The following is the result of the Smith Commission to 'strengthen' the Scottish Parliament
*Scotland is forbidden from setting a National Minimum Wage
*Scotland is forbidden from setting Inheritance Tax
*Scotland is forbidden from taxing oil and gas revenue
*Scotland is forbidden from changing taxes on fuel
*Scotland is forbidden from tax incentivisation for clinical research
*Scotland is forbidden from changing duty on tobacco
*Scotland is forbidden from changing duty on alcohol
*Scotland is forbidden from changing more than 30% of its taxes
*Scotland is forbidden from varying Statutory Sick Pay
*Scotland is forbidden from changing the Equality Act
*Scotland receives no extra money from VAT
*Scotland is forbidden from setting Guardian's Allowance
*Scotland is forbidden from setting National Insurance
*Scotland is forbidden from exploring a foreign policy
*Scotland is forbidden from changing the JobCentre network
*Scotland is forbidden from setting Statutory Maternity Pay
*Scotland is forbidden from changing more than 15% of its Welfare powers
*There is a 1960s northern Ireland-style Unionist Veto on electoral reform
*Scotland is forbidden from holding constitutional referendums
*Scotland is forbidden from setting a state pension
*Scotland is forbidden from setting Child Benefit rates
*Scotland is forbidden from changing Universal Credit
*Scotland is forbidden from removing Weapons of Mass Destruction
*Scotland is forbidden from changing the Income Tax allowance
*Scotland is forbidden from renationalising public transport
*Scotland is forbidden from abolishing Labour's Bedroom Tax
*Scotland is forbidden from setting a Bereavement Allowance
*Scotland is forbidden from extricating Housing Benefit from UC
*Scotland is forbidden from receiving revenue from savings and dividends
Thursday, 27 November 2014
Monday, 17 November 2014
Last Orders for Socialism in Labour
It’s hard to believe it
was only a few short weeks ago that Scottish Labour activists fondly
laboured under the misapprehension that the Better Together campaign
was one which had as its focus Scotland and the United Kingdom. The
events of the past month have shown that Better Together doesn’t
refer exclusively to nations, but also to political parties: namely
coupling Labour’s vote in Scotland to the ideology of the
Conservative Party.
Johann Lamont’s
humiliating resignation as branch manager was something which,
predictably for a machine politician with the vision and foresight of
a particularly myopic cnidarian, she had failed to envisage. But make
no mistake about this: Jim Murphy had secured the Scottish Labour
Party leadership vacancy before poor Johann had the faintest idea
that she was to be resigned. Better Together – funded and staffed
until the end of 2014 (in comparison, Yes Scotland closed on 19th
September) – staffers including Blair McDougall and Robert
Shorthouse are running the Murphy campaign, and even the booking for
the launch of his campaign was made under Better Together’s name.
A right-wing coup of an
eviscerated Scottish Labour Party, governing a Scotland nestled
smugly in the muscular arms of a Conservative-dominated United
Kingdom was always the guiding goal of the Better Together campaign.
It is no coincidence that the campaign was dominated by New Labour
(or, if you prefer, Red Tory) figures such as McDougall, previously
notable only for writing a series of letters to Scottish newspapers
in 2003 demanding that his namesake Tony be allowed to bomb the
civilians of Iraq in an illegal, genocidal war, to which the roots of
today’s Scottish Labour collapse can be directly traced. Better
Together failed to attract real Labour figures such as Denis Canavan
or Henry McLeish, who either jumped ship to the Yes side with
Scotland’s socialist movement, or stayed clear of the official No
campaign whilst still supporting the union.
It is in this Better
Together milieu of Red Tories and actual Tories that Jim Murphy found
his political home. Murphy – notable for being educated at the same
whites-only school in Apartheid-era South Africa which also produced
Apartheid’s feared chemical weapon chief, Wouter Basson – was
instantly at home in a middle-class, right-wing, neo-liberal setting:
not surprising for a man who has close links with right-wing
Israelis, and the extreme right US group the Henry Jackson Society.
Labour members should go
into this leadership election with their eyes wide open: it has
already been decided. Jim Murphy would not be giving up his seat in
the Shadow Cabinet if he didn’t believe this. His campaign –
lauded to the heavens by the Daily Record and Daily Mail (both of
which are home to his undeclared running-mate Kezia Dugdale) - is
reminiscent of the Better Together campaign itself: it’s Murphy who
gets the first item on the news with the other two candidates lucky
to get a response. Murphy’s campaign which controls the news
agenda.
This is the last chance
for socialism to prevail in the Scottish Labour Party, and it seems
it has already been lost. Whilst decent Labour members have already
fled during the period of Blairism and New Labour (many to the SSP),
some remain, desperately trying to bring the party back to socialism.
This cannot happen if Jim Murphy is in charge – which is why those
who funded and supported the Better Together campaign have redirected
their attentions to Murphy: including a donation of no less than
£10,000 to Murphy’s leadership campaign from Conservative Party
donor Alan M Sharr. Hear that dinging sound? It’s the penny
dropping for the Scottish Labour activists duped into campaigning
with the Tory-funded Better Together campaign that the concept of
Labour and Tory being Better Together didn’t end with the
referendum.
The Better Together
campaign was desperate to prevent a fair, modern, redistributive
Scotland. It was staffed and funded by a right-wing political elite
from the halls of Westminster, from the right wing of the Labour
Party and from the Conservative Party.
They did not give their
time and money to keep Scotland in the United Kingdom to then see the
Scottish Labour Party turn back to socialism. That is why they are
now fighting for their man, the conservative candidate, Jim Murphy,
to take control of the party. And that is why the socialists in
Scottish Labour should be scared: for this is their last chance.
Saturday, 1 November 2014
It's all about talent
There's some debate about whether the present crisis engulfing the Labour Party in Scotland is a product of a lack of political talent in the serried ranks of red Tories.
Labour say this is nonsense, that their production line of charm and intelligence has never yet failed them: why, just look at James Kelly!
I would shy from offering an opinion on the matter, but would perhaps find it instructive to reflect on Labour's first Holyrood frontbench and last month's one. Some positions have changed names and responsibilities, for example, 'Children and Education' is now 'Education'. Other positions were filled by Liberal Democrats in 1999.
Leader of the Labour group:
Then Donald Dewar
Now Johann Lamont
Justice:
Then n/a
Now Graeme Pearson
Education:
Then Sam Galbraith
Now Daily Mail columnist Kezia Dugdale
Local Government:
Then Wendy Alexander
Now Sarah Boyack
Enterprise and Lifelong Learning:
Then Henry McLeish
Now Daily Mail columnist Kezia Dugdale
Finance:
Then Jack McConnell
Now Iain Gray
Health:
Then Susan Deacon
Now Neil Findlay
Chief Whip:
Then Tom McCabe
Now Lewis MacDonald
Rural Affairs:
Then n/a
Now Claire Baker
Transport:
Then Sarah Boyack
Now James Kelly
Is there a single position in which they are stronger now than they were then, and I include the positions which were vacant then in my question?
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