Search topics on this blog

Thursday 20 June 2013

Where are we going on independence?

The answer I want to give to the title question is a confident – To  a decisive YES vote on September 18th 2014!

That’s what I and any independence supporter is expected to do – be gung ho, celebrate the polls that bode well, attack the methodology, pollsters and those who commissioned the poll when things don’t go so well. Forward to victory! Don’t be deflected! Find increasingly ingenious ways to interpret poll results that don’t suit us until they yield a positive message.

Well, I’ve done my share of that for six years, in arguments, in blogs, on Twitter, on YouTube, in letters to newspapers. Why? Partly to reassure myself, mainly to bolster the morale of the faithful and to encourage the undecided to look deeper into poll results.  Such things are legitimate in politics because, rather like the stock exchange, it’s part rational but significantly irrational and emotional, and confidence plays a significant part in success in any endeavour. The hard core of independence supporters will never be persuaded to change their allegiance by a poll, but their energies can be blunted, their enthusiasm dulled, and some may retreat into a blame-the-stupidity-of-the-Scots-electorate mode, and reduce the amount of work they do for the cause.

I’ve been tempted myself to say - “I’ve done enough – they can have my vote on September 18th 2014, but that’s it. Hell mend Scotland if it votes NO…”

But so far, that mood has never lasted, because events have triggered my adrenalin flow, and exasperation, astonishment or even mirth at the latest manifestation of ‘Britishness’, unionism, or the ever-idiotic Better Together spokespersons has driven me back to the grindstone.

So what is the proper attitude to the polls? Saying they don’t matter, the only poll that matters is the ballot box, or perhaps what-we’re-hearing-on-the-doorstep-tells-us-different etc. is a counter-productive reaction.

An opinion poll, conducted by a reputable organisation with sound sampling and interpretation methodology, in its raw data at least, is a vital and valuable snapshot of opinion at a point in time. Like any snapshot, it can be crisp in detail and capture the essence of the moment, or it can be blurry and unrepresentative. And, like any snapshot, those viewing it can offer multiple interpretations of what it means; and in this regard, the psephologists are the art critics of polls and, if we have any sense, we will pay attention to what they say and draw our own conclusions as to what action is necessary to move the next poll in the direction of independence.

The focus tends to be, naturally enough, on the polls that are published, but additionally, all parties conduct private polls for their eyes only, to guide their strategists. On the rare occasions the media get wind of this, commentators generate much synthetic shock that a party should take a poll and not publish the results. This is compounded on occasion by the stupidity of politicians who are unable to resist the temptation to make veiled allusions to such polls, with predictable results – demands that they publish immediately, accompanied by accusations of skulduggery. (There has been one such example recently.)

THE POLLS

Here are some of the questions on a straight independence choice asked by pollsters -

YouGov

Do you support or oppose Scotland becoming a country independent from the rest of the United Kingdom?

Do you agree or disagree that Scotland should become a country independent from the rest of the United Kingdom?

Do you agree that Scotland should become a country independent from the rest of the UK?

ICM

Would you approve or disapprove of Scotland becoming an independent country?

TNS System 3

Do you support or oppose Scotland becoming a country independent from the rest of the UK

Survation 

Do you support or oppose Scotland becoming an independent country, separate from the rest of the United Kingdom?

POLL RESULTS ASKING THE INDEPENDENCE STRAIGHT CHOICE  QUESTION

In April 2005, TNS System 3 found 46% said YES, 39% said NO

In April 2006, same result by YouGov/SNP.

By November 2006 ICM/Telegraph got 52% YES and 35% NO. That might have been an indicator of the 2007 SNP win, then again it might not, because …..

January 2007, four months before the election, YouGov/Channel 4 poll gave 40% YES, 44% NO

Because of these poll – and because of the shock 2007 Holyrood result, unionists were jolted out of their complacency, none more than the supine Scottish Labour Party. “This wisnae meant tae happen, Tony!” bleated a shell-shocked Jack McConnell, and great menacing beasts stirred uneasily in the bowels of the British Establishment.

And so the first historic Scottish Nationalist Government was elected – a minority government, yes, but as a party in power, not as a coalition. And what happened at the next poll?

April 2008 YouGov/the Sun 34% YES, 51% NO

Spooky, or what?

14th January 2012 Survation/Mail on Sunday 26% YES 46% NO.

I hear your cynical cries already - “Ha! Mail on Sunday! and Survation? Who the **** are they?” etc. because the day before we had this -

13th January 2012 ICM/Sunday Telegraph 40% YES 43% NO.  Had the electorate flipped overnight – or had the Mail on Sunday just behaved like the Mail on Sunday?

I could go on at length with poll results and interpretation of the mind-bending cross-relationships and implication of other questions to each other, on more powers, and support for remaining in UK, but I won’t, because my interpretations would be that of a layman, not a professional psephologist or political strategist, and would have correspondingly little value.

SELF-DELUSION AND MAGICAL EVENTS

What do we know? 

Bluntly, that -

the polls currently show a minority of the Scottish electorate in favour of independence

we have a mountain to climb before September 18th 2014

we must start to see some upward movement in the near future if we are to have any chance of success. 

Despite the fact that these three statements are undeniably true, simply to state them is to enough provoke cries of protest, and a range of ingenious interpretations of poll results, brandishing of poll results that were favourable, denial of the validity of poll results that were less favourable, attacks on the media, the pollsters and their allegedly flawed methodologies, and invocation of magical events in the past (the lead-up to the 2011 Holyrood landslide) and magical events in the future (the White Paper).

Bluntly, some independence supporters are going to have to grow up fast, politically and arithmetically, if we’re going to win.

I take comfort in my belief - which I hope to God is well-founded -that this mindset only exists among some of the support, that the SNP and YES strategists are rooted in hard psephological and political realities and can tell a standard deviation from a bull’s arse.

The 2011 result was astonishing, unpredicted by the politicians, but anticipated by the pollsters, albeit late in the day (because the shift in the electorate occurred late in the day), and nobody knows what caused it, although speculation, informed and otherwise, is rife. There is nothing in that past event – an election to a devolved Parliament – that is a reliable indicator to how voters will decide in a referendum of such historical importance, with such enormous constitutional implication as 2014 – except maybe hope …

It’s in the past, and the past is not a reliable guide to the future in politics.

The White Paper is clearly of enormous significance. It offers a huge opportunity for the independence argument, but also represents a huge threat to it. The formidable forces of the British Establishment, the monarchy (yes, the monarchy – the Queen has already pinned her colours to the mast), the UK Government, the UK Civil Service, the compliant media and press, the military/industrial complex, the nuclear industry - and shadowy overseas interests - are already preparing their attack plans. 

The White Paper will be leaked in part (inevitable, leaving aside the presence of spooks in the Scottish Government!) and will be subject to a dissection and onslaught against it that has rarely, if ever, been seen in British politics.

The Scottish electorate in the main will not read it (how many of you have ever bought or read a white paper?) and will be offered partisan and simplistic headlines, mainly hostile.

The Scottish Government and YES Campaign will be unable to match that in volume and coverage, and won’t want to match it in virulence and misrepresentation.

They will therefore be totally reliant on the brevity, quality and originality of their message, delivered in the main online and through volunteers, and with luck, through the national public service broadcaster - the BBC - if the independence movement can stop trying to alienate and antagonise every last journalist, presenter and programme editor in the entire corporation.

CLOSING – AND HOPE!

There are really only three key questions as a guide to action for the time remaining till the referendum -

1. How many Nos and Don’t knows can be shifted to YES?

2. What are the arguments that will shift them and how can they be focused and targeted on the various demographics and interest groups?

3. How are the frustrated pro-union devo-maxers going to divide, denied their second question  and faced with a polarised choice – YES or NO?

What I know to be true is that the vital and dedicated workers on the pavements, in the car parks and public places, at the letter boxes and on the doorsteps - and the less-important but still relevant backroom contributors such as me - are just getting on with spreading the message of independence as best they can to the widest possible audience they can reach.

9 comments:

  1. On the face of it your analysis is correct but the campaign proper has not yet begun.

    The unionists have been relying on negative messages of fear and intimidation to win them the day but have made the mistake of showing all their hands far too early in my view.

    The supporters of independence have so far been pre-occupied with repulsing the unionists scaremongering.

    The unionists greatest weakness is that they have nothing positive to offer Scotland.

    I still feel confident that the pendulum will swing strongly in favour of YES once the campaign proper starts and people actually get to hear the positive case there is for ending Westminster rule and compare that against the alternatives offered by Westminster which will be punishment of the Scots by disenfranchising Holyrood and imposing savage cuts to Scotland's budget to name but a few.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for commenting, M.

    "On the face of it your analysis is correct but .." suggests that you disagree with significant parts of it. It would be interesting to know what, specifically, they were.

    " ...the campaign proper has not yet begun"

    The campaign started de facto the day the referendum date was agreed. The formal campaign was launched by YES some time ago. What you are referring to is the big push after the White Paper launch, and of course, the official, legally-defined period in the weeks before Sept 18th 2014.

    But we're in the campaign up to our necks, and fooling ourselves that we're not is exactly the kind of self-deluding, 'magical- thinking" that worries me.

    This is no time for warm and lazy intellectual baths of "It will be Alright on the Night!"

    I'm sure the SNP strategists and YES understands that very well - the UK and Better Together sure as hell do ..."

    "The unionists have been relying on negative messages of fear and intimidation to win them the day ..."

    I agree with that.

    " ...but have made the mistake of showing all their hands far too early"

    Whether they were mistaken or not remains to be see. They most certainly have not shown all their hands yet - the worse is yet to come.

    "The supporters of independence have so far been pre-occupied with repulsing the unionists scaremongering."

    Countering claims with facts was - and is - vitally necessary. Simply call it scaremongering is not an adequate response. If anything, YES has not been robust enough in countering claims.

    "The unionists greatest weakness is that they have nothing positive to offer Scotland."

    That is potentially their Achilles Heel, but in uncertain time, negative messages about change tend to favour the status quo.

    I share the confidence in your last paragraph, but only if we focus a helluva lot better - independence supporters are not without their share of negativity and blaming behaviour.

    Saor Alba!

    Peter



    ReplyDelete
  3. There are still 15 months to go before the referendum, and the gap between Yes and No is typically between 10 and 20 points. This means that if we manage to convert just 0.5% of the voters from No to Yes every month, we should close the gap, and if we convert more, we win. In other words, we don't need to see an abrupt change to the polls any time soon, so long as the trend is with us.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thomas, there are so many 'ifs', 'so-long-as's' and hopeful assumptions in that, that there's little I can say. except "if we had ham, we'd have ham and eggs - if we had eggs!"

    There is no evidence yet in published polls that the trend is with us. But I hope it is, and volunteers report hopeful signs on doorsteps and with sign-up rates ...

    Thanks for posting.

    regards,

    Peter

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hi Peter

    Another interesting article. Just two thoughts for now: I notice (unless I am being far too optimistic) a more robust response by YES Scotland to the usual scare stories (and they ARE mainly scare stories in my opinion) which is an important change in tactic. I hoe to see more of this as I believe, and have done for some time, that the YES Scotland campaign has been to passive. I realise there is still some 15 months to go, but the overwhelmingly negative MSM needs far more robust responses.

    The second point is about the BBC in Scotland. (I refer to it as such as there is no such thing as BBC Scotland). I DO think it is completely and obviously biased for the Union position. Given that it SHOULD be the "National" media, and is part funded by Scottish Tax-payers, I find it an affront that they hold and present such a biased view. This is NOT their brief and they should be held to account. Their self-regulation to complaints IS A FARCE.

    Can the referendum be won? Of course. I take some mild satisfaction that despite 18 months of the most domineeringly pro-Union media storm (a tsunami of negativity, as Elaine Smith said the other night) the YES vote appears to be steady and in fact slowly rising, while the DKs appear to be growing also. NO is losing the argument (mainly because it doesn't have an argument) but can still win the referendum by the triple attack of Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt.

    It's a long hard road, and I do not think we can be sitting at 35% YES in November 2013 when the White paper is released and expect to win it in the final 16 weeks.

    I hope that the strategists have it right!

    Saor Alba

    Tony

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hi, Tony,

    I don't agree with a word you say about BBC Scotland, but I'm way past the futility of trying to explain why - I've wasted too much breath and time on other BBC bashers to go over it all again.

    I agree with most of the rest, and like you, I'm still hopeful, providing independence supporters stop the bone-headed attempts to antagonise the only media organisation that can help them.

    But for those who revel in that pointless exercise, Wings Over Scotland should keep them happy.

    Saor Alba!

    Peter

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Pewter

      I will not antagonize you further with regard to the BBC ;-)suffice to say in more general terms that we have a HUGE fight on our hands which would be made so much easier if ANY of the media would at least be neutral. The final 16 weeks will not be time enough in my opinion.Best wishes

      Tony

      Delete
  7. I've been called many thing, Tony, but 'Pewter' is a new one! I hope it doesn't mean I'm a mug, although if I must be, pewter is what I would choose to be.

    regards,

    Peter

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ooops! Sorry!

      Although I used to have a rather elegant old pewter drinking mug at one time ;-)

      Take care

      Delete