I think the time is now right for a new political party to be formed in Scotland. This new party should be distinctively Scottish, unashamedly Unionist, a champion of personal liberty and offer a centre-right alternative to the left wing hegemony in Scotland. This principled stance would place the party in stark contrast to the SNP which is
nationalist of course, with deeply authoritarian tendencies, and appears now
to be firmly entrenched on the political left (more for expedience than
principle).
In my view this new party should replace the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats north of the border, and these old
parties should be disbanded. A number of Labour supporters might also be attracted to a party that puts the Union front and centre of its thinking on constitutional matters.
The new party would need a new name of course as part of a new identity. "The Unionist Party of Scotland"
sounds like a good name to me and has strong echoes of the pre-1965 "Unionist Party"
which was the name of the old, independent Scottish party of
conservatism before it was subsumed into the UK Conservative Party. The
pre-1965 Unionist Party is still the only party to gain more than 50% of
the vote in Scotland (at the 1955 election) even after the 2015 general
election's seismic event.
In the wake of the general
election results in Scotland, in which the Scottish National Party
gained 56 out of 59 seats (95% of seats) on the basis of just shy of 50%
of the vote, I think the time is right for a fundamental re-alignment
in Scottish politics and the formation of a new political party to
replace some of the ineffective parties we have at the moment. This
re-alignment is in the national interest, if for no other reason than to
prevent the country becoming effectively a nationalist fiefdom in terms
of its elected representatives.
As a result of the
referendum on Scottish independence in 2014, it is clear that the
minority 45% who voted "Yes" have largely coalesced around the SNP,
while the 55% majority vote is split among Labour, the Conservatives and
the Liberal Democrats, with probably a few also switching directly to voting
SNP this time. This gives the SNP a massive electoral advantage. As has
been pointed out, in a two-way referendum question, 45% is a fairly
large defeat; but in a general election 45% of the vote will produce a big win in a three or four party system. (Of course the SNP went even beyond this figure
in the general election getting close to 50% of the vote, albeit on a
reduced turnout.)
Although this will probably be the high water mark of SNP support (though recent polls suggest support may even have increased since
the General Election), I certainly do not foresee their share of the
vote dropping below say 40% nationally in the next 5–10 years.
At
the present time, the unionist vote is split at least three ways, with
the Labour Party currently gaining about 25% support, the Conservative
Party on around 15% support and the Liberal Democrats bottoming out at around 5%.
In
my view, the "Conservative" or "Tory" brand is finished in Scotland,
being irredeemably tainted by association with the hated Thatcher
government in the 1980s. This does not mean that centre right politics
have nothing to offer the Scottish people. With a good leader in Ruth Davidson and other decent parliamentarians like Murdo Fraser, the problem with the Scottish Conservatives is not people, but the toxic branding of the party.
The time is right to decide where conservatism goes in the future. In my view they have two options. The current Conservative Party can carry on as is, gaining around 15% of the vote, splitting the Unionist vote and being the third or fourth party in Holyrood while returning 1 or 2 MPs to Westminster. Or it can seek to break with the past (a hard thing for conservatives to do admittedly) and seek to take centre right politics forward in a new way in Scotland.
If, God forbid, in the future
Scotland ends up as the high tax, high public spending, authoritarian
socialist utopia of SNP dreams, the need for a realistic alternative
to the left wing hegemony will only become greater in future years. But such is the visceral
reaction against the Tories for many Scots that the
case for achieving desired objectives for a good society by
non-socialist
means cannot properly be presented to the people for them to consider on merit.
For
other reasons, the Liberal Democrats also look like a spent force. They
really offer nothing distinctive from what is already found in either
the Labour Party or the Conservative Party and any caché from being "not
Labour" in Conservative areas and "not Conservative" in Labour areas has been blown away, probably for good. In addition, the core liberal commitment to personal
freedom is equally shared by the other Unionist parties, particularly by
modern, moderate conservatives.
The Labour party is in a
different position. Their long term future still remains in doubt. In
five years' time, if you add 10% on the Labour vote and deduct 10% off
the SNP, then you are looking at Labour on 35% and SNP on 40% with
everything to play for. Perhaps, but perhaps not. It is simply not yet
clear whether the 2015 election was merely a deep hole from which Labour
can bounce back or whether it was an indicator of terminal
decline. The fact is that apart from constitutional issues, there is
little difference politically between the SNP and Labour anyway. The two
leading parties are both vying for more or less the same spot on the
political spectrum. It is inconceivable at the moment to imagine a
merger between Scottish Labour and the Scottish Conservatives as they
have fundamental differences that run deeper than their agreement that Scotland should be
part of the United Kingdom. So this new party will not include Labour,
though it may attract Labour members and many "Labour" voters. But a strong Unionist Party would offer a clear choice to the electorate, being distinct from
what Labour and the SNP offer.
So what does the new party need in order to succeed? I would suggest the following four elements would be a good start.
1. The Party must be independently Scottish
At
the moment the unionist parties in Scotland are perceived as being the
Scottish "branch offices" of English parties. This needs to be changed
in principle and in practice. The new party must be inherently Scottish
in identity. Its first duty must be to Scotland and the Scottish people
and it must be a wholly independent entity from any party in England,
Wales or Northern Ireland. It should seek election to local councils in
Scotland, to the Scottish Parliament as a potential Scottish government
or coalition partner, and to the United Kingdom Parliament as a separate
political party representing Scottish unionists. This means the party
will have its own policies and agendas that do no necessarily align with
English parties, and though it may forge alliances with other parties,
it will never place any partnership with others above its solemn
covenant with the Scottish people.
Such a move would
allow the party to make a serious challenge to the SNP's mantra that
only it somehow represents the best interests of the Scottish people or
has the right to the mantle of Scottish patriotism, both of which seem
to have had quite a bit of traction in the public mind. I believe this
alone would take a significant bite out of the SNP vote, especially in
rural Scotland.
A Scottish moderate centre-right party
would likely be an ally of the Conservative Party in the House of
Commons, but it should not take the Tory whip and always remain
an independent bloc of MPs within Parliament. A Conservative government
in the
UK would find friends in this new party and could likely rely on its
support on many issues, but could not depend on unconditional support.
Good Scottish friends would still be free to offer constructive
criticism or disagreement where needed.
2. The Party must be staunchly Unionist
The
new party should position itself as a unabashed defender of the Union
with the rest of the United Kingdom because the Union has always been
and always will be in Scotland's best interests. Modern unionism has to
move beyond defending the status quo, even though the strength the Union
has been shown time and again over the past 300 years, and go on the
attack to promote the Union in Scotland and champion a permanent federal
settlement between the four nations of the UK. The party should aim to
be the "natural home" of the majority "No" voters in the referendum in
2014.
A positive future for Scotland as part of the
United Kingdom would be one of the main ideological divides between the
new party and the SNP.
Within a federal UK, each
constituent nation should have a high level of economic and social
autonomy, while pooling resources where this is deemed to be
advantageous. Foreign affairs and defence would be the two most obvious
areas for the federal government, but some tax and benefits may also
best be organised at the British level.
Emphasising the
need for a strong union that is elastic enough to allow the four
nations to do things their own way is the best way to counter the
narrowness of nationalism, which can only look increasingly outdated in a
modern, globalised world.
3. The Party must be a champion of Liberty
One
of the disturbing trends of the SNP government at Holyrood is how
authoritarian its tendencies are. The SNP as a party of the left
believes in the nanny state which will not only look after its citizens,
but tell them how to live their lives and make sure they do so, backed
up by the the State's power to punish non-conformity.
The
prime example of this at the moment is the "Named Persons Scheme"
whereby every child in Scotland will be appointed with a State Guardian
to look after their interests. This guardian (most likely a health or
education professional) will have sweeping powers that can be exercised
without parental consent and even without parental knowledge.
The
new party should be at the forefront of a campaign to keep the Scottish
people free from the tyranny of the nanny state and lefty do-gooders in
the SNP.
The new party should position itself as being on the side of the ordinary person and against the politically correct elites.
Similarly the party should oppose any future
schemes to erode civil liberties such as attempts to abolish
the need for corroboration in criminal law, any attempt to
introduce compulsory ID cards, and so forth. The new party should
champion traditional freedoms enjoyed by all the British people and
oppose all moves which threaten freedom of thought, freedom of speech,
freedom of religion or freedom of assembly.
For the
SNP, the only "freedom" they value is the false freedom of independence
from the rest of the United Kingdom. For the new party, "freedom" must
first and foremost be championed for the people against a centralising,
interfering State.
The principle for this stance is
simple. Liberty is supremely valuable and needs to be defended. Lord
Acton observed that "Liberty is not a means to a higher political end.
It is itself the highest political end." That should be the principle
running through the new party like letters through seaside rock.
A strong stance on personal liberty against the power of the state would likely attract many liberal-minded Scots.
4. The Party must offer a moderate centre-right vision for Scotland
There
is a "social democratic" consensus in Scottish politics. The two main
parties in Scotland for the last 40 years are both centre-left parties
(the SNP and Labour) which are in essential agreement on all political,
economic and social issues, except for the question of Scotland's place
in the United Kingdom. Both essentially see the State as the great
benefactor of the people and the solution to any problem confronting
Scotland lying in higher taxation and public spending. Because of this,
the parties of the left are willing to give the State almost limitless
power and resources to achieve their objectives.
Scotland
needs a voice that proclaims a different narrative and a different vision: a one-nation,
moderate, centre-right political viewpoint. A voice that points out that
the State is no more a guarantor of the common good that any other
flawed human institution. A voice that stands up for the importance of non-State institutions that are also working for the common good, often better than the State, including most importantly: the family, churches and other faith
groups, community groups, charities, businesses and many other non-state
associations and organisations. A voice that points out that when the
State becomes too big, rather than promoting the welfare of the nation,
it gets in the way of the nation's welfare. A voice that challenges the
consensus that high levels of taxation are automatically in the public
interest.
In short, Scotland badly needs a political
voice that offers a centre-right alternative to the left wing consensus. That voice cannot be the Conservative Party because too few
Scots are willing to listen to it, often due to historical events and a
collective recollection of how bad the 1980s were in much of Scotland's
industrial heartland. Whether the recollection is fair and accurate or
not is beside the point. A new voice is needed to give centre-right
ideas a fair hearing, that the best way forward for the Scottish people,
including the poorest in the country, lies in a small but efficient
government, low taxation, a thriving economy, and maximum freedom for
the individual consistent with social harmony and the common good.
Scotland needs a party which stands up for traditional values and is
proud of our past; a party which is wary of changing long-cherished
institutions and values our Judeo-Christian heritage as the
non-negotiable foundation of our way of life; a party which is
pro-family, pro-business, and for ordinary working people; a party which
is willing to look after the interests of rural Scotland and farming
communities and protect the environment as a heritage for future
generations.
Although the Conservative Party might be
finished in Scotland this does not mean that conservatism (with a small
c) should not have an important part to play in the future of Scottish
politics. Indeed, if only to give a different point of view, such a
voice is vital in a healthy, liberal democracy.
I think
a new party with these principles and with policies to match them would
be attractive to many Scots and could make a significant impact
electorally on Scottish politics. I think it would likely garner almost
all the current Scottish conservative vote, most of the Liberal Democrat
vote (such as it is) and an increasing share from floating voters as
they tire of SNP rhetoric and under achievement.
It is too late
to change anything for the 2016 election, but looking ahead to the next
General Election and next Scottish Parliament election after 2016, I am convinced this is where
Scottish liberalism and Scottish conservatism needs to go.
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