourri' in the literal French language sense of being a "rotten pot"?
No – I don’t think they were rotten.
John McKenna wrote:For example, the reduction of Labour to a third-place party in the Scottish Parliament shows a high degree of national schismaticism, not to say even schizophrenia, with an increasing polarisation, between Nationalists and Unionists, with an important minority of double-dealing Scots who will vote Tory in the elections to Holyrood but SNP in those to Westminster. Talk about having your Barnet-formula cake and eating it!
Certainly there has been a lot of chat about the “Ulsterisation” of Scottish Politics with votes increasingly being split on Indy/Yoon lines. The commentator David Torrance has a piece in the Herald about this, but it’s behind a paywall, so I haven’t read it. I think it is an issue, but I’m not convinced how long-term it will be.
Whilst there may be a movement from SNP to Tory I’m not sure to what extent that is motivated by the Barnet Formula. In my experience the fiscal framework is poorly understood.
John McKenna wrote:I forgot to mention the unexpected rise of UKIP in Wales and the Anti-Austerity Party in Northern Ireland. What's that all about?
In a wider context I thought financial crises tend to result in increases in “fringe” anti-establishment party support.
John McKenna wrote: I will think about it all, but right now the way I read it is that the Scots should have voted for independence in the Scottish Referendum. That would have been the honest way, however, they chose the canny way.
What on earth does this mean? If you are accusing me of not being honest, I think you need to explain.
NickFaulks wrote:Alistair Campbell wrote: but UKIP underperformed their poll ratings
I never understood how UKIP could possibly do anything in Scotland. Look at the name of their party - the Scots don't even want to be in the UK.
The Scots do want to be in the UK – we had a referendum on the matter. Did you miss it? It was quite a thing up here.
Polls since show a slight but steady decline since in support for Indy and of course neither the Greens nor the SNP explicitly campaigned on Independence(in terms of manifesto commitments).
I don’t think social attitudes differ particularly across the UK, but voting behaviour does. The anti-establishment vote has to find a home somewhere, and Scots elected a UKIP MEP 2 years ago. However (and I feel my attempts at objectivity starting to crumble) Mr Coburn perhaps came across as too much of a clown in the recent campaign which may have cost votes.