The Anonymous Widower

We’re Back To The West Lothian Question

A good leader always picks the issue, place and time for their battles to ensure that he or she wins in the end. Planning should be meticulous and hopefully it all works out as they want it.

Compare Margaret Thatcher and her government and military’s response to the invasion of the Falklands by Argentina with other campaigns fought in Iraq and Afghanistan recently. The Falklands was a smaller conflict, but very little was left to chance, although it could be thought of as a close run thing.

Other British Prime Ministers and influential politicians have brought contentious legislation through to law, by making sure they plan and win every battle. Take Cameron’s law on same-sex marriage as a recent example. But then there are many others.

So when Alex Salmond proposed a vote on Scottish independence, I thought if he got it right, he could win.

His mistake was that he didn’t plan and get decent concessions on tax and spending, before he even called for the poll. That way, if Devo max had been successful and acceptable to all parties, after a few years, Scotland would probably have had an agreed separation, in much the same way Slovakia separated from the Czech Republic.

But he pig-headedly called the referendum as early as he could.

And he lost. So we’ve now been kicked back to the West Lothian Question, but with more variables than it ever had before. Tam Dalyell must be laughing from his grave.

It has been suggested this morning that large cities have more powers, something that I agree with.

But Scotland now has the Glasgow Problem, as surely what is good for London, Manchester, Birmingham and Newcastle must be good enough for the one of the largest cities outside London in the UK.

Alex Salmond, who in a overly-passionate campaign led us to this mess, should resign!

September 19, 2014 - Posted by | World | , ,

1 Comment »

  1. I agree he should resign. I am relieved that the final majority was pretty much 10%, with 15% “don’t care enough to vote” as well. I was concerned they would be so neck and neck that the majority would be less than 1%. I suspect than quite a few voters changed their mind at the polling booth.

    Comment by nosnikrapzil | September 19, 2014 | Reply


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