|
CAMPAIGNING FOR SCOTLAND
(Owned, Edited and Printed in Scotland since November
1926)
"Promoting all that is best in Scottish
Nationalism and all that is best in Scotland."
[Issue 152 - 2nd
May 2003] |

Compiled by Jim Lynch |

THE PARTY’S OVER - FOR
NOW
There is no point in
dissembling; the SNP went into this election with 35 seats, albeit 2 of them
still held by those who had resigned from the Party, and we came out with
27, a drop of 8. Labour’s total fell by 6, but they started with 56. So the
make-up of the new Parliament is: Labour 50, SNP 27, Tories 18, Liberals 17,
Greens 7, SSP 6 and independents 4. A Labour/Liberal coalition would mean 67
votes, a majority of 2 - interesting, for the rest of us - not for them!

Shona Robison
Brian Adam
We did get more first
past the post seats, 3, Ochil - George Reid from Labour, Dundee East - Shona
Robison from Labour, and Aberdeen North - Brian Adam from Labour. Labour
lost 3 seats to us, 1 seat to the Tories, 1 seat to an independent, and 1
seat to the Liberals. We lost Galloway to the Tories - by 99 votes; we lost
the same Westminster seat to the Tories in 2001 by 72 votes! However as we
took Dundee East from Labour by 90 votes.......
I attended John Swinney’s
Press Conference today ( see below) and was astounded at the savage attacks
on him by the press; mind you when it was the Scotsman and the Record, why
should I have been astounded. Alan Cochrane of the Telegraph was also a bit
nasty, but probably because he was stuck in Scotland while his colleague was
looking for the Galloway papers - George Galloway, that is, not "and Upper
Nithsdale". What these guys don’t see is that they have spent the last 4
years denigrating the Scottish Parliament and the MSPs, and they now lament
the apathy they have created in the electorate, and blame it on the SNP!
The seats lost by the SNP
were mostly under the list system,(apart from Galloway) as there were so
many ways for people to cast their second vote; the Green Party picked up 7
seats and the Scottish Socialist Party (formerly Militant, if you believe
Labour Minister Brian Wilson) picked up 6. The Scottish Pensioners’ Party
also had a list seat, as had Mrs Sillars. The actual ballot paper for the
second vote was about 18 inches long at all the Lothians Polling Stations
anyway; other regions might have had more or less, so confusion reigned.
The first past the post
seats were as follows:
| Inverness East, Nairn and
Lochaber (that’s one seat by the way) |
Fergus Ewing |
| Moray |
Margaret Ewing |
| Perth & Kinross |
Roseanna Cunningham |
| Ochil |
George Reid |
| North Tayside |
John Swinney |
| Aberdeen North |
Brian Adam |
| Dundee East |
Shona Robison |
| Banff & Buchan |
Stewart Stevenson |
| Angus |
Andrew Welsh |
| |
|
Other seats which were
near misses:
| Aberdeen Central
|
1242 |
3% |
| Cumbernauld & Kilsyth |
520 |
1%
|
| Dundee West |
1066 |
2% |
| Galloway |
990 |
.17% |
| Glasgow Govan |
1235 |
3% |
| Kilmarnock & Loudon |
1210 |
2% |
| Linlithgow |
1970 |
3.5% |
| Tweeddale |
538 |
1% |
| Western Isles |
720 |
3% |
It should be noted that at
the 1999 election, the Liberal majority in Tweeddale was 4,478, and that
this has been reduced to 538! Over the last year the Liberals had complained
to the Parliamentary Standards Committee that SNP list MSP, Christine
Grahame was working too hard, and doing what they should have been doing;
the Liberals were also putting it about that as Christine was top of the
list the people didn’t need to vote for her as she would be elected anyway.
What nice people they are.
As noted above, Galloway went
to the Tories, helped by 4299 Labour votes, and as they Unionist Parties say
"It’s nae loss whit a freend gets."; apart from Tweeddale all the other
marginals are Labour.
List MSPs are as follows:
| Central Scotland |
Linda Fabiani, Michael
Matheson, Alex Neil |
| Glasgow |
Nicola Sturgeon, Sandra
White |
| Highland & Islands |
Rob Gibson, Jim Mather |
| Lothians |
Fiona Hyslop, Kenny
MacAskill |
| Mis Scotland & Fife |
Bruce Crawford, Tricia
Marwick |
| North East Scotland |
Richard Lochhead |
| South of Scotland |
Christine Grahame, Adam
Ingram, Alasdair Morgan |
| West of Scotland |
Campbell Martin, Stewart
Maxwell, Bruce McFee |
At the Press Conference, John
Swinney said that there were lessons to be learned from the results; he said
that in future the SNP will concentrate on first past the post seats and
thus minimise the vagaries of the list which cost the SNP 7 seats, and that
he intends to put in a new party constitution with more emphasis on the
members , and to reconnect the party to its local communities. In response
to questions from the press about the failure of the SNP campaign, John
gently pointed out that they themselves had complimented the SNP on a
brilliant campaign! Fuller briefing below.
My own view is that this has
been the best and most professional campaign the SNP has ever run, and John
Swinney has gone from strength to strength and performed superbly on TV. It
is so disappointing that all the effort, dedication and ingenuity did not
pay off - the last programme "Meet the Leaders" only attracted about 200,000
viewers. It’s a bit like the Scottish football team; there the crowd turns
up and the team let them down, and in the elections the team played
brilliantly but the crowd didn’t turn up.

John Swinney wants change after SNP loses seats
Fri 2 May 03
SNP
leader John Swinney today came out fighting insisting he would not resign
despite the election result which saw his party lose a quarter of its seats.
Mr Swinney was in an aggressive mood at the post-election media briefing,
warning his party that it "must change" before the next election in 2007. He
insisted a "root and branch rejuvenation of the party" would be carried
through with urgency but the independence message would stay central to his
ambitions. The SNP leader said: "The challenge of the next four years and
the challenge of what I intend to do, devoting the next four years of my
life to winning the 2007 election, is to guarantee that the SNP is perceived
in 2007 as a credible alternative government." Mr Swinney said he would
deliver a major blueprint for reform of the party's internal structure by
July. He said: "It is time for a root and branch rejuvenation of the party
as we face up to the challenges of the modern political era." He said he
wanted a new party constitution with a one-member-one-vote voting system and
a smaller national executive. The parliamentary ranking system which saw the
exit of SNP leading lights Mike Russell and Andrew Wilson should be binned,
he said. And in a warning to local activists, reform will allow the
leadership to "remove failing branches". The shadow cabinet is to be cut in
size and in a hint of greater discipline the SNP's MSPs will be told "never
to forget why they are privileged" in their jobs. More participation by
women, the disabled and ethnic minorities and a stronger presence for the
party in local communities are also on the cards. He said: "That is the
party reform agenda I will drive forward and drive forward with urgency." Mr
Swinney stuck firmly to his guns on the independence policy despite
suggestions that it had cost his party votes. He said: "Excuse me for
believing in Scottish independence, excuse me for believing that is the
right way forward for Scotland. But I say to you honestly and clearly and
with the strongest political conviction can possibly muster that
independence is the right answer for Scotland. It's a view I hold very
deeply and it's one I will put to the people of Scotland and I will persuade
them the merits of those arguments in the years to come." Mr Swinney argued
that his party needed to put more effort into winning first-past-the-post
seats if it wanted to move from a protest party to a party of Government. He
said: "What we have demonstrated in Ochil, in Dundee East, in Aberdeen
North, tough contests with the Labour Party, is the SNP's ability to deliver
first-past-the-post successes. The problem is that we are not able to do
that in sufficient areas across the country and that is what the agenda I
have set out today is all about." Mr Swinney also rejected suggestions that
his campaign had been a failure, insisting he was "very proud" of it. He
added: "What we have to recognise however is that we have got to get across
to the people of Scotland simple and clear choices in the years ahead."
MEA CULPA
Last
week I received a mild rebuke by email from John J Ramage, as I did not wish
the English a Happy St George’s Day on 23rd April; he also informed me of
something I did not know, that William Shakespeare was both born and died on
23rd April ( a few years between obviously!).
Anyway, belated St
George’s Day wishes to our English readers, and I actually did refer to it
in Foot in the Mouth Notes when I commented that Charles Clarke, English
Education Minister, was visiting Scotland, this constituency no less, where
he had no mandate, on St George’s Day. Forbye, I quoted from Julius Caesar,
but that must have been serendipity, and not planned!
I seem to recall that last
year I did some investigation into St George and his place in the Calendar
of Saints, and in my quest for knowledge even went so far as to contact the
Vatican Library. My recollection, without looking up my own words, is that
he was demoted, but not given the Kirkcaldy heist, which is what I believed;
strangely, looking up St George on the Web, I kept coming across the Red
Hand of Ulster!
As Mr Ramage put it, there
are no Shakespeare suppers, which does seem a bit peculiar when you consider
the impact he has had on the world; I am sure that virtually every friend or
acquaintance of mine could come up with a Shakespearean quote at the drop of
a hat, so why are the English so shy of celebrating their bard?
I also received
another message from a Steafan Risnidh, which may have been praise or
rebuke, but as it was in the Gaelic I’ll never know. Thanks anyway.
NOBLE NOBEL NOBBLED
This
week a Nobel prize winning economist from America said that Scotland could
be better off as an Independent country.
Robert Mundell, professor
of economics at Columbia University in New York, not only backed fiscal
autonomy for Scotland, but said that there was no reason why the country
could not be successful under Independence. Professor Mundell was awarded
the Nobel prize in 1999 for his work on international monetary and
fiscal policy, and has been described as a major influence on the formation
of the European single currency; he has served as an adviser to the UN, the
World Bank, the US Federal Reserve Board, the European Commission and
several governments in Latin America and Europe.
He argued that Scotland’s
political union with England had made sense when Britain was in the
ascendancy and leading the Empire. "The enduring legacy of the empire was to
make the English language the most important in the world. But that era is
now over. The modern counterpart to the British Empire is the EU which
provides for 25 countries in Europe the political and economic umbrella that
the British Empire provided earlier for countries like Scotland. I do not
know whether Scotland needs a government in between its own parliament and
what will one day probably become the federal capital of Europe in
Brussels."
His comments were
widely reported in the Herald, making the front page, but the Scotsman
relegated to a footnote on Page 8, as "Economist backs fiscal autonomy"; I
do not know if the Daily Record was aware of it, as their billboard for that
day said "Exclusive - SNP will cost Scotland 30,000 jobs." At the same time
as Professor Mundell was giving an independent view, the Chancellor, Gordon
Brown, was telling the Scots how well off they were and would be under the
Westminster system, and projecting growth of 3%-3.5%; the Bank of England
was saying 2%-2.5%, OECD - 2.6% and NIESR - 2.8%. All of these institutions
are forecasting that there will be a massive shortfall in the Budget
figures, meaning that taxes will have to be raised by as much as £30 billion
over the next 2 years; as growth in Scotland is very much below the UK
average we will be hit harder.
Another little con trick when
the Chancellor was up here a week or two ago; he told us that whereas in
1985 the number of 18-24 year olds out of work for over a year was 40,000,
this year it was only 282. He neglected to mention the 27,200 in the same
age group who had been receiving jobseeker’s allowance for up to a year, and
that only 67% of that age group were in employment compared with 79% of
25-34 year olds and 82% of 35-49 year olds. What you don’t know won’t harm
you!
So we have an internationally
respected independent Nobel prize winning economist with no axe to grind
saying Scotland could do well as an independent country, and a New Labour
Chancellor, who dissembles and has got his sums wrong, telling us it would
be a disaster; I rest my case.
COURTING TROUBLE
As the
debates on law and order have ebbed and flowed over the last few weeks, a
major issue has been about the number of policemen on the streets; the SNP
want an additional 1000, the Liberals maybe 300-400, the Tories the same,
and New Labour talk of freeing police time.
It is the last approach
we should be looking at more closely; New Labour claim that the police spend
an awful lot of time in court, waiting to give evidence, and that this is
the biggest waste of police time. A concerted effort to change things would
release more policemen to walk the streets. This is undeniably true, but so
is the fact that since coming into power, New Labour have taken no steps to
change this; this is probably acceptable in their eyes as a benefit
delivered cannot then be promised at the next election. That apart, just how
do they aim to free up policemen this way, as this would require fundamental
changes to the law, and so far, the new Criminal Justice Bill has not
addressed these.
What the new Bill has done is
pay a sort of lip service to the principle, by removing court police
officers and replacing them with security guards! This clever ploy has
raised hackles among Scotland’s judges; as it is, when criminals are brought
before the court, the benches are full of other criminals, criminals’
families, criminals’ victims and criminals’ enemies, and witnesses. Removing
police officers from these courts is tantamount to encouraging mayhem and to
severely limiting impartial justice; a policeman at least merits respect, if
not fear, but security guards are generally treated with disdain, but this
would put more police on the streets! Sheriffs and magistrates around
Glasgow have already indicated that they would not be willing to sit in
court under these circumstances.
While we are at it, another
proposed piece of legislation on education has also incensed the judiciary;
Lord McCluskey, Scotland’s most senior Law Lord has expressed deep
reservations about the draft Education (Scotland) Bill. According to this,
when parents of special needs children challenge their local councils, they
will not be entitled to legal aid; this means that parents would have to pit
their wits against teams of well-paid and well-qualified opposition lawyers.
According to Lord McCluskey this would deny them their right to a fair
hearing under the European Convention of Human Rights.
So the first example is one
of hocus-pocus, as New Labour seek to swop police officers for security
guards, and the other looks like an oversight somewhere; I just hope that no
SNP members were complicit.
FOOT IN THE MOUTH
NOTES
Headlines in both the
Scotsman and Herald this week stated "60% of GPs back home visit charges."
As you read the article,
you discover that it is 60% for the UK; in Scotland 60% of GPs were opposed
to home visit charges. (OK, it was only 59%, but 60% chimes!)
Parking
charges at the flagship Edinburgh Royal Infirmary range from £1.20 for up to
1 hour, to £10.00 for 6 hours and over; a proportion of nursing staff can
get permits for £250.00 per year, but there are not enough to go round.
Nightshift nurses face
the same charges; overnight the car park is empty.
Scotsman columnist
Katie Grant is wondering this week
if her duty is not to walk to the ballot box,
but to get down on her knees and pray.
As she is a well known member
of the Tory Party, she might be right.
Since 1997, stock values
on the World market have fallen 5%; from the same date, stock values in the
UK have fallen by 12%. This has had a dramatic effect on company pension
schemes, heralding an uncertain future for older people.
The Chancellor helped
turn a drama into a crisis by removing £5 billion a year in tax credits from
pension schemes.
A million and a quarter
parents are still waiting for money from the new working tax credit system
which came into force with such a fanfare at the beginning of April; 450,000
have not yet applied for the credit, due to the application therefor being
too complicated, and 800,000 have applied and so far have received hee-haw.
As one disgruntled
non-recipient put it "If my Tax Return is late, the Inland Revenue fine me.
When they’re late, it’s "Tough!" "
Littlewood’s Stores have been
severely criticised for coming out of the Ethical Trading Initiative
designed to protect Third World labour.
The company was bought
last year by two residents of the tax haven island of Sark, the Barclay
twins, coincidentally owners of the Scotsman newspaper.
One
of the most acrimonious subjects during the election campaign was the cost
of the new Holyrood Parliament building; the Westminster Cabinet decided the
site, the architect, the design and the contractor, and the Scottish
Parliament is getting the bill, and the aggro.
In a radio interview,
Andy Kerr, the "outgoing" finance minister, described the £400 million cost
as a "drop in the ocean." See New Labour - see public money.
One topic given great
prominence during all the political debates was the problem of alcohol abuse
and its impact on crime and the health services; a lot of words were used to
come up with reasons for the problem.
From casual observation
(as I try never to watch these programmes) it seems that most popular soaps,
Emmerdale, Coronation Street and East Enders, have as a focal point the
local pub.
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SCOTTISH
FOOD, TRADITIONS AND CUSTOMS
(if you have any suggestions on what you'd like us to include
email peter@scotsindependent.org
This year's Beltane Day (1 May 2003) coincided with the date of the second
Scottish Parliament Election and political activists were probably too
busy to give much thought to one of the Beltane traditions. What holly is
to Yule, rowan is to Beltane as the practice was to collect rowan branches
on Beltane Eve to hang up in the home. Not only in the house but in barns,
byres, sheep-faulds and stables, and special care was always taken to
insert a rowan branch in the midden. Middens were supposedly a favourite
meeting-place of the 'black sisterhood' and as Beltane eve was believed to
be a time when fairies, witches and all other uncanny creatures, who
sought to harm mere mortals, were especially active then every precaution
had to be taken to ward them off. Rowan was seen as the greatest
protection.
Last week we noted the practice of young girls washing their faces in the
May Day dew and, especially, in the highlands they always carried a sprig
of rowan when carrying out this task. Obviously you couldn't be too
careful.
Beltane Day was also the day for many centuries that cattle were moved to
the summer sheiling. This age-old migration was carried out in The
Hebrides until the 19th century as described by Alexander Carmichael :-
'On the first day of May the people of the crofter townland are up betimes
and busy as bees about to swarm. This is the day of migrating, from
townland to moorland, from the winter homestead to the summer sheiling.....
All the families of the townland bring their different flocks together at
a particular place and drive the whole way.'
The crofting way of life still exists and is the inspiration for this week's
recipe, the haggis-based Crofters Pie.
Crofters Pie
Ingredients : 1 lb (450 g) haggis; 8 oz (225 g) mince, cooked and cooled
with 2 oz (50 g) mixed vegetables; 1 lb (450 g) potatoes; 1 lb (450 g)
turnip; 6 oz (150 g) cheddar cheese, grated; 1 oz (25 g) butter; 4
tablespoons milk; seasoning
Mix haggis and cooked mince then place in bottom of an ovenproof dish.
Peel and chop potatoes and turnip and cook in boiling salted water for 15
to 20 minutes until tender. Drain well, then mash with butter and milk
until smooth. Add seasoning. Mix the cheese with the potato mixture and
spread on top of the haggis and mince. Bake in the centre of the oven, 200
deg C/ 400 deg F/ Gas Mark 6, for 15 to 20 minutes.
See our
Scottish Food, Traditions and Customs in our Features section
DATES IN
HISTORY
2 May 1568
Mary, Queen of Scots, escaped from Loch Leven Castle. She had been forced
to abdicate in favour of her son James (VI) on 24 July 1567.
3 May 1679
Archbishop James Sharp, of St Andrews, murdered by Covenanters at Magnus
Muir, Fife.
3 May 2002
Sudden resignation of Wendy Alexander as enterprise minister left Jack
McConnell as the only Labour minister left in the Scottish Executive from
Donald Dewar's original team, formed three years before. Jack McConnell
appointed social justice minister Iain Gray as her successor.
6 May 1941
In the last German bombing attack on the Clyde area, Greenock was worst
hit, with 280 dead.
SING
A SANG AT LEAST
(compiled by Peter D Wright)
"That I for poor auld
Scotland's sake
Some useful plan or book could make
Or sing a sang at least ........"
- Robert Burns
THE
GREAT SILKIE OF SULE SKERRY
Traditional
In Norway land there lived a
maid,
"Hush, ba, loo lillie" this
maid began,
"I know not where my baby's
father is,
Or by land or sea does he
travel in."
It happened on a certain day,
When this fair lady fell fast
asleep,
That in cam' a good grey
silkie,
And set him down at her bed
feet.
Saying "Awak', awak' my pretty
fair maid,
For oh, how sound as thou dost
sleep,
An' I'll tell thee where thy
baby's father is,
He's sittin' close at thy bed
feet."
"I pray come tell to me thy
name,
Oh, tell me where does thy
dwelling be?"
"My name is good Hill Marliner,
And I earn my livin' oot o'
the sea.
"I am a man upon the land'
I am a silkie in the sea,
An' when I'm far from every
strand,
My dwelling it is Sule Skerry."
"Alas, alas this woeful fate,
This weary fate that's been
laid on me,
That a man should come from
the Wast o' Hoy,
To the Norway lands to have a
bairn with me."
"My dear I'll wed thee with a
ring,
With a ring, my dear, will I
wed wi' thee."
"Thoo may go to thee weddings
wi' whom too wilt,
For I'm sure thoo will never
wed wi' me."
"Thoo will nurse my little wee
son
For seven long years upon thy
knee;
An' at the end o' seven long
years
I'll come back and pay the
nurse's fee."
She's nursed her little wee
son
For seven long years upon her
knee;
An' at the end o' seven long
years
He came back wi' gold and
white monie.
He says "My dear, I'll wed
thee wi' a ring,
Wi' a ring, my dear, I'll wed
wi' thee."
"Thoo may go to thee weddings
wi' whom thoo wilt
For I'm sure thoo never will
wed wi' me."
"But I'll put a gold chain
around his neck,
An' a gey good gold chain
it'll be,
That if ever he comes to the
Norway lands,
Thoo may hae a gey good guess
on he.
"An' thoo will get a gunner
good,
An' a gey good gunner it will
be,
An' he'll gae out on a May
morning
An' shoot your son an' the
grey silkie."
Oh, she has got a gunner good,
An' a gey good gunner it was
he.
An' he gaed oot on a May
morning
An' he shot the son an' the
grey silkie.
"Alas, alas, this woeful fate,
This weary fate that's been
laid on me."
An' aince or twice she sobbed
and sighed,
An' her tender heart did brak
in three.
Footnote : Around the north and west
coasts of Scotland many tales exist of the belief that the grey
seal can cast its skin and become a man on dry land. This was a
very popular song during the Scottish Folk Revival.
See the
SING A SANG AT LEAST in our
features section
A KIST O
FERLIES
A Keek at the Guid Scots
Tung

By Peter & Marilyn Wright
(Note: All words underlined in
this section are RealAudio links)
Dreip a dyke:
Let oneself down from a wall with arms stretched
He was a gash and faithfu' tyke
As ever lap a sheugh or dyke.
His honest, sonsie, bawsent face
Aye gat him friends in ilka place.
COMPLETE POEMS
Ma Auld Buits
by A Milne
See Scots Language in
our Features Section
for other poems, stories, songs, sayings, jokes and words in the Scots language
SCOT WIT
Enjoy a Scottish Joke every week and
listen to it as well
THE MONTHLY PRIZE
CROSSWORD
Each month the Scots Independent Newspaper
offers a prize crossword and we're now offering this online in the Flag in the Wind as
well. Should you complete the crossword by the deadline you can fax it over to
the SI and the first correct one opened on the closing date will win a £10.00 book token.
SI Prize Crossword No.
41 MAY 2003
[Click here to bring up the crosswords]
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.
SOME OF OUR FEATURE
SECTIONS....
About Us
Our mission is to fight for an Independent Scotland and to promote its history,
heritage and culture. Learn all about us here.
Events
A running event guide to what's on in Scotland.
The Scots Language
A great introduction to the Scots Language, produced by Peter and Marilyn Wright,
and added to each week both in text and RealAudio. Enjoy listening to words, poems and
stories told in a real Scots accent!
The Rebels Ceilidh Songbook
An excellent introduction to traditional songs from Scotland.
Sing A Sang At Least
Our collection of Scottish songs. A new song is added to the collection each week.
Scottish Food, Traditions and Customs
Enjoy our collections of recipes and our comments on them.
The Prize
Crossword
Each month the newspaper edition produces the Prize Crossword and you can now try it for
yourself with this online edition. We carry previous copies here as well.
Notable
Dates in History
Each week we add three new notable dates in history building this into an historic
timeline for Scottish history.
Features
Lots more stories, recipes, historical articles and even whole books are added here on a
regular basis.
The Oliver Brown Award
An annual award given to an outstanding Scot(s) each year. Also included picture
galleries from the annual lunch.
THE SCOTTISH NATIONAL PARTY
The Scots Independent Newspaper is independent of the Scottish
National Party, but we support the Party in its drive for Independence; while space
precludes us commenting on all the issues raised by the 35 MSPs, 5 MPS and 2 MEPs, also
the Party Office Bearers, we have provided a link to the SNP Website.
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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only £995.00 and at the same time get a FREE 2 column classified advert in
the Scots Independent Newspaper for the same 12 months, all for the same inclusive annual
price of £995.00.
Banner Advert
One Banner advert, 468 x 60 pixels, is available on this index page under the Issue Date
and before the first article. Cost is £695.00 per month and includes an optional FREE
2 column display advert in the Scots Independent Newspaper during the same month as you
have the banner on the site.
WE WOULD WELCOME YOUR
FEEDBACK
The Flag in the Wind would welcome your feedback on what you think of this
weekly service. Happy to receive any comments or suggestions. Simply email webmaster@scotsindependent.org.
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