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CAMPAIGNING FOR
SCOTLAND
(Owned, Edited and Printed in Scotland since November 1926)
[21 July 2000]
THE
KING IS DEAD - LONG LIVE THE KING!

The announcement by Alex Salmond MP, MSP,
that he will demit office as Convener of the Scottish National Party has
sent shock waves through the Scottish political establishment. Those of
us who have not been uncritical admirers of Alex do recognise and
appreciate the dedication, energy and initiative he has displayed
consistently over the years and his massive contribution to the cause of
Scottish Independence..
However the Scottish National Party is
not a divine institution, and people can and do lose their appetite from
time to time, as we’re all human. Despite the media hype the SNP has
never been a one man band, although Alex’s skills as a TV performer
are formidable; he also scares the hell out of his opponents. Comments
have been made that he has not shone in the Scottish Parliament because
he is a star player, an individualist, and teamwork is now the name of
the game.
There have been only four Chairmen in my
time in the SNP, Arthur Donaldson, Billy Wolfe, Gordon Wilson and Alex
Salmond. Arthur Donaldson was Chairman when Winnie Ewing won Hamilton;
Billy Wolfe was Chairman when we won the Western Isles in 1970, then had
11 MPs elected in 1974 with 31% of the vote. Gordon Wilson inherited the
Party after we lost 9 of our 11 seats in 1979, and had to contend with
the splits engendered by the 79 Group, which led to the expulsion of
among others, Alex Salmond. Gordon spent a few years rebuilding the
Party, but when he lost his own Westminster seat in 1987 the
Chairmanship was too onerous for someone who had to earn a living
outside politics.
Alex Salmond became Chairman, or Convener as it is now
politically correctly called, in 1990, to misgivings among many of the
more mainstream nationalists, but has done extremely well and healed old
wounds.
Who will succeed? Any of the names
mentioned so far, John Swinney, Alex Neil , Roseanna Cunningham, Mike
Russell or Kenny MacAskill could, and each of them would bring their own
ethos and drive; none of them would be bad for the Party.
It is odd that that opposition to Alex is
always from fundamentalists. We do not recognise that term applied to
some of the individuals concerned who were arch-devolutionists in the
past (This comment excludes the named contenders).
It must be like Humpty Dumpty in Alice in
Wonderland who said "When I use a word it means just what I choose
it to mean-neither more nor less".
NOT
QUEEN ELIZABETH TWO - BUT TWO QUEEN ELIZABETHS
Press and TV is full of fulsome (foolsome?)
tributes to the Queen Mother who will shortly be 100 years old; maybe
she’s already 100 as the Royals have two birthdays, the official one
and the real one.
We also know now that the Queen herself
has managed to squirrel away £35 million from the last settlement and
that the savings we mentioned last week are really coming out of our
money and not the Queen’s. Gordon Brown is not as hard on the Royal
pensioners as he is on the more worthy ones.
Incidentally, what will happen to the
Queen Mother’s £4 million overdraft, run up at taxpayer’s expense
when she passes on? Maybe they’ll get it from the insurance.
ALSO
PAST THE SELL BY DATE
No more has been said about the proposal
trailed a few weeks back to scrap the post of Secretary of State for
Scotland, but it was bruited about to be before the next General
Election. According to reports Dr Reid has 86 staff, but it is not clear
if this includes the 3 special advisers appointed over the last year.
One item highlighted by George Rosie when
he was interrogating Dr Reid on TV, the Secretary of State can annul any
legislation passed by the Scottish Parliament; Section 35, I think.
After the demise of this post who will be authorised to annul this
legislation?
One thing is clear; Dr Reid and his
sidekick (literally) Brian Wilson spend an awful lot of time and our
money attacking the SNP (Witness Brian Wilson was the only one who
publicly denigrated Alex Salmond on his demitting office).
When Tony Blair appointed John Reid and
Brian Wilson to the Scottish Office he had obviously never heard of the
"Good cop, bad cop" routine.
THE
GRAVY TRAIN STANDING AT.....

Photograph Andrew P M Wright
Mr. Ian Smith , who resigned as Chief
Executive of Dumfries & Galloway at a day’s notice last year has
been given the post of Local Government Ombudsman; the post is part-time
and carries a salary of £38,264. Mr. Smith is on the Consultative
Steering Group to provide financial services for the Scottish
Parliament; he is also a director of West of Scotland Water.
At the time of his appointment to the CSG,
Dumfries & Galloway was under investigation for a transaction
involving the housing department.
Last week the former Convener of Dumfries
& Galloway was given 250 hours of community service for misuse of a
council Visa card; his defence was that this was established practice.
At the time, Mr. Smith was the Chief Executive.
It looks as if the proposed "Bonfire
of the Quangos" has failed to ignite.
THE
PRIVATE GRAVY TRAIN IS STILL RUNNING...
A week or two ago it was suggested that
three former Scottish Secretaries, Ian Lang, Michael Forsyth and Sir
Malcolm Rifkind, might have jobs in the City.
Sir Malcolm Rifkind will become a
director of Aberdeen Asset Management on 1 Aug; he is on the boards of
Ramco (Aberdeen based oil explorer), British Assets Trust, Foreign &
Colonial Emerging Markets Trust and is a consultant to the Australian
mining company BHP.
Ramco shares are soaring at the moment;
Riffers obviously knows a thing or two.
If he goes on like this he’ll have time
to be a Westminster MP.
VALUE
ADDED ???
It seems hardly credible that hospices
which care for the terminally ill are not exempt from VAT. Scotland’s
biggest hospice, St Margaret’s in Clydebank, is appealing against
paying VAT on furnishings and building work.
All the expenditure at the hospice is to
do with caring with the terminally ill and their relatives. While the
NHS contributes to the running costs it supplies less than 25% of the
cash; the rest comes from donations.
Hospices give added value to the final
days of their patients; it is obscene that Government takes money from
them.
You add value - we’ll add the tax.
THE
CAMPBELLS ARE CONNING
I did watch a so-called "fly on the
wall" programme on the Prime Minister’s Press Secretary, Alastair
Campbell. These programmes, which purport to show things as they really
are, are a load of nonsense. Anyone conscious of a camera or any
recording device will act as they want to be portrayed, not as they are.
In fact, the programme was seen as a way showing Mr. Campbell in a good
light, and he came out of it very well, which was the object of the
exercise.
That said we should be asking why these
people should be raking in money from the public purse for media
managers who say "Well, what he actually said was..." as if we
are all idiots. This government has already spent over £1 billion on
consultants of one sort or other in the last three years and this does
not include the army of minions we saw on TV.
Politicians are supposed to be
communicators, that’s part of their job, they shouldn’t need someone
else to do it for them. And if these guys like Campbell were worth their
salt then the Government would have a much better public image, or are
we missing something?
It is a well known fact that a spin
doctor is there to present the story; when he becomes the story his
usefulness is ended. Frank Dobson (Remember him) said of another wobbled
spin doctor "You can be a successful poisoner, or a famous poisoner.
You cannot be both."
NATS IN
TROUBLE
No, no, not another everyday story of SNP
Treasurers, but a few problems which have arisen with the National Air
Traffic Service (NATS). Initials are very much in vogue due to the long
winded names and the short winded attention span. There is a Flight Data
Processing System (FDPS) and it is being installed by Electronic Data
Systems (EDS) at the Oceanic Area Control Centre (OACC) at Prestwick.
EDS is an American firm and they have
already installed software for the Inland Revenue (BAST...) ; anyone who
has tried to submit their tax return electronically will know of that
problem.
Anyway, the Prestwick project is already
two years behind schedule and has been halted at the instigation of the
Commons Public Accounts Committee (CPAC). According to them the original
estimate was £1 billion over a 10 year contract; it is now £2.4
billion and still rising.
SNP Transport Spokeswoman, Linda Fabiani,
MSP, has called for a public enquiry as to why this shambles has come
about, but it is not likely she will get any answers. The Labour Party
say it was a PFI (Private Finance Initiative) started by the Tories, and
they scrapped it and put in public money. They say the Government is
setting up a PPP (Public Private Partnership) to run it. (You can hardly
believe all this jargon!)
This is the privatisation of Air Traffic
Control, opposed by aircrew and air traffic controllers, who are sure
that safety will take second place to profit; well they have the
railways as a model, do they not? When in Opposition Labour was
stridently opposed to this policy, but as the New Tories they have
wholeheartedly embraced it.
EDS ( founded by Ross Perot) has managed
to lock the Inland Revenue into a juicy 10 year contract, and by the
looks of it they have done the same thing with NATS. It’s like the
Skye Bridge and the Bank of America--Cherchez le Tory Ex Government
Minister, probably now working in the City.
DATES
IN HISTORY
21 July 1796
Death in Dumfries of Robert Burns,
Scotland's National Bard. Composer of some 400 songs including the
Scottish National Anthem 'Scots Wha
Hae'.
23 July 1745
Prince Charles Edward Stewart,
'The Young Pretender', landed in Eriskay with only seven men. The last
Jacobite Rising was to follow.
24 July 1411
Battle of Harlaw,
Inverurie, where the Crown forces under the Earl of Mar faced a Highland
Host led by Donald Lord of the Isles. Heavy casualties were inflicted on
both sides but victory went to the Lowlanders as the Highlanders withdrew.
Aberdeen suffered heavy losses with the death of Provost Robert Davidson
and many of the City Burgesses fighting on the Crown side.
THE
REBELS CEILIDH SONG BOOK
THE BALLAD OF THE
INCH
Tune: "Castles in the Air"
Ah'll tell ya a story,
An' I'll swear tae ye it's true,
A' aboot the Pillar Box -
The ane wi' E.R.II.
Chorus: Singing,
Fa'll blaw it this time?
Fa'll blaw it noo?
The anes that blew it last time,
Canna blaw it noo.
They took this mickle Pillar
Box,
An' stuck it in the grron',
Wi Edinburgh C.I.D.
An' Polis a' aroon'.
A noble Lady in the Sooth
said, "Let it weel be seen
By a' thae traitrous Scots up North
That I'm their English Queen.
"Sae watch it weel ma
merry men,
An' keep it in your care,
For England's nearly bankrupt,
An' we hav'nae ony mair."
They guardit it richt
faithfully,
They guardit it fell well;
But in ahint their backs there nipped
A big black-coated chiel.
Ye read it i' the papers,
Ye saw it i' the news -
How he stuck his "Coupon" in,
Wi' a yaird-lang, fizzin' fuse.
As he hirpled back across
the road,
Tae the Cops he bad, "Good-night!
Ah wadna stand sae near the box,
For yon wis gelagnite."
A minute later aff it went,
Wi' a flashing an' a thump,
An' noo they've taen awa' the bits
Tae the Corporation Dump.
The bottom bit they left
there,
A' ragged-edged an' shairp;
But the lid wis in St. Peter's hands,
Bein' played on like a hairp.
It's said that on the next
day -
Pit there tae get their rag -
Upon the mound o' rubble
Wis a wee bit yella flag.
See the Songbook
in our features section
AND
AS WE CONTINUE.........
If you read our first issue of The Flag
in the Wind you will know that this is a weekly Internet commentary on
the Scottish political scene; if you desire further erudition click on
Archives.
THE
SCOTTISH NATIONAL PARTY
The Scots Independent Newspaper is
independent of the Scottish National Party, but we support the Party
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THE FLAG
IN THE WIND
The above was the title of a book written
in the early Fifties by John MacDonald MacCormick, one of the founder
members of the Scottish National Party in 1934. The sub-title was
"The Story of the National Movement in Scotland". His comment in
the book said "It is perhaps in the symbols which men use that their
deepest sentiments are most readily expressed. Flags as well as straws
show which way the wind is blowing". A
fuller account appears under Features.

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