Yet another opinion poll has placed the SNP on track to win a majority in its own right in May’s Holyrood election, a majority which First Minister John Swinney has said would trigger a second independence referendum. The new poll, by Find Out Now for The National, projects the SNP to take 67 seats, giving it a comfortable majority. Labour would be on second place on 17 seats, with Reform and the Scottish Greens tying for third place on 14 seats. The Tories are facing a well deserved catastrophe, and humiliation for Russell Findlay, being reduced to just ten seats, just three ahead of the Lib Dems on seven. This would give the two independence parties represented in the Scottish Parliament 81 seats in total, the largest pro independence majority in the history of Holyrood, crushing the anti-independence parties who between them would muster a mere 48 seats.
Like most recent polls, this poll gives the percentage for those who say they would vote Scottish Green in the constituency vote, 9% in this poll say they’d vote Scottish Green in the constituency vote, but the Scottish Greens are not standing in the large majority of constituency contests, and it’s safe to assume that most of their voters would opt for the SNP in constituencies where Green candidates are not standing, which could boost the SNP’s projected 67 constituency seats by a few more.
According to this poll, the SNP’s dominance in the constituency vote is such that it is not projected to pick up any seats on the list. The only constituencies which the SNP is not projected to win, with the projected winner in brackets, are Caithness, Sutherland and Ross (LibDems), Edinburgh North Western (LibDems), Edinburgh Southern (Lab), Fife North East (LibDems), Orkney Islands (LibDems), and Shetland Islands LibDems). Of these, the Scottish Greens are not standing in Caithness, Sutherland and Ross, Edinburgh Southern, Fife North East, and Orkney.
When John Swinney announced that the SNP would be seeking to win a majority in its own right in this election, I was dubious that it was possible, and felt it would have been more prudent to strive for a pro-independence majority comprised of the SNP and the Scottish Greens, but this is – if memory serves me right – the third recent poll which suggests that the SNP could actually pull such a stunning victory off. Winning an absolute majority for a second time in an electoral system which was designed to ensure coalition governments would be a remarkable triumph and a vindication of the leadership of John Swinney who has been able to turn round the SNP’s fortunes after a very difficult few years.
While I am all for maximising the pro-independence vote, we had a pro-independence majority after the 2021 Scottish elections only for the anti-independence parties, shamefully aided and abetted by a Scottish media which had abdicated from the role of acting as a guardian of democracy, to insist that there was no mandate for an independence referendum as the SNP had failed to win a majority in its own right. The gas giant ego that is Alex Cole-Hamilton even insisted that an election which had centred on the issue of a second independence referendum had not in fact been about another independence referendum at all.
Because of the experience of 2021, it’s imperative to secure an SNP majority this time round, if only to see the anti-independence parties squirm and try to shift the goalposts again. It’s as certain as Alex Cole-Hamilton admiring himself in a mirror that they’ll do so, and come up with some other spurious reason why democracy in Scotland only matters when the voters return a verdict which is to the liking of the Westminster parties. My guess is that they’ll claim it’s because the SNP share of the vote was less than 50% and that this invalidates the SNP’s mandate for an independence referendum. They will combine this with the old canard about the 2014 vote being “once in a generation”, elevating campaign rhetoric aimed at boosting voter participation into a binding commitment.
BBC Scotland will of course pay lip service to the fact that May’s vote was an election, not a referendum, and a government wins a mandate based upon securing a majority of seats, not a majority of votes cast, then it will get back to the vital business of detailing every mechanical failure on the Glen Rosa ferry and demanding to know why John Swinney isn’t down in the ship repair yard with his power tools.
The First Minister insists that a majority for the SNP in May will bring about an independence referendum in 2028. I have not the slightest doubt that should such a referendum come to pass, the Yes campaign will win it convincingly. Of course, that is precisely why Keir Starmer has said he will not consent to another independence referendum this side of the next Westminster general election, giving himself a veto over the democratic will of the people of Scotland. John Swinney for his part insists that he has a plan to force Starmer’s hand but says he will not reveal this until the SNP majority is secured. That’s probably sensible as revealing it now would only give the anti independence media and parties, as well as the “critical friends” which the independence movement possesses in abundance, the opportunity to criticise and attack the plan. We will just have to wait and see. John Swinney can be accused of many things, but being a blowhard is not one of them. If he says he has a plan I’d believe him.
The dream scenario for the May election is for the SNP to win an absolute majority in Holyrood, bolstered by a strong Scottish Green contingent. Ideally this would be backed up by a Plaid Cymru and Green coalition majority in the Senedd, meaning both Scotland and Wales would have majority governments which reject Westminster rule. That would open up a second pro-independence front for a weakened Starmer to contend with. For Labour, Scotland has already been written off, but the loss of Wales and devastation in the English local elections would be a psychological blow from which Starmer’s leadership could not recover.
But it’s not just Starmer’s time as Prime Minister which is at stake in May. It’s the future of Scotland, Wales, and the UK. This election is Scotland’s chance to embrace independence and to reject a UK which, whether it’s governed by Labour, the Tories, or the ghouls of Reform is in thrall to the interests of the super-rich. This poll is encouraging, but the odds are still against an SNP majority. We can dare to hope, but we need to make it happen, for the sake of Scotland, for the sake of all our futures. Where I live, in the South Scotland Holyrood region, SNP 1 & 2 is the best way to make that happen. SNP 1 & 2 is also the best course of action in the Highlands and Islands region. In other regions, SNP 1 and Green 2 is the tactic most likely to maximise pro-independence representation.
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