Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Scottish politics thread
- This topic has 955 replies, 78 voices, and was last updated 1 week ago by tjagain.
-
Scottish politics thread
-
tjagainFull Member
still has nowt to do with Murrell that other folk in other circumstances have been prosecuted successfully.
ircFree Member“what does that have to do with Murrell?”
It suggests to me that the vast majority of politicians reported to the COPFS by Police Scotland get convicted.
Don’t forget Mike Watson as well.
ircFree MemberGoing by their track record Mr Murrell may need to pack pyjamas when he goes to court.
politecameraactionFree Memberstill has nowt to do with Murrell that other folk in other circumstances have been prosecuted successfully.
If Murrell is taken to trial, it’s the facts that are relevant to him that matter, not the facts relevant to the last few politicians that were convicted, true. But the allegations aren’t outlandish (this sort of stuff happens all the time), these types of cases are usually document-heavy (unlike eg sexual assault cases), and the people making the allegation of embezzlement seem generally competent and successful in this area.
But we’ll see. It’s a long way between today and a verdict.
squirrelkingFree MemberIf Murrell is taken to trial, it’s the facts that are relevant to him that matter, not the facts relevant to the last few politicians that were convicted, true. But the allegations aren’t outlandish (this sort of stuff happens all the time), these types of cases are usually document-heavy (unlike eg sexual assault cases), and the people making the allegation of embezzlement seem generally competent and successful in this area.
But we’ll see. It’s a long way between today and a verdict.
This, everything else for or against is just baseless speculation.
politecameraactionFree MemberIt seems very odd that the Scottish Government is spending millions of pounds pa on international development when international development assistance is a reserved matter per s7 of Schedule 5 of the Scotland Act 1998.
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1998/46/schedule/5
https://www.gov.scot/policies/international-development/development-assistance-programmes/
It seems even odder that while the development work in Malawi, Rwanda, Pakistan and Zambia is quite carefully planned, Yousaf should have been making off-the-cuff decisions about how much and to whom to make emergency donations in support of Palestinians.
I’m not sure I buy the implication that the donation to UNRWA was a quid pro quo for Hamas getting his parents-in-law out of Gaza. I thought that the Rafa crossing was controlled by the Egyptians and Israelis at that point…?
tjagainFull MemberMaybe they are just being humane? People are dying in huge numbers, starvation is rife, medical services have collapsed.
politecameraactionFree MemberI’m not disagreeing with the idea that there is dire need in Palestine.
International development assistance works best when it is carefully planned, coordinated and delivered over the long term – not subject to chopping and changing of short term politicians. The UK International development community has been buggered around enough by that already. That money that was sent to UNRWA can’t be spent on the Scottish Government’s existing commitments in Zambia, Malawi, Pakistan and Rwanda – so what happens to them?
It’s certainly A Good Thing to be humane. Should everyone government agency in the country pursue one-off cash donations to humanitarian causes at its chief executive’s decision?
It’s very weird for a politician to go against the advice of civil servants, particularly on an issue where they have deep personal and family interests. To be blunt: if a Jewish FM were intervening in how aid were sent to Israel at a time when their in-laws were trapped in Israeli territory, there would be a firestorm.
It all speaks to a very lax attitude inside the Scottish Government and the SNP about transparency and integrity when it comes to spending other people’s money. Ferries, campervans, foreign donations, food banks…
I also just don’t understand how the Scottish Government can spend money on an issue that is outside its legal authority. But maybe I am just missing something there, as it seems such an obvious breach of the Scotland Act 1998. Perhaps Westminster passed subsequent enabling legislation or something, I don’t know.
politecameraactionFree MemberMeanwhile, if (and to be fair it’s a pretty big if, considering the Telegraph) this is true, then it’s a bit of a LOL. The debate may not happen and the impact may be zero, but it’s not a great look. It reminds me of the increasingly arcane discussions of the fringe Internet left, where it becomes a weird kind of virtual worldbuilding like Dungeons & Dragons.
The SNP is set to spend time debating what national anthem an independent Scotland should have despite its general election drubbing… Stewart McDonald, a former Glasgow MP, said the move to conduct a conference debate on a Scottish state’s official song was an example of how detached his party had become from the everyday concerns of voters…He warned the SNP would get “horsed” at the 2026 Holyrood elections unless it urgently changed, hitting out at an unhealthy internal culture in which dissent and debate were not tolerated.
tjagainFull MemberPCA – is there anything that the Scottish government does, did or could do that you agree with?
Or is your position simply the Bain principle?
politecameraactionFree Memberis there anything that the Scottish government does, did or could do that you agree with?
Removal of child benefit cap, free prescriptions and youth dental and uni at point of use (although I would have means tested), banning pavement parking, reopening railway lines in Birders and Fife and East Lothian, building new railway stations, free school meals in primary schools…
Many of these things have happened in other parts of the UK but it was the SNP in government that was responsible for rhem in Scotland.
What these successes all have in common is they are technocratic, build on existing capacity, and are legal and have been immediate positive impact on residents’ lives. Where the SNP fails biggest is with poorly-considered, partisan, nation-building or plain unlawful initiatives: ferries, returnable bottles, gender recognition, Yousaf cosying up to Erdoğan…Not all of these were terrible ideas but beyond the capacity (legally or practically) of the SNP as the Scottish Government to deliver.
ircFree Member“I also just don’t understand how the Scottish Government can spend money on an issue that is outside its legal authority.”
Because their spending is not audited by the UK govt. They get their budget and get on with it. I would expect the senior civil service to advise against spending outside the devolved areas but in this case it appears they did and got ignored.
In other cases senior civil servants seem to view themselves as part of the SNP team. For example they way they retrospectively changed the rules to allow historical grievances against Alex Salmond to be pursued.
Another questionable area is using civil servants to draft papers about how an independent Scotland would work. There is no indy Scotland. There is no prospect of indyref 2 in the short or medium term. That looks like party political work to me not govt work.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/09/20/independence-documents-spending-scottish-national-party/
piemonsterFree MemberAre you suggesting anyone but Cameron Downing is a “baddie”?
I think he was ejected/jumped from the SNP a few years back, and rightly so from what I can see. Seems like a right ****hole and deserves a conviction and jail sentence.
2022 article https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/snp-equalities-officer-who-threatened-28249046
Not sure if anyone here can remember this happening and why it took a while for him to leave?
inthebordersFree Memberuni at point of use (although I would have means tested)
Means Tested who?
These folk attending Uni are adults, so presumably you mean them – I reckon 99% of them would fail the ‘test’ and their costs covered.
politecameraactionFree MemberTrue – but student loans are already means tested in Scotland, so why can’t fees be too? https://www.mygov.scot/apply-student-loan
I’m just a bit unenthusiastic about “universal” benefits that can end up benefiting higher earning families more than lower income families. But I do accept that sometimes it costs more money to administer the means testing than you save by withholding benefits/subsidies/whatever from people that don’t need them as much.
I should have added the Baby Box to the list of Good Things the SNP has achieved in power.
inthebordersFree MemberTrue – but student loans are already means tested in Scotland, so why can’t fees be too?
Because it’s not the policy by the Govt we elected – but don’t worry, when we’ve lost the Parliament you can congratulate yourself for your part in increasing the cost of living for future generations.
politecameraactionFree MemberOK, well, we are agreed that student fees could be means tested.
Obviously it’s a policy decision not to do that, and the consequence is for the state to subsidise all students rather than target students with the greatest need, and as a result the state isn’t able to spend that same value elsewhere in education or to reduce taxes. Some people will think that’s worthwhile.
scotroutesFull MemberMy assumption is that subsidising fees is seen to have a downstream benefit (higher trained workforce, increased future tax take etc) so I can see an argument for universal subsidies.
Neither should we discount the stigma element. Baby boxes would be a really good example of using a universal benefit to overcome any reluctance on the part of the more needy recipients.
ircFree Member“These folk attending Uni are adults, so presumably you mean them – I reckon 99% of them would fail the ‘test’ and their costs covered.”
Nope. It is not the students that are means tested, it is the parents. The amount of loan available depends on parents income. There is no reason to suppose that means tested tuition fees would not work the same way. Poor parents – free tuition. Average or wealthy parents pay tuition fees.
https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/students/student-loans-scotland/#tips-6
inthebordersFree MemberNope. It is not the students that are means tested, it is the parents. The amount of loan available depends on parents income. There is no reason to suppose that means tested tuition fees would not work the same way. Poor parents – free tuition. Average or wealthy parents pay tuition fees.
I understand how it works now, but I was asking PCA for his definition – based on his post.
And since fees are paid by the student over their working life, what has their parents income got to do with it?
ircFree Member“And since fees are paid by the student over their working life, what has their parents income got to do with it?”
Bugger all. An unfair system which tries on the one hand to treat over 16 year olds as adults but on the other hand insists hat they are dependent on the good will of their parents.
ircFree MemberDavid Davis uses parliamentary priviledge to allege possible perjury among other issues during the Salmond affair.
politecameraactionFree Member“And since fees are paid by the student over their working life, what has their parents income got to do with it?”
Kids born into wealthier families generally turn out wealthier themselves, and part of that it because their parents have more money to spend on their education. That’s not a radical idea. There are very few middle class kids that don’t end up going to uni/HE because they would pay some or all of their fees – we can see that from what’s happening in places that do charge fees to some students.
scotroutesFull MemberDavid Davis uses parliamentary priviledge to allege possible perjury among other issues during the Salmond affair.
Not a thing on the BBC website about it.
gordimhorFull MemberIf you want a good account of the whole Salmond affair then read Break up by David Clegg and Kieran Andrews. It is thoroughly investigated and the conclusions are scathing
scotroutesFull MemberDavid Clegg of the Daily Record? The person that Liz Lloyd allegedly leeked to? Does he name her in this book?
gordimhorFull MemberNo he is smarter than that. I was sceptical too but there’s no other attempt to give fair summary of the whole thing , so far as I know.
1piemonsterFree Memberallegedly leeked
What in the hell do they do with the Leek? Or is this NSFW?
gordimhorFull MemberPrices are going up faster than our already poor wages that’s why social care providers cant recruit and retain staff
ircFree MemberCurrently reading Clegg’s book after picking a copy up for £3.50. A good reminder of the major issues and plenty detail I wasn’t aware of. Still amazed that theoretically neutral civil servants explained not taking serious allegations further at the time because it might affect the referendum.
argeeFull MemberUp here on holiday just now seeing the family, what is going on with the drug addicts and stuff, i come up once or twice a year, but just now i don’t think i’ve ever seen so many junkies and alcoholics wandering about as this, i know it was recently stated that scotland has the highest drug deaths in Europe, but it’s mental seeing so many around, i’m in Perth just now and it’s like it’s level pegging with Bristol in terms of numbers, was through Dundee earlier in the week and that’s even worse.
inthebordersFree Memberi know it was recently stated that scotland has the highest drug deaths in Europe,
Yes we’ve an issue but would you be surprised to learn that the key reason is due to how deaths are recorded in Scotland, compared to other countries, especially the rest of the UK?
This is worth a read, as it puts it far better than a couple of bullets.
tjagainFull MemberAlso remember that the tories in Westminster vetoed attempts at harm reduction
No doubt the drug deaths issue is real ( if perhaps overstated) and no doubt this is being weaponised to attack the SNP despite the fact that they have little power to influence poverty ( tho they have taken some steps) and poverty / shit lives is a prime driver of hard drug addiction and also remember that Westminster tories vetoed attempts to reduce the issue simply so they still had the stick to beat the SNP with
IIRC finally the “shooting galleries” are now being put in place in Glasgow. a tiny but important step to harm reduction
1tjagainFull MemberHere is another topic that could well have interesting ramifications. The assisted dying bill ( cue boredom from you all 🙂 )
Forbes church is very much against this. Will she have learned from being so burnt over religion in her campaign for the leadership that she will be able to keep her religion out of this? the bill is in committee stages now but will be coming back to the house for a full vote at some point. I do not expect her to support it but what stance will she take? The religious right are mobilising against the bill in particularly nasty ways.
Its supported by the overwhelming majority of the electorate.
so will she say ” Its a conscience matter” and shut up?
“Its a conscience matter and I will be voting against” ( both acceptable in my view.)
or will she simply state ” my religion is against it, I will be voting against” ( acceptable just about IMO)
or will she campaign against on the fake secular grounds that the religious right use and the lies they use. ( completely unacceptable IMO)
Its going to be an interesting test for her I think and how she handles it will have great bearing on how her political career goes. So far I have heard nothing from her.
matt_outandaboutFull MemberHave we done the SNP pulling nature recovery / nature services finance and some technology finance to pay for the pay rises / hole left by Westminster cuts?
I’m seriously pissed off with the nature finance being pulled, but struggling to work out why beyond SNP spending again…
1argeeFull MemberHave we done the SNP pulling nature recovery / nature services finance and some technology finance to pay for the pay rises / hole left by Westminster cuts?
Don’t think this is down to UK government, these are deals that the Scottish Government have made with unions, councils, etc. The Scottish Fiscal Commission released a press release today regarding Scottish finances as well, it’s not a positive read https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0rw9l40qxdo
matt_outandaboutFull MemberThank you, that’s an interesting read.
If they keep this up until 2026, I expect we may see a change in government…
You must be logged in to reply to this topic.