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as a glaswegian I don't mind if you reclaim Edinburgh lol
LOL
I'll get the treaties drawn up
as a glaswegian I don't mind if you reclaim Edinburgh lol
and like I said I will when you post somthing other than pointless tat aimed at me rather than the actual discussion.
So why should your friends and family be correct, and Hugh's wrong?Funny that so do I
The work collogues, friends and family I speak to on a daily basis say different, all of them born and bred, business and land owners - so yeah I know who I would rather believe
Would you want independence?So then can the North East of England go for independence? As the Kingdom of Northumbria was independent of England for hundreds of years...
If we do, can we have our occupied territory around (and including) Edinburgh back?![]()
as a glaswegian I don't mind if you reclaim Edinburgh lol
It was ours before 653 anyway, but you can have it if you really want itLOL
I'll get the treaties drawn up![]()
Its not just the Scottish labour voters who feel that HughIn fact it's the Blair Brown governments that made many Scots Labour members and voters realise that 'New Labour' was nothing more than toryism in disguise.
I don't feel that is the case Hugh, there was no 'massive defection' to the SNP in the 2010 general election, in fact the SNP received less than half the votes that labour did. I think the success of the SNP in the 2011 Scottish elections was a local politic phenomenon which often happens with local elections and often doesn't transform to the wider national stage.This was part of the reason for a massive defection from Labour to SNP in 2011 Scottish elections.
I don't feel that is the case Hugh, there was no 'massive defection' to the SNP in the 2010 general election, in fact the SNP received less than half the votes that labour did. I think the success of the SNP in the 2011 Scottish elections was a local politic phenomenon which often happens with local elections and often doesn't transform to the wider national stage.
Oil revenues. Do keep upeh? what are you on about?
Steve, maybe they should. That is the entire point of the discussion.
A bunch of people collectively named "Yorkshire" have pitched their lot in with the UK, presumably because it is believed to be best for them...
I thought this was fascinating.... have a read of this opinion piece by Peter Arnott.
It's a wee bit nsfw later on with swear words but he absolutely nails it.
peterarnott.blogspot.co.uk/2014/07/dinner-with-no-voters-or-what-i-wanted.html
Seriously, by 2010 in Scotland Westminster had become pretty much a side show in terms of the SNP, I'm not sure why you brought that in, nobody ever expected them to do well there after devolution. The 2011 Scottish elections were a different story, Labour were leading by a big margin in the polls right up to election day and got wiped out. It was partly a protest vote and partly Labour voters complete disillusionment with their party.
Except of course SNP led in virtually all the opinion polls from late March onwards, hardly the last minute and Labour polled nearly 30% again hardly a wipeout and actually considerable more than the almost 20% the SNP managed a year earlier. These are Scottish votes here so Im not sure why you feel they are irrelevant.
Seriously, by 2010 in Scotland Westminster had become pretty much a side show in terms of the SNP, I'm not sure why you brought that in, nobody ever expected them to do well there after devolution. The 2011 Scottish elections were a different story, Labour were leading by a big margin in the polls right up to election day and got wiped out. It was partly a protest vote and partly Labour voters complete disillusionment with their party.
Hugh, I'm trying to keep this discussion civilised, so I'm treating your opinion with the respect it deserves. But, honestly, what I do not understand is that if Scottish voters in general, and Scottish Labour Party voters in particular, were so disillusioned with Blair (as were rUK voters, as jakeblu rightly states) why did/do they keep voting Labour and not SNP?
The point I'm trying to make Hugh is there seems to be a strong sense of Localism in the SNP vote, a bit like the independent who wins a seat, but often that localism does not spread into the wider national picture. It seems that Scottish voters see other parties as more representative of their views and more able to represent them on a national scale. That has to be worrying for the nationalists.Steve I'm totally lost as to what point you're trying to make.
They're the Scottish election results not the general election onesThey haven't, see - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elections_in_Scotland#Scottish_Parliament how the red disappears.
There the Scottish election results not the general election ones
They haven't, see - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elections_in_Scotland#Scottish_Parliament how the red disappears.
The colours refer to Scottish Parliament elections, not general elections. I would suggest that indicates dissatisfaction with local Scottish Labour Party as opposed to the Labour Party in general. Not the same thing.
I asked the question about continuing support for the Labour Party at the general elections between 1997 and 2010. I see you do not wish to address that. Suffice it to say that if you look at the numbers relating to general elections (which was the subject of my post), and which are the tables beneath the colours, you will find the figures I quoted verified.
To sum up: Share of vote at 1997: Labour 45.6% SNP 22.1%
Share of vote at 2010: Labour 42% SNP 19.1%
As can be seen by the numbers, Scottish voters continue to support Labour at general elections, despite your claimed dissatisfaction with Tony Blair (and presumably Gordon Brown) and their policies.
general election is different to the scottish elections and agin different from the local council elections. It shouldn't be a shock that people don't vote SNP for westminster as they are unlikely to achive anything. It's more likely people just don't vote rather than trying to make a difference. the turn out for elections is pretty p*** poor and can't really be taken as an actual indication of what people think.
As I said above, why would the Scottish electorate vote SNP members to Westminster when they have a Scottish parliament? They quite rightly don't see the need for Nationalist MPs there any more.
From your own source.
Scottish Parliament turnout:
1999 59%
2003 49.4%
2007 51.8%
2011 50.4%
Scottish turnout at general elections:
1997 71.3%
2001 58.2%
2005 60.6%
2010 63.8%
Seems that Scottish voters consistently turn out in greater numbers for a general election than a Scottish Parliament election. But let's not actual numbers get in the way of a good argument, shall we?
No you didn't say that but you intimated that the Scottish elections were more important to Scottish people. Jim, was just pointing out that contrary to that more Scottish people vote in the general election. A fair point I think and one that should worry the nationalistsI didn't say more voted in the scottish elections than the general, I said "the turn out for elections is pretty p*** poor" but lets not what I actually said get in the way of a good argument shall we
It's an interesting point, but the trouble with statistics is that it's so easy to devise interpretations which fit with one's own predilections.No you didn't say that but you intimated that the Scottish elections were more important to Scottish people. Jim, was just pointing out that contrary to that more Scottish people vote in the general election. A fair point I think and one that should worry the nationalists
i didn't intimate that point at allNo you didn't say that but you intimated that the Scottish elections were more important to Scottish people. Jim, was just pointing out that contrary to that more Scottish people vote in the general election. A fair point I think and one that should worry the nationalists
That's an interesting observation. In what way(s) do you not currently have full control over NHS Scotland?We'd say that with full control of our NHS Scotland's health would improve and consequently the workforce will increase.
And your solutions are where? All you're saying is you disagree with nothing but speculation to back it upCheers Dod, there are some points in that article that I have issues with (surprise surprise) and mostly because the author outlines the problems but says nothing about solutions.
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The block grant is fixed but the NHS budget isn't. The Scottish parliament could spend a larger proportion of the block grant on health, but it chooses to spend it on other things. Given how far the health of Scotland lags behind England, I'd suggest that's a shockingly bad allocation of resources.The NHS budget is fixed by what comes back to Scotland by way of the block grant, it's a finite sum and if extra cash is needed it has to be taken from somewhere else or something else.
I know you can say that it would be much the same in an independent Scotland but there would be more scope and we believe more cash to steer towards healthcare.
And your solutions are where? All you're saying is you disagree with nothing but speculation to back it up![]()