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"rene59 - Member
She could have asked for devo super max.
POSTED 4 HOURS AGO # REPORT-POST"
she should have waited for them to release Devo Max Plus, it's got a longer life and better localization...
[quote=aracer said]
So how decisive would a 51-49 vote* have been, and how long would that have put the issue to bed for before people got a chance to change their minds?
* in favour of yes
a 5% swing changes it It snot overwhelming IMHO - its a decisive vote for no IMHO but it has not put the issue ot bed that would have required 2/3 + no vote
Anyway once the older voters die off that will be reveresed*
We wont have a vote within 10 years IMHO UNLESS the UK leave the EU but the issue is not dead and buried either
* I remember your maths only joking 😉
** In favour of almost anything that means the Tories are never in power over me.
You know there's a simple answer to this problem of too many layers of administration if we get an English parliament.
Send Guy Fawkes into the House of Lords. 🙂
Or as we are saying up here, "If at first you don't succeed, secede"
So how decisive would a 51-49 vote* have been, and how long would that have put the issue to bed for before people got a chance to change their minds?
That's the joy of it - the No side need to win every time, we only need to win once 😉
Okay, I'm slightly joking - but when you poll people on what Holyrood should control, 66% want everything apart from defence and foreign affairs to be controlled by Holyrood, 75% want Holyrood to control all welfare and benefits, and 71% want Holyrood to control all taxation.
People in Scotland want independence, just not if you call it independence. This is important for two reasons - firstly it shows that business as usual from Westminster simply won't cut it, we need at least what Gordon Brown promised, federalism or home rule. Secondly if there is another referendum and the vote is Yes, even people who voted No can be brought around because they really want most of the same things as Yes voters.
Another referendum is for the future, though - first project is to make the Labour Party as irrelevant in Scotland as the Tories and Lib Dems. We need to separate Scottish politics from UK politics, with separate political parties.
Good to see the ripples from our referendum are leading to more demands for self-determination in England
[url= http://www.essexchronicle.co.uk/share-Stansted-Airport-passenger-duty-Calls/story-23172796-detail/story.html#ixzz3GCdhdc7w ]Essex wants some too[/url]
Essex wants some too
Imagine the protest songs 😉
What do we want?
Fake tan!
When do we want it?
Now!
So how decisive would a 51-49 vote* have been, and how long would that have put the issue to bed for before people got a chance to change their minds?
Voters were repeatedly told that a Yes vote would be final and there was no going back, even if we really, really, really wanted to. Which, I thought was odd, if we really were so much better together I thought we'd be welcomed back. Anyway, I digress. You can't suddenly make 45% of the country stop wanting the things it wanted before, no matter how often you tell them they can't have another referendum. FWIW I'm with Ben, there won't be another one anytime soon unless the extra powers don't arrive as promised or there the UK is pulled out of the EU.
Ben, what you meant to say was:
People in Scotland want [i]the good bits of[/i] independence, just [i]none of the bad bits of[/i] independence.
Ben, what you meant to say was:People in Scotland want the good bits of independence, just none of the bad bits of independence.
Yup, that's a good way of putting it. All along I've always preferred a proper reform of the UK - get rid of the House of Lords, in fact get rid of Westminster altogether, replace it with a properly federal system of government.
But that's pie in the sky stuff, Westminster is never going to change, it's an undemocratic system that has no interest in making itself more democratic. Independence is achievable, fundamental Westminster reform is not.
I hope I'm wrong about that.
One of the problems in a Federal system is that if you have bits that are hugely different sized then the weighting will always be to the bigger bits. In the US the big states dominate the political system, the only reason that others get a look in is that the big states can't agree and there are plenty of states.
In a Federal UK, the option to 'break' the UK into 4 parts does not really work. The bulk of the people, the income and the wealth lies in England. We could try to break down England into Regions, but that does not really work for large sections. I live SW of London, outside the M25 - so which region do I fall into - South, South East, Not quite the South West? There are some distinct regions - Cornwall as an example - but others are arbitrary. Where does the NE fit into the model, does it include N.Yorkshire - or is Yorkshire a region - or is the West Yorkshire Conurbation the region?
England as state has existed in its current form for hundreds of years and as such trying to break it down does not really work. We already have county councils (and unitary authorities) at a 'Regional Level' that we could devolve more power and responsibility for very little additional cost.
If we do need an 'English Parliament', then all it really needs is for those MPs representing Scotland, Wales and NI to abstain when bills are voted on where the power has been devolved to the Local Assemblies/Parliaments. SNP MPs already do this! We do not need another level of government, between the UK, Scotland, Wales, NI, the EU, County Councils, Unitary Authorites, District Councils, Town Councils, Urban Councils, etc - we probably have enough!
I think a big issue with a federal UK is that the English seem emotionally tied to Westminster.
Maybe the way around that would be to make Westminster English only (represeted under a PR system) and create a senate or a UK parliament somewhere further north.
Incidently, I could live with a federal UK, I have issues with that power structure being in London with part-time Scottish MPs though..
I also think we should maybe break that conversation out of this thread and start a new one tbh.
One of the problems in a Federal system is that if you have bits that are hugely different sized then the weighting will always be to the bigger bits. In the US the big states dominate the political system, the only reason that others get a look in is that the big states can't agree and there are plenty of states.
Your first bit is wrong, your second bit is backward.
1) I don't know every federal system but in the US and Australia you avoid domination by the heavily populated entities by having the states enjoy equal/disproportionate representation in the upper house. For example, the US senate has two senators from every state, regardless of population - so California (38m people) has the same number of senators as Wyoming (half a million).
2) the result of the above is that the sparsely populated states have a disproportionate influence over US policy. One third of the US population is in the four most populous states. The country would look very different if policy was determined by Texas, NY, Florida and California!
3) besides, what's undemocratic about the bigger populations having a bigger say?
Maybe the way around that would be to make Westminster English only (represeted under a PR system) and create a senate or a UK parliament somewhere further north.
Westminster is the UKs and not the english parliament, the others might agree to sell it to you though
The westminster elite will never vote to leave London
The westminster elite will never vote to leave London
Why would they, its the capital city. It's normal for economic and political activity to be based in the capital. Moving it elsewhere would make zero difference to the political process or outcome.
Those calling for greater devolution in the rUK need to understand what potential consequences which would most likely be a rise in local taxes outside the South East (local authorities making spending promises and having to find the funds to pay for them). You can see this happening in Scotland with the changes in property taxes, I think you'll find in a year the changes will be shown to have backfired with people paying less on cheaper homes and higher priced home sales slowing significantly leaving a hole in the budget having to be made up elsewhere.
1.Why would they, its the capital city. 2.It's normal for economic and political activity to be based in the capital. 3.Moving it elsewhere would make zero difference to the political process or outcome.
1.True
2.True
3.False
It would inevitably be a little less London centric if it was not based there and the politicians never went there.
My views, what with having been twice, are massively less influenced by London than yours.
whatnobeer - Member
...You can't suddenly make 45% of the country stop wanting the things it wanted before, no matter how often you tell them they can't have another referendum....
[url= http://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/self_determination_international_law ]Especially when they know their rights to self determination.[/url]
With the backtracking on the vow, the next few months is going to swing a lot more against Westminster government, and the pressure is on the SNP to declare a UDI if we get a majority of SNP members out of Scotland's quota to Westminster next May.
Never give up.
Exactly - imagine if the winners in a general election said that the result was the settled will of the people and there wouldn't be another election for a generation - and expected everyone who voted differently to stop campaigning and accept the result.
It's ridiculous.
But @ben it wasn't an election, it was a referendum. A Yes would have been forever.
JY I think the whole London centric thing is overblown massively. Whats clear on a pounds and pence perspective is that London and the South East subsidise the rest of the country. As I said regional representation is likely to backfire in a way people don't expect. Think local taxes.
bencooper - MemberImagine the protest songs
What do we want?
Fake tan!
When do we want it?
Now!
Is this the same bencooper who said this:
bencooper - MemberThese aren't jokes about Scottish independence, they're jokes about Scots - and they're always the same jokes. Kilts, haggis, tartan, fried food, bad weather, tight with money, etc. [b]the same jokes people have been making for decades when they can't think of anything funny to say.[/b]
I'm sure people from Liverpool get equally tired of the jokes about dole, not working, stealing etc.
❓ whoops 😆
I'm perfectly happy to admit that that wasn't especially funny.
JY I think the whole London centric thing is overblown massively.
Given you live in London I think you are unqualified to say and unlikely to notice. this is not your fault it is just is. Media is centred there, finance is centred there, parliament is centred there, lobbyists are centred there, arts, theatre and culture is centred there. What more centralisation do you want - Rugby League?
Whats clear on a pounds and pence perspective is that London and the South East subsidise the rest of the country
GAWD bless ya Sir ...doffs cap, strokes whippet
Some may say it drains resources and attract wealth from the rest of us. Its a bit of both.
Genuine q is part of it not just that many companies have London as their head office and this skews the figures?
FWIW i presume it still the wealthiest as capitals always are but how much ? Who knows
bencooper That's the joy of it - the No side need to win every time, we only need to win once
bencooper Exactly - imagine if the winners in a general election said that the result was the settled will of the people and there wouldn't be another election for a generation - and expected everyone who voted differently to stop campaigning and accept the result.It's ridiculous.
No it's not. Despite feeling as strongly as any Yes voter I would have to stop campaigning, your first post alludes to this.
Everyone spoke of this being a once in a generation vote, not just Salmond. Everyone on here was saying so. Now we see twisting and turning on how long a generation is.
In all honesty, if this goes to another referendum in the next 5 years or so I don't think I have the heart for a fight. Might even vote Yes just to help the inevitable along or possibly spend the interim understanding the fact I will have no recourse on the issue following a Yes vote. Hopefully this will be enough time to come to sensibly come to terms with the result I did not want. Something so many people seem unable to do.
Genuine q is part of it not just that many companies have London as their head office and this skews the figures?
Yes but why do they do this? The very fact they are all in one place is self perpetuating.
Yes but why do they do this? The very fact they are all in one place is self perpetuating.
you've missed the point.
😆 you dont understand democracy. Democracy is never forever. Its about merits of arguments and if people agree with them, at a particular time.jambalaya - Member
But @ben it wasn't an election, it was a referendum. A Yes would have been forever.
Separation isn't necessarily forever if circumstances changed to allow reunion.
To argue an unchanageble position and the domination of that position forever, is pretty much a good definition of fascism.
In a democracy the people are always sovereign. Not ideas or questions.
you've missed the point.
I am flattered you think I had one
Separation isn't necessarily forever if circumstances changed to allow reunion.
A vote to rejoin would necessarily require agreement from both Scotland and rUK at the same time. So I think describing separation as "forever" is fair.
its not at all. Union happened once, circumstances could change to allow it to happen again.( personally I doubt that would be to Scotland's benefit. But circumstance could easily allow it.oldnpastit - Member
Separation isn't necessarily forever if circumstances changed to allow reunion.
A vote to rejoin would necessarily require agreement from both Scotland and rUK at the same time. So I think describing separation as "forever" is fair.
Toodle pip wee man....next stop Westminster and finally the HoL?
careful THM, according to Alex
'Rocks would melt with the sun before I'd ever set foot in the House of Lords'
He's donating his FM pension to charity. Classy.
Probably because he's intending to make enough on the speaking circuit ?
Well done jambalaya, yes it's "probably" because he thinks he won't be left skint if he donates it to charity,
He wouldn't be the first to donate for the wrong reasons. It's 'reasonably' common for folk to give to charitable causes because it improves public image/social standing.
No idea if this is the case. But as there's a politician involved I'll err on side of being a cynical git.
So here are the facts, not so generous in any way shape or form. Another perfect example of the Salmond spin
Mr Salmond will donate £42,501 to the charity he founded in honour of his late mother, Mary Salmond, in 2007, every year for as long as he serves as an MSP.
He will donate the pension paid by the Scottish government whilst he is still earning his salary as a Scottish MSP. As far as I understood he was intending to stand down as an MSP, so he's donating what exactly, 6 months, 12 months ? Also what a bizarre pension entitlement, one you can claim whilst you are still working for the same employer.
So secondly of all he get's pension of £42k pa as a result of doing a job for 7.5 years (Scottish rules is your FM pension is 50% of your salar!y), back of the envelope based upon his age that's worth around £1m. His salary was £85k as First Minister and thus his pension contributions would have to be around £120k pa to fund such a pension if where private sector.
I assume people have seen the quote from the head of the BBC who described Salmond as a paranoid loser 🙂
Everyone spoke of this being a once in a generation vote, not just Salmond. Everyone on here was saying so. Now we see twisting and turning on how long a generation is.
Personally I thought that the referendum might just be the first skirmish in a long engagement. Having won, the unionist parties have it in their control to make sure there remains a majority against independence. If they fail and the SNP regain a mandate for another referendum then I don't see why there shouldn't be one.
If the SNP make significant progress in the Westminster elections and retain a majority in the Scottish Parliament then it'd only take something like say the UK being run by a Tory/UKIP coalition for there to be some considerable weight behind another independence referendum.
He will donate the pension paid by the Scottish government whilst he is still earning his salary as a Scottish MSP. As far as I understood he was intending to stand down as an MSP, so he's donating what exactly, 6 months, 12 months ? Also what a bizarre pension entitlement, one you can claim whilst you are still working for the same employer.
If he stands down as an MSP and is re-elected as an MP then I'd expect him to continue donating that pension to charity. When he was an MP and an MSP at the same time he used to donate one of those salaries to the same charitable trust.
I don't disagree on the pension entitlement thing though - it's an example of politicians feathering their nests. I know one chap who was briefly a minister in the Labour led Scottish government before losing his seat. He now takes his MSP & minister pensions at the same time as running his own lobbying firm. A long, long way from the days I remember him as being a socialist activist - although he no doubt still classes himself as a socialist.
I assume people have seen the quote from the head of the BBC who described Salmond as a paranoid loser
Was that the same ex head of the BBC who himself was formerly a Tory councillor?
Tory/UKIP coalition
The mere thought of it makes me want to set up a Peoples Republic of Piemonsters
So here are the facts, not so generous in any way shape or form. Another perfect example of the Salmond spinMr Salmond will donate £42,501 to the charity he founded in honour of his late mother, Mary Salmond, in 2007, every year for as long as he serves as an MSP.
Donating £42,501 every year to charity is "not so generous in any way shape or form" ? What would you consider to be a proper generous amount ?
But he's not donating it every year, it's short term piece of politics, see my post about how long is it before he stands down as a MSP. Also what a complete farce you can claim a First Minister pension of £42k pa whilst you are still earning a salary as an MSP !
My point is he should be getting that pension whilst he is still working for the same employer. Giving away something which should never have been allowed is not generous. It is also total spin to say he is giving away his pension, that's a headline designed to suggest he is forgoing it permanently which he is absolutely not. A £42k pension in Scotland is very generous and that for 7 years work. i wonder what other pensions he'll be getting paid for by the Scottish tax payer.
see my post about how long is it before he stands down as a MSP.
And see epicsteve' comment :
[i]If he stands down as an MSP and is re-elected as an MP then I'd expect him to continue donating that pension to charity. When he was an MP and an MSP at the same time he used to donate one of those salaries to the same charitable trust.[/i]
Salmond has a track record of not accepting two incomes for his elected work :
Also what a complete farce you can claim a First Minister pension of £42k pa whilst you are still earning a salary as an MSP !
It might well be "a complete farce" but is Salmond personally responsible for introducing the rule ? The fact that he is donating his to charity suggests that he doesn't personally see it as a necessity. Nor does it follow that he is being less generous because you think the rule is a farce.
Another perfect example of the Salmond spin
To be fair your criticism of him on this point appear to be based on the fact that you don't like his politics, whether or not it's a perfect example of the Salmond spin you are certainly playing politics with the issue.
I don't like Salmond's politics but it doesn't lead me to conclude that donating a second income to charity can't be seen as "so generous in any way shape or form".
I assume people have seen the quote from the head of the BBC who described Salmond as a paranoid loser
Nope and as it is you saying it quote please.
not so generous in any way shape or form"
If he shat gold bricks and gave them to the poor and needy you would still complain. Ernie nails it tbh- politics from you and nobility[ and possibly politics] from AS.
He is doing a good turn and all this shows is that some right wingers - esp on STW- have some hate issues re AS.
Personally I thought that the referendum might just be the first skirmish in a long engagement. Having won, the unionist parties have it in their control to make sure there remains a majority against independence. If they fail and the SNP regain a mandate for another referendum then I don't see why there shouldn't be one.
The unionist parties won the referendum, they're comprehensively losing Scotland:
It's beginning to dawn on the smarter Scottish Labour people that they've comprehensively screwed up by getting into bed with the Tories. People have long memories, that behaviour won't be forgiven - the question is whether Labour in Scotland is dead for a decade of a generation.
People have long memories
Agreed. And I'm expecting this to be a big card played by both sides. With one going "look at these gits who sold you out" and the other going "look at these gits, let them in and there'll be another referendum"
Hard to see Labour recovering in time for the next round of political electioneering points scoring. But I will not be suprised if that frequently bandied about map will prove far from accurate. Much will depend on how much money people have in their own pockets I suspect.
Anyway, up the peoples republic of rhubard pies
Only on here could somebody dig up AS for giving £40k plus pa to charity,suprisingly it wasn't THM. I wish he had stayed on for a while, the sound of Jam, zulu and THM's heads exploding as he was allowed a PPB on national tv because of the size of the SNP's vote in the next Westminster election would have been heard in Sutherland. 😀
Interesting times coming here, Labour must REALLY wish the elections were a lot longer away.
The Yes vote would have been permanent, I think a No should be the same.
JY google it, its on all the news services. If AS had just got on with his giving privately, or ideally, decline to take the pension at all whilst he was still working as an SMP/MP then that would have credibility in my eyes.
ernie, not sure it is his politics which is the issue for me, it's his whole mode of operation. I'm glad he has a track record of not being paid for two jobs, Scotland and UK as a whole should have a rule that if you are an MP you have no other job. I have that in my employment contract, always have. As an SMP/FM I would imagine he had a lot to do with the pension rule.
I think he also donated half his FM salary to charity too. you'll need to google the facts on that though.jambalaya - Member
But he's not donating it every year, it's short term piece of politics, see my post about how long is it before he stands down as a MSP. Also what a complete farce you can claim a First Minister pension of £42k pa whilst you are still earning a salary as an MSP !My point is he should be getting that pension whilst he is still working for the same employer. Giving away something which should never have been allowed is not generous. It is also total spin to say he is giving away his pension, that's a headline designed to suggest he is forgoing it permanently which he is absolutely not. A £42k pension in Scotland is very generous and that for 7 years work. i wonder what other pensions he'll be getting paid for by the Scottish tax payer.
@seosamh - from google he kept his FM salary and donated some/all of his other MP/SMP salary to charity. Its the two jobs / two salaries thing again for me.
As an aside Google also turned up that when he stood down as a UK MP he got a £65k pay off (resettlement allowance to help him deal with not being an MP !), he kept half and gave half to charity. I do wonder again how MPs get a payoff when they walk straight into another job, in his case as an MSP and then FM.
So my blood boils further 😉
He tweeted his own pleasure at his donation !
He gets £85k as First Minister AND £60k as an SMP (not to mention most his life will be run on expenses). When he took the UK resettlement allowance he was still an SMP, still earning his £60k (and maybe the £85 too can't recall if he was FM too). So he is still earning £60k as an SMP and would have been entitled to a pension of £45k.
He really is the king of spin and a master of smoke and mirrors.
from google he kept his FM salary and donated some/all of his other MP/SMP salary to charity.....when he stood down as a UK MP he got a £65k pay off (resettlement allowance to help him deal with not being an MP !), he kept half and gave half to charity
So you have done a bit of digging around in Google and discovered that Alex Salmond has given quite a bit of money (which he was perfectly entitled to keep for himself) to charity.
You don't however believe that this is [i]"so generous in any way shape or form".[/i]
You are not exactly a very easy person to please, are you jambalaya ?
Would you like to tell us how much Alex Salmond should have given to charity for it to have met with your full approval ?
more google
Gordon Brown waived his UK PM's pension entirely, ie for life. AS is donating it whilst he is still employed by the Scottish government/people as an SMP. That was my point all along. What Gordon Brown did was generous. What AS has done is PR.
@earnie I appreciate he could have kept these amounts, but there is a strong argument that he should never have had them. The condemnation from UK Labour about keeping half the £65k when stepping down as an MP was pretty strong. As I said it would be one thing if he just gave this money discretely but he announced it with a fanfare on Twitter.
but there is a strong argument that he should never have had them.
So you are criticizing the system not Alex Salmond, you didn't make that clear, you gave every indication that it was Alex Salmond that you had a problem with over this issue.
As I said it would be one thing if he just gave this money discretely
I don't see a problem with someone announcing that they are donating a salary to charity. It certainly doesn't make that the charitable act is less generous because they have announced it, which is what you've suggested.
Gordon Brown is obviously the best example we could possibly have
http://order-order.com/2014/01/24/exc-gordon-brown-office-has-10000-a-week-expenses-raises-over-3-million-gives-less-than-1-million-to-charity/
[quote=jambalaya ] As an SMP/FM I would imagine he had a lot to do with the pension rule.
Alex Salmond wasn't even at Holyrood when that rule was implemented. Oh - and it's MSP, not SMP.
jambalaya - MemberWhat Gordon Brown did was generous. What AS has done is PR.
You really are a hypocrite jambalaya. Three weeks ago you were criticising Gordon Brown's charitable donations from a second income dismissing him as not being motivated by altruistic considerations, you are now describing him as being "generous".
Do you remember that thread ? scotroutes used the same "evidence" then from a right-wing Tory blogger to belittle Gordon Brown's charitable work as he has now.
If you can't remember the thread here it is again :
http://singletrackworld.com/forum/topic/welcome-back-gordi#post-6420617
It's nice to see the relentless positivity of the no campaign is alive and well.
HAHAHA @ erie pwning you and NW comment
The Yes vote would have been permanent, I think a No should be the same.
Good luck with that thought
JY google it, its on all the news services.
I did before i asked i found nothing but top hit now
‘really, Salmond, you’re a paranoid loser and you really shouldn’t insult the BBC like that’,
I love statements like that, he should be on here with that level of hypocrisy... oh hold on is it you Jam 😉
Can you state categorically for the record what AS has to do in terms of a charitable donation for you to not insult him for it ?
duckman - Member
Only on here could somebody dig up AS for giving £40k plus pa to charity,[b]suprisingly it wasn't THM[/b].
Oi, play the ball ref....oops forgot, you are one! Are you Steve Walsh by any chance?
No need to worry about the DOs charitable affairs. There are enough basic facts that support ridiculing his posturing and lies, we don't need anymore. Spinning his way jnto Westminster will be funny enough and then the book launch....
JY, He could forgo his SMP pension for life, better he could forgo the FM one but as that's higher it would seem reasonable for him to keep that. He could have forgone his £65k allowance from the UK parliament.
@duckman - we don't know he is giving £42k to charity, there are too many caveats. Also he is giving the Scottish taxpayers money to charity from a pension which should not be paid under these circumstances, ie when he is till working/being paid for by the Scottish taxpayer.
Think about it - he can do the job of first minister for £85k or not bother and get £45k !
Northwind there is nothing negative about pointing out what a fraud Salmond is is there ?
ernie - yes I am criticising the system too, one he was the leader of and did much to shape. Brown gave up his pension for life, Salmond has done no such thing
There is no doubt in my mind he intends to stand as a UK MP in the May 2015 General Election - more jobs and more pay whilst drawing his pension from the Scottish taxpayer.
All of this just reinforces my view of the Holyrood political elite being just the same (in fact worse) than those other bods in Westminster
He seems to have accepted the future entitlement to a pension only to "donate" it to charity some years later.
If his moral compass is as strong as he says it is, why didn't he just waive it in the first place like Gordon Brown and David Cameron. Wouldn't the £42K a year be better retained in the public sector than stashed in his own charity?
@robdixon - yes this is my point exactly
The article linked to above says that the Scottish Parliament has now [b]abolished[/b] this special first minister pension which was drawable at any time and no matter what other jobs you where doing. So AS is drawing a pension which has now been withdrawn being seen to be too generous. The fact he is giving away some of it for a limited period doesn't make him a hero in my book.
Oi, play the ball ref....oops forgot, you are one! Are you Steve Walsh by any chance?
Now there is somebody that the English have cause to hate. Still I am sure he will continue to make a good bogeyman...AS not SW.
http://www.marysalmondtrust.com/guidelines.html
We do know he is giving the full amount to charity,what are these caveats you alone seem to be privvy to that make him a fraud?
AS gives to charity=fraud
Major parties renege on "the vow" tumbleweed
Jebus, pipe down... 😆jambalaya - Member
@robdixon - yes this is my point exactlyThe article linked to above says that the Scottish Parliament has now abolished this special first minister pension which was drawable at any time and no matter what other jobs you where doing. So AS is drawing a pension which has now been withdrawn being seen to be too generous. The fact he is giving away some of it for a limited period doesn't make him a hero in my book.
The foaming at the mouth that AS causes in some quarters is one of his most attractive attributes IMHO. I hope he does head back to Westminster just for the sheer entertainment value, especially if Labour had to rely on the SNP to shore up a minority government.
Maybe we should have a new thread on which coalition you'd prefer:
- Labour & SNP
- Tory & UKIP
Maybe we should have a new thread on which coalition you'd prefer:
- Labour & SNP
- Tory & UKIP
Jesus ****ing wept
epicsteve - Member
The foaming at the mouth that AS causes in some quarters is one of his most attractive attributes IMHO. I hope he does head back to Westminster just for the sheer entertainment value, especially if Labour had to rely on the SNP to shore up a minority government.Maybe we should have a new thread on which coalition you'd prefer:
- Labour & SNP
- Tory & UKIP
The SNP have stated they won't prop up a westminster gov.
Major parties renege on "the vow" - tumbleweed
❓
[img]
[/img]Smith Commission set up on 19th September to start drafting new legislation.
Proposals published on 13th October [url= https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/proposals-for-further-devolution-of-powers-to-scottish-parliament ]here[/url].
Now I don't know about you but to me that looks like the government has done exactly what they said they would, and on time too. We're not finished with November yet, and it would seem premature to say the government won't deliver on the future items in the timetable, so please, enlighten me as to which vow has been reneged on.
Lets see what happens to the smith commission proposals after a new government is elected in may.The Flying Ox - Member
Major parties renege on "the vow" - tumbleweedSmith Commission set up on 19th September to start drafting new legislation.
Proposals published on 13th October here.
Now I don't know about you but to me that looks like the government has done exactly what they said they would, and on time too. We're not finished with November yet, and it would seem premature to say the government won't deliver on the future items in the timetable, so please, enlighten me as to which vow has been reneged on.
Promises, what promises! 😆
but largely I do agree people need to engage in the process and see what comes from it.
@seaosamth - I did say earlier I was quite revved up about this, I meant it. Seems the Scottish parliament did agree with me that the FM pension was too generous, just that AS declined to give it up and we are supposed to give him a round of applause for only keeping half.
@epic, yes I agree I think that's one of his main appeals to his supports, that he winds up those opposed to him.
@Flying Ox - yes Government is absolutely on schedule, they are motivated to implement the more powers for English MPs on English issues. I think in time we will see they've been the biggest winners here. The Scots will get more powers which will shine a light on their overly optimistic promises which they cannot deliver (they'll still blame Westminster for everything of course), the English MPs will get to vote on English policies which will be a big step forward.
FTFY 😉 all for it!the English MPs will get to vote on English policies which will be a big step forward towards Scottish Independence
btw anyone heading to the RIC conference on saturday?
Is it not time this thread was brought to a dignified close? There can be other threads started at opportune times to discuss devo issues.
We all miss this thread, you can see that by the fact we won't let it go !
brought to a dignified close?
Bit late for that
We all miss this thread, you can see that by the fact we won't let it go !
Kill it, kill it with fire, napalm, badgers, nukes, and making progress.
just that AS declined to give it up and we are supposed to give him a round of applause for only keeping half.
What a weird way of writing he voluntarily gave up half his pension. You have let your personal feelings cloud your judgement here. If you chose to donate half of your pension I will applaud yo as we should all applaud him. he did not need to so this, he could no tbe foced to do it but he did and still you are nit willing to say well done. If he cured cancer you would moan he did not do it soon enough.
By all means suggest he could do more but FFS how many politicians or people do this ? Very few so lets applaud them when they do.
So my blood boils further
massive schadenfreude over here
