Home Forums Chat Forum SNP. You LOST, get over it

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  • SNP. You LOST, get over it
  • scotroutes
    Full Member

    Really? Have you forgotten the question on the ballot paper already? The alternative offer was to remain in the union, which is what two million people voted for.[/quote]If only the “No” side hadn’t come up with all these extra proposals, eh?

    epicsteve
    Free Member

    The only people I know who are chuntering for extra powers are those who lost. All the No voters I know, don’t want them. Which side was in the majority?

    The majority voted no, but it was their own side that created the confusion over the extra powers. I have heard some rumblings on the subject of betrayal from folks that voted No and who have said the offer of new powers was a factor in their decision.

    Hard core No voters will always vote No (well, maybe not always because UK politics could easily impact that for some of them – especially the traditional Labour vote which hasn’t always been pro-Union) and hard core Yes voters will always vote Yes. There is a fair chunk in-between (and the polling indicated this as well), many of whom were attracted to the idea of independence but were scared at the prospect and seemed to want to give the UK parties one last chance.

    dragon
    Free Member

    As I understand it yes if tax take dropped because of reduced income tax then yes choices would have to be made on cutting schools, hospitals, roads etc. Obviously some tax still would go to Westminster to pay for UK wide things like border control, defence, the Research Councils etc.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    70-80% of tax take still goes to Westminster. Seriously, these are pretty minor tweaks to the existing arrangements.

    hora
    Free Member

    If Labour lost enought Scottish seats that they’d need SNP votes in the UK parliament then it’s very hard to see the price for that being anything other than an agreement to support the holding of another referendum.

    It’ll be a Tory majority regardless so Labour wont win/get in. I’d also like to see UKIP shut the **** up. They have two pissing seats. Big deal. 750 total and they have two. Wish they’d shut up. Idiots.

    epicsteve
    Free Member

    Really? Have you forgotten the question on the ballot paper already? The alternative offer was to remain in the union, which is what two million people voted for.

    It was the No campaign that changed what that meant to “stay in the UK, but with more powers” and certainly some people thought that’s what they were voting for when the put their mark in the No box.

    It certainly would have been better if they devoMax option was on the ballot paper – especially as it wasn’t offered until after some people had already voted by post. At the moment it’s possible to know what percentage wanted independence, but it’s not possible to say how many voter for No on the basis that they thought devoMax was the best available option, and how many were an outright No under any circumstances. I’d hazard a guess that the majority of the No vote was the latter, but I wouldn’t hazard a guess at what percentage. I don’t think the offer made the difference between winning and losing for the No camp though – they’d have won anyway. In fact if the No vote didn’t send their big-guns up to Scotand to campaign they’d probably have won with a much healthier margin. Given the vast majority of the press outlets were supporting the Union then there wasn’t really any need for the UK politicians to get involved.

    epicsteve
    Free Member

    It’ll be a Tory majority regardless so Labour wont win/get in. I’d also like to see UKIP shut the **** up. They have two pissing seats. Big deal. 750 total and they have two. Wish they’d shut up. Idiots

    I’d be surprised if there is an outright Tory majority at the next general election. It seems one of the least likely outcomes to me. So if the Tories are to retain control it’ll need to be with the support of someone else – and that could be UKIP if they win more seats at the general election. Whether they do win more seats (or even retain what they’ve currently got) is definitely open to question though – the Tories will be arguing that a vote for UKIP is effectively a vote for a Labour government, just as Labour will be saying that a vote for SNP is a vote for a Tory government.

    binners
    Full Member

    It’ll be a Tory majority regardless so Labour wont win/get in. I’d also like to see UKIP shut the **** up. They have two pissing seats. Big deal. 750 total and they have two. Wish they’d shut up. Idiots.

    While they are indeed idiots, it would appear that 19% of the country are presently stupid enough to consider voting for them. And all the polling says that nobody is going to get a majority at the general election. Theres potentially going to be some serious horse-trading going on to establish a working majority. And whether we like it or not UKIP and the SNP are going to be right in the mix

    The nightmare scenario is a Tory/UKIP coalition. Imagine Nige holding sway in the role of kingmaker 😯

    Cheers!

    epicsteve
    Free Member

    The nightmare scenario is a Tory/UKIP coalition.

    Not if you’re the SNP. They must be praying for that.

    epicsteve
    Free Member

    Looks like the Smith report contains potential legislation aimed at stopping there being another referendum: “To provide an adequate check on Scottish Parliament legislation changing the franchise, the electoral system or the number of constituency and regional members
    for the Scottish Parliament, UK legislation will require such legislation to be passed by a two-thirds majority of the Scottish Parliament.”

    wrecker
    Free Member

    Theres potentially going to be some serious horse-trading going on

    He looks a bit like a horse doesn’t he?

    bencooper
    Free Member

    Going by the polls for the next Holyrood elections, that won’t be a problem.

    duckman
    Full Member

    It’ll be a Tory majority regardless so Labour wont win/get in. I’d also like to see UKIP shut the **** up. They have two pissing seats. Big deal. 750 total and they have two. Wish they’d shut up. Idiots.

    Did those Tory Bar stewards increase the number of MP’s by a hundred and not give any to Scotland? Typical!
    Interesting that historically there has been a major change in Scottish politics every two decades. I think you can take that as the cycle that as much as some of you wish would end;it won’t.Unless we get a Tory/UKIP love in. If that was to happen,then shall we cut the period of time to a decade?
    One final point, the Smith report isn’t law,not until the next Government passes it,so I am afraid that trying to hold Westminster to the offer isn’t sour grapes,your lot offered it…And not in a spirit of reconciliation either. I wonder why we didn’t hear about it until days before the ref.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Politician of the Year??

    binners
    Full Member

    Ian Duncan Smith?

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    jambalaya – Member
    Current wishfull/dellusional thinking is another referendum before 2020.

    If scotland returns 4 pro independent parliaments(majority in westminster of SNP, and a large majority holyrood(65%+))before then, personally I think it’s unlikely the British government will be able to refuse one.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    teamhurtmore – Member
    Now let’s see if there are politicians capable of exercising this new responsibility well.

    Lets see what happens to them when they try and pass them through westminster.

    dragon
    Free Member

    How about an Tory / SNP coalition 😆

    TBH I see a Tory majority at the next election.

    ohnohesback
    Free Member

    So Westminster attempting to rewrite the Scottish Parliament’s rules in order to prevent it acting unilaterally? I can imagine how that would go down north of the border!

    I forsee another referrundum before 2020. The Indy issue is far from over and next time I believe – hope – the Nats will win.

    BoardinBob
    Full Member

    it would appear that 19% of the country are presently stupid enough to consider voting for them

    There is a worrying undercurrent of racism/ xenophobia/ bigotry that I’m seeing more and more. While UKIP are often considered to be an “English” problem (a lot of pro-Yes stuff used the fear of UKIP as a campaign tool) my attention was drawn to a Facebook page that was setup this week protesting against plans to convert a disused waterboard building into temporary accomodation for asylum seekers. Some of the comments from local residents were eye watering. Here’s a few unedited examples

    That’s what all the yes voters voted for this is the SNP s doing we should be looking after our own people FIRST

    Am fkn right pissed of with this shit get them to **** out our country there’s a nuff people that don’t belong here n this country aww ready that are rapping our woman trying to kip nap our weans

    Stick it up yer arse **** more ae these **** in this country than us scots send thum **** back !! Sick ae this god dam country wee get treated like shit and they get the good stuff rats man

    **** offf !!! Refugees ?? Seriously ? Theyll get chased out what about us ?? HAVE WE NO GOT A SAY NAW ? THE PEOPLE THAT STAY IN POSSO NO GOT A SAY ? **** THAT THEY DONT NEED IT THEYR GETTING ENOUGH AFF THE SOCIAL SEND THEM HAME NO WONDER THERS POVERTY HERE AND PEOPLE HOMELESS AND STARVING HAVING TO USE FOOD BANKS .. SET UP A HOMELESS UNIT INSTEAD OR SOMETHING FOR THE WAYNES DONT GIVE IT TO **** HERE TO SPONGE AFF THE BREW AND CLAIM FOR THEYR FAMILYS BACK IN WER EVER THEYR FROM

    THATS A JOKE ITS REALLY IS !!!!

    WEEV GPT ENOUGH TP DEAL WOTH WITH THE AMOUNT A JUNKIES WE DONT NEED RANDOM REFUGEE WAYN SNACHERS TO WORRY ABOUT ASWELL

    😳

    tpbiker
    Free Member

    Like you I have no idea why they would have to respect the wishes of the people

    Because they aren’t prepared to engage in another debate around it so soon, which is an entirely legitamate viewpoint given the massive division and cost it incurred last time round. And if only one side is prepared to take part its hardly a fair fight is it?

    Hypothetically – whats to stop the Scottish Government running a referendum every 2 years until they finally get a small majority, then walking away from the UK forever? As someone has already pointed out, the UK wouldn’t subsequently be able to run referendum every 2 years after independence to opt back in, waiting until the population again changed their minds.

    And perhaps I should remind you that the ‘wishes of the people’ was that Scotland shouldn’t be independent. Sounds to me that the wishes of the people currently come a distant second to the ambitions of the SNP party.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    my attention was drawn to a Facebook page that was setup this week protesting against plans to convert a disused waterboard building into temporary accomodation for asylum seekers

    Yeah, but that’s Possil*. The pub next to the Water Board site has finally been demolished but there were several murders there.

    *And it’s Facebook.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    You do realise that the SNP only get into power if the people vote for them? If it was a manifesto commitment to have another referendum on independence, then it would be the people that wanted it.

    epicsteve
    Free Member

    You do realise that the SNP only get into power if “the people” vote for them? If it was a manifesto commitment to have another referendum on independence, then it would be the people that wanted it.

    Indeed. I don’t think even the SNP will push for another referendum unless something has changed and they have some kind of mandate for it (it’d be pointless anyway as they’d just lose again). At the moment they definitely don’t, but there will be a lot of political changes coming over the next few years and that could well deliver them a mandate for another referendum.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Hypothetically – whats to stop the Scottish Government running a referendum every 2 years until they finally get a small majority, then walking away from the UK forever?

    Nothing but the point was raised in relation to them having a vote if the UK decided to leave the EU. The SNP are not proposing to do this anyway.

    As someone has already pointed out, the UK wouldn’t subsequently be able to run referendum every 2 years after independence to opt back in,

    You can tell your ex wife as often as you like after the divorce that you still love her but the decision is not yours to make so you can dp what you like re this it wont be your call. Shall we at least debate plausible hypothetical scenarios?

    Sounds to me that the wishes of the people currently come a distant second to the ambitions of the SNP party.

    Political parties dont stop campaigning for what they believe in when they lose an election.

    For clarity I should add that I do not think they can have a referendum in the next 10 years[ and quite possibly 20 years] unless their is a substantial change in the Union such as leaving the EU. The people have spoken.

    BoardinBob
    Full Member

    Yeah, but that’s Possil

    They still vote

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Like you I have no idea why they would have to respect the wishes of the people

    But JY there are 60m people in the UK, you have to respect everyone’s wishes. 5 blokes down the pub might want to declare Independence for their favourite boozer.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    70-80% of tax take still goes to Westminster. Seriously, these are pretty minor tweaks to the existing arrangements.

    Well Scotland get’s a lot of that money back to pay for NHS, welfare, pensions etc

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    Too many pigeons, here’s a few cats to throw in…

    The SNP is only part of the independence movement in Scotland, and while the SNP may be regarded as being in the forefront, they do not control the independence movement.

    There is a separate legal system in Scotland. The Treaty of Union didn’t absorb Scotland’s parliament into England’s but created a new body and the respective legal rights were retained. In Scotland sovereignty resides in the people, not the parliament. Hence the attitude amongst many here that it is not whether we are “allowed” to have a referendum, but whether we should exercise our sovereignty and simply declare independence. A suitable trigger being maybe when there is a majority of MPs from Scotland supporting independence, or a large majority in the Scottish parliament. That could be next May.

    And as for “get over it”, when Labour or Conservative lose an election, do you expect the voters for the losing party to convert to the other political opinion? Similarly independence isn’t going away.

    This is why it is important why if Westminster wants to put the independence issue to bed they should honour “The Vow”. Devolution is what a substantial part of the Scottish people would prefer/accept, but if it is denied, they will see the only option is independence.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Well Scotland get’s a lot of that money back to pay for NHS, welfare, pensions etc[/quote]Oh aye – but this isn’t some grand federal solution that’s being proposed as some on this thread seem to believe. My point is that most of Holyroods budget will still come in the form of a “grant” from Westminster.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    But JY there are 60m people in the UK, you have to respect everyone’s wishes. 5 blokes down the pub might want to declare Independence for their favourite boozer

    We did all these arguments on the previous thread. The arguments and points raised [ including weak ones that compare a nation, its elected representatives and a democratic vote of the people of said nation to 5 blokes [ womans place is in the home i presume?] in the pub] are unchanged.

    It would be very difficult for rUK to ignore the wishes of Scotland and force them to stay against their wishes. If your wife wants to leave then she leaves what you want or millions of others is neither here nor there as you cannot force her or scotland to remain.
    I am not sure why this is hard to grasp and it will only ever be done in highly exceptional circumstances
    Imagine if the EU said no you cannot leave we all have to vote on it. its **** ludicrous and has been done to death

    unknown
    Free Member

    The staggering arrogance of some people never ceases to amaze. “The Scots voted no” in one breath, “whinging Scots” in the next. “We” in one breath, “you” in the next.

    The result was no, but at least 45% of people in this country want it to be independent. The third city in the uk doesn’t want to be in it.The “there, you’ve had you’re little vote now back in your box and we’ll hear no more about it” attitude is ignorant in the extreme. If you can’t understand that you don’t just give up on independence then you’ve no appreciation of the strength of feeling. The Tories won the last election (sort of), why are we having another one, can’t those labour lot just accept the result with good grace? Why did we have a devo vote in 97 when we’d already had one in 79?

    There’s been a surge in support for the SNP, and the other Yes parties and movements since the result. Exactly who the hell does anyone think they are to tell us we what we should support?

    Actually, maybe it’s insecurity rather than arrogance. “Leave? Don’t you love me any more?”

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Funny how that argument only seems to work one way?

    Why did so many SNP voters vote NO?

    rene59
    Free Member

    Why did so many SNP voters vote NO?

    How many?

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Indeed lets see the stats/evidence to support that claim please

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    20%

    And don’t forget the irony of one large metropolitan area (nearly) determining the outcome for the rest…..hmmmm

    rene59
    Free Member

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    teamhurtmore – Member
    Funny how that argument only seems to work one way?

    Why did so many SNP voters vote NO?

    That stretches credibility to the utmost to put it politely.

    Did they find that figure in a huge pile of steaming bovine exhaust?

    Scots have expressed their opinion of the SNP and its policies by joining the party in record numbers. Membership has gone up from 25,000 before the referendum to almost 100,000 in just a few weeks.

    (And before I’m accused of being a SNP fan, I’ll repeat I am not a member and have no intention of joining.)

    Edit: for comparison’s sake, the total membership of the Conservative Party throughout the UK is estimated at 135,000. Membership of the LibDem Party UK wide is estimated at 43,500. Both members of the Labour Party refused to comment on membership numbers. 🙂

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    ^^^ I meant to say Scottish Labour.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Why confuse post-event trends with the event itself. The maths is straightforward and confirmed in the stats at the time. One in five SNP voters, voted NO. The canny 20%. Don’t forget which side stretched credibility beyond breaking point – helps to explain the result.

    Since then lots of people have switched to UKIP too. Apart from the similarities in both leaders lying through their teeth, so what? Different things altogether

    Tried deodorant rene?

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