Saturday, 29 September 2012
Saturday, 22 September 2012
MY SPEECH TO TODAY'S RALLY FOR INDEPENDENCE IN EDINBURGH
Friends, I bring you greetings from the Scottish Socialist
Party and I am proud to be part of this wonderful occasion and this vibrant
movement as Scotland again asserts our inalienable right to self-determination
and Independence.
Look around you. It might be September but this, this is the
beginning of the Scottish Spring. Let the world take heed from Edinburgh today
that we Scots are marching for our freedom and we are equally determined
to secure our full democratic rights.
And we re-assert today that supporting a country’s right to
self-determination does not make you a nationalist per se, it makes you a
democrat. And as a democrat, a democratic socialist, one question interests me
more than most today – will working class people in Scotland, who make up the
vast majority here, be better off with Independence or not?
To that question, which
millions of people rightly demand a straight answer, we can stoutly reply YES
SCOTLAND – For if all the revenues, taxes, duties, profits and wealth generated
here in Scotland stayed here, rather than be transferred to the UK Treasury or
boardrooms abroad, it stands to reason we would be better off. That is what
Independence means.
But working class people understand we have to stand up for
ourselves and so I urge you to join with us in this great cause.
There are of course many
shades of opinion gathered here today and I respect that, but I want an
Independent Scotland that is a modern democratic republic, where we the people
decide our own future, freely, democratically and without interference or
constraint.
This great movement gathered here today seeks the same goals
as billions of other people throughout the world, the chance to secure our
Independence and realise the economic emancipation and social progress we are
capable of.
Jimmy Reid famously distinguished ‘Scotland is a nation.
Britain is a state’. And the British state today is in decline. It is at the
epicentre of a worldwide financial ‘racket’ that exploits the world and goes to
war regularly to protect its ‘operations’. That connection brings shame on
Scotland.
An Independent Scotland by contrast could be a beacon to the
world. We would never send our sons off to die in wars motivated by imperial
plunder. An Independent Scotland would declare peace with the world not war,
nor threaten our fellow human beings with nuclear annihilation or environmental
destruction.
So let us today resolve that we are building a new Scotland,
where no one gets left behind,
where wealth is not the measure of greatness or nobility,
where helping others wins more gold medals than helping
yourself,
where prejudice and ignorance are eradicated like the
Tuberculosis my grandmother and so many others like her died of in the 1930’s,
where Independence brings economic emancipation and freedom
to everyone not just a select few and where all these are inalienable rights
belonging to all those who chose to live here.
That then is our message today ringing out loud and clear to
our fellow Scots and to the world.
Thursday, 20 September 2012
MY ARTICLE IN THE MORNING STAR ON INDEPENDENCE
WHY SOCIALISTS SHOULD SUPPORT INDEPENDENCE?
Tommy Docherty the legendary wit
and manager of Manchester United once quipped after his team had suffered a
humiliating defeat ‘We lost 4-0 and frankly we were lucky to get the nil.’
The Tories in Scotland know just
how he felt for they are so hated that out of 56 MP’s they have just one, and
they were lucky to get that! And yet, as incredible as it may seem, their
Coalition partners are despised even more. The Liberal Democrats now have no
constituency MSP’s in mainland Scotland and were ‘mauled’ in last year’s local
elections for ‘joining’ the hated Tories at Westminster.
All of which presents Labour with a
real dilemma. As cheerleaders for the ‘No to Independence’ campaign they are in
coalition with the Tories and Lib Dems. Former MSP Charlie Gordon, who lost his
seat to the SNP expressed the widespread unease in Ed Miliband’s army when he
tweeted recently ‘Tory millions and Labour activists ‘Better Together’!!*??’
This is the political opposition
facing the exuberant Independence movement as it rallies in Edinburgh this
Saturday. It will be the first time supporters have had the opportunity to meet
since the launch of the ‘Yes Scotland’ campaign in June. And it promises to be
quite a day. First Minister Alex Salmond will speak for the SNP as will Patrick
Harvie of the Greens and myself for the Scottish Socialist Party. Our three
parties – founders of the Scottish Independence Convention in 2005 - will be
joined by thousands of people from across Scotland including many from civic
and cultural communities.
It is noticeable that the terms of
this debate have shifted significantly since the 1990’s. ‘Unionists’ now accept
Scotland is a nation with an inalienable right to self-determination. They also
accept Scotland is perfectly capable of running our own affairs and even
concede we would be one of the world’s richer nations. It was not always so.
But they insist ‘we will be even wealthier as part of the UK’. I will come back
to that claim but first it is important that socialists also recognise
supporting self-determination does not make you a nationalist. Lenin for
example supported the rights of nations to self-determination, so did Rosa
Luxemburg, John Maclean and James Connolly. No one familiar with their work
would call them ‘nationalists’.
Independence is not divorced from
the class struggle it is part and parcel of it. And for the Scottish Socialist
Party Independence means Scots will be free from the neo-liberal stranglehold
of financial speculators who dominate the world economy today. The SSP sees
Independence as a stepping-stone to a better society not an end in itself. We
strive for an independent socialist Scotland, a modern democratic republic. And
that vision is enjoying greater and greater support as this debate unfolds.
The Scottish Socialist Party
contends that if all the income, revenues, taxes, levies and duties raised in
Scotland, and currently transferred to the UK Treasury, were to stay here it
stands to reason Scotland would be a wealthier place. But we also accept that
working people will only be better off if we fight for our share of that
wealth. There will be no automatic gains from Independence. Only the working
class will improve their collective living standards. And improve them they
must because Scotland endures some of the worst social conditions in the UK.
With 225,000 people officially unemployed and a further 800,000 in part time,
casual or insecure temporary employment earning the national minimum wage
[£6.08] or less there is much help needed. One in three households now shiver
in fuel poverty as standards of living and the quality of life plummets like
the temperature gauge. Scotland’s obscene inequalities are widening not
narrowing as we stare down the barrel of the worst economic recession in 80
years. The 1,700 jobs lost at meatpackers Halls of Broxburn this week were
merely the latest in a long line of setbacks for communities like West Lothian.
The debate so far has been widely criticised for being too
focused on procedural issues; whether there will be one question on the ballot
paper or two? Which Parliament has the legal power to call the Referendum?
Which bodies will oversee the electoral operation? These matters look likely to
be settled soon allowing the debate to focus on the most substantive issue,
whether working class people will be better off with Independence or not?
‘Better Together’ argues that
Scotland reaps rewards from the Union. The truth is British capitalism holds
working class people in Scotland back. It denies them opportunities and is now
carrying out swingeing cuts in their living standards vital public services.
Equally warmongering Britain, with the 5th biggest military budget
in the world brings shame on us all as it is used to occupy Afghanistan having
invaded Iraq and bombed Libya.
All of which poses an increasingly straightforward question
for progressive Scotland. Do we pin our hopes on another useless Labour
Government or set sail for Independence? Ed Miliband promises more cuts, more
warmongering, more tax breaks for the rich, more tax hikes for the working
class, more privatisation and more assaults on civil liberties. We’ve have had
plenty of that. Scotland’s social democratic character manifests itself in
other decisions – the abolition of NHS prescription charges, free elderly care,
free university education, free travel for our senior citizens. These
provisions signify Scotland’s commitment to collectivism and rejection of
austerity, cuts and most of all the Tories.
The Independence movement has a striking opportunity to
transform Scotland and provide the country with the political settlement it
needs. The way to win the Referendum is to embrace this ‘transformational
agenda’ and promote an alternative vision for Scotland one which rejects the
neo-liberal, warmongering capitalist model currently on offer.
Colin Fox sits on the 'Yes Scotland' Advisory Board.
Saturday, 15 September 2012
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