Jackson Carlaw Announces his Leadership will bring a “Radical overhaul of policy”

If Jackson Carlaw wins the Scottish Conservatives leadership election, there will be a radical overhaul of Scottish Conservative policy and the process by which policy is developed. He has announced a commitment to the proposals for policy formulation overhaul outlined by the Sanderson Commission in addition to evidence sessions being open to the wider public. It would appear that this change will indeed be radical with no ‘sacred cows’ beyond that of a “staunch defence of the Union”.

Explaining the thinking behind the changes, Jackson said, “I am standing in this leadership election because I believe I can make the difference. This is an election to be Leader of the whole Scottish Party and not just of the MSPs at Holyrood. Arguably, the MSP group has proved to be part of the problem. In the wake of the 1997 rout it is easy to understand how the new MSP group filled a void. However, an unfortunate perception has grown ever since, that MSPs see themselves as the centre of the Scottish Conservative universe.”

“Our policy making has been bizarrely haphazard. There has been no permanent structure or process whatsoever. We react to others. From time to time an MSP has had a good idea and makes something of it. Others are rarely involved. Our links with business are pathetic and those with expertise in their respective fields are lacklustre. Is it any wonder that we have made little electoral progress?

“The experience I have gained, the working knowledge of the Party and the people in it, will allow me as Leader to deliver a complete package of radical change in the way we approach our business. In some ways that’s not terribly flashy but achieving that change will be truly radical. A party which functions effectively and speaks meaningfully to voters is surely the basis of our recovery.”

 

The Policy Commissions will consist of one MSP, three elected Conservative Councillors, two approved Parliamentary candidates and three others who may be activist members with an interest in or individuals experienced in the policy area. Two further co-options will be allowed as appropriate. Recommendations on the membership of the Policy Commissions will be made by the new Party Management Board and approved by the new Scottish Conservative Convention in early 2012. The Policy Commissions will issue a call for evidence in much the same way as a Parliamentary Committee and seek to include, on a non party political basis, the advice of those informed by experience in the widest sense.

The first recommendations will not be made until September 2012 to allow next May’s council elections to take place. Party members will be consulted widely with the policy review not concluding until a policy conference in May 2013.

James Corbett – Why I’m Supporting Ruth Davidson

James Corbett is a 24 year old Scottish Conservative Party member and Secretary of the Troon Branch. In this article he explains why he is supporting Ruth Davidson in her leadership bid.

It’s no secret that the Scottish Conservative Party is at a crossroads. The current leadership contest is a huge opportunity to draw a line under our past losses and decide where we go from here. I believe in the Scottish Conservative party and its values but I also believe that to survive it must undergo a major overhaul.

The belief that the Conservative party is a “toxic brand” in Scotland has more and more become an excuse for our failures rather than the real problem. Times have changed and the party has not changed with them. The political landscape has changed and the Scottish Conservatives have not changed with it. We have failed to generate new membership and we failed to cultivate the seeds of potential in our current members. The back office infrastructure both at Central Office and constituency level is nowhere near where it needs to be for running any kind of national campaign.

Murdo Fraser advocates giving up on the Scottish Conservatives and forming a new party. He couldn’t be more wrong. He talks about not needing a new “captain” but a whole new “ship” and then suggests a strategy from 1965 and presenting a more Scottish image. By adopting a 46 year old policy and wrapping ourselves in tartan we will become a great political force in Scotland, is a concept that makes no sense to me. I can’t believe that the only thing preventing great numbers of the population from voting for us is just that they really, really don’t like our name.

My argument might benefit from an example:

Q.  Why do Skoda’s have heated rear windscreens?

  1. A.  To keep your hands warm while you push it.

That joke and many others like it were once what defined Skoda cars. Today however, they  are a highly credible brand with a reputation for reliability and a massively improved share of the market. I use Skoda as an example because they didn’t change their name, they made their product better.

People don’t cast their vote on the strength of a name, they vote for what they see as the best policies communicated to them in the best way possible. From the world of politics the SNP are actually proof of this. In less time than I’ve been alive they have gone from a small and widely derided fringe party with very few election victories to the party of majority government in Scotland. They have created new and different policies and worked hard at communicating them to the electorate. They have also put a great deal of effort into creating a modern and dynamic party machine using every possible modern campaign tool. I may not be a fan of their policies but I have to respect their campaigning ability.

 

I am wholeheartedly supporting Ruth Davidson’s bid to become the next Scottish Conservative Party leader. We need to inject a new energy and passion into the heart of the party. We need to embrace being Scottish, Conservative and Unionist and become the party our members and all the people of Scotland deserve. It’s time for new blood and new ideas. It’s time for the Scottish Conservatives to become a 21st Century political party. It’s time for Ruth Davidson.

Andy Hume “On Unionism” and why the Scottish Conservatives should stop banging on about it.

 

Andy Hume graduated from Glasgow University, for whom he was a world champion debater and worked in both the public and voluntary sectors before taking a deep breath and finally entering the productive part of the economy. He was formerly the author of a well-known blog on Scottish politics, “Mr Eugenides”.

 

There are a few things about their party that all Scottish Conservatives know. They (or  we – I am a supporter, but not a member) know that once upon a time, the Conservatives won over 50% of the vote north of the border. We know that after this there was a slow decline in our fortunes until the coming of Mrs Thatcher, our devotion to whom our fellow Scots failed, unaccountably, to share; after that, things began to unravel for us electorally and we have yet to recover. We take it as an article of faith that if those fellow citizens could be weaned off the socialist teat that we have urged them for so long to renounce, Scotland’s prospects would be a lot brighter. This much we know; and this much I agree with, wholeheartedly.

But, perhaps above all, we remember 1992. Our valiant rear-guard campaign in that election has gone down as our finest hour; a latter-day Battle of Britain where we fought against all odds to save Conservatism in Scotland and succeeded stirringly (though in view of our later abandonment of the field, Dunkirk might be a better analogy). And if you ask Tories anywhere in Scotland, of whatever age, how this splendid achievement came about, you’ll get a near-unanimous answer. In the face of Labour talk of devolution, and the SNP’s ludicrous promise to make us “Free by ‘93”, it was John Major’s stout defence of the Union that saved the day. We stood up and declared, loudly, what we stood for, and the Scottish people, or at least a healthy proportion of them, responded. On this account, the sine qua non of the Conservative appeal to the electorate has to be a stalwart defence of the Union; it’s the first and strongest foundation on which any successful campaign has to be built.

I think this is a myth.

It is now accepted as fact that John Major’s focus on the constitutional issue saved our bacon in that 1992 campaign, but there is scant evidence for this. The unexpected Tory ‘success’ in that election was a nationwide phenomenon, not just a Scottish anomaly; polls pointed towards a Labour victory and the BBC were predicting a hung parliament as late as 10pm on the night. We defied expectations everywhere, not just in the corner of the kingdom where we made the Union a priority in our campaigning. And, of course, repeated trumpeting of our Unionist credentials did us no good in 1997 – or, indeed, in any election since then, including this year’s.

This is probably anathema to many readers of this website, but I submit that people in Scotland just aren’t that bothered about the Union. They don’t really care. In as far as it impacts on their thinking, they broadly agree with us, yes; Scotland has benefited greatly from its membership of the United Kingdom, and this is a constitutional arrangement that should remain in place. But then again most people largely agree with UKIP that we should disentangle ourselves from the European Union, yet they remain marooned in fringe-party status.

I can see through the monitor that you are shaking your head, so here’s a question for you. When was the last time you had a conversation about the Union with someone?  I don’t mean a fellow member of your local association, or another political blogger, or your candidate for the Holyrood elections: I mean a real person. Seriously, when was it? I hate to break it to you, but ordinary people talk about jobs, they talk about house prices (or waiting lists), they talk about gas bills, they talk about football. They do not talk about the constitution. They don’t look at Ruth Davidson on the TV screen in the pub and say, “I’ll give the Tories one thing; they’re sound on the Union”. In all my years, the only people outside the Conservative Party that I have ever heard talking with any passion about Britishness are fans of Rangers FC, a fine institution that is dear to my heart but not perhaps the optimal model for reaching out to the undecided neutral.

Indeed, I’d argue that the fact the electorate is in sympathy with us on the issue actually makes a constant focus on the Union less important, not more. Time and again, the Scottish people have told us, “Yes, we get it. You’re in favour of the Union. So are we. What else have you got?”. And answer there has usually come none. Just as with that issue in the 1990s, we risk becoming, as Michael Portillo once put it, “the pub bore” on this subject. David Cameron’s most effective put-down of the appalling Gordon Brown was that he was an analogue politician in a digital age; I’d argue that wearing our Unionism so brightly on our sleeves lays us open to the same charge. We sound anachronistic and faintly weird, like those red-faced Ulstermen who used to be on our TVs all the time, always upset about something.

For the avoidance of doubt, I am not arguing that Scottish Conservatives should be relaxed about the prospect of Scottish separatism, let alone support it. The day will come when the leader has to man the barricades in defence of the Union, sure enough and it may even come within this Parliament. But the brand of Unionism which says that we can make no concessions which allow Scotland to diverge at all from the rest of the country – a paleo-Unionism, if you like – didn’t work in 1997, it didn’t work in the subsequent devolution referendum, and it’s not working now. It makes it look like Tories are against progress and change, which any self-respecting Malcolm Tucker will tell you is electoral death. There is no point in drawing lines in the sand when the tide is against you.

Whoever the new leader turns out to be, I would argue that they need to put everyday issues at the heart of their appeal, not the defence of a Union which people don’t really believe is threatened anyway. They need to set out a coherent vision of a right-of-centre alternative in which the solution to our social ills is not incessant rises in spending, micro-meddling in people’s lives and the continuation of the failed leftist policies that have let down so many parts of this country. And this needs to be a real alternative to the left-wing consensus that utterly dominates political debate in Scotland, not the social democracy-lite that we seem to have sometimes espoused in recent years.

But they should also be reaching out to the kind of young professionals who in England would be natural Conservative voters – successful, suspicious of big government, unhappy at ever-higher taxes – but up here tend to gravitate elsewhere, usually to the SNP. To do this, they need, crucially, to be open to change – whether it’s coalition with other parties at Holyrood, or fiscal autonomy, a genuinely liberal stance on social issues, even the wholesale rebranding exercise that is now on the table in this leadership election – no matter how much that might upset some of the old dears who will be voting in it.

Above all, twenty years after our electoral fortunes were supposedly saved by putting the Union front and centre in our campaign, the first step to rebuilding those prospects should be for the new leader, whoever she or he is, to put their Unionism in a case marked “break glass in case of emergency” and leave it there until it is needed, and not before. In politics, it is not enough to be right; one must also be relevant.

Carlaw: Sitting MSPs will no longer be able to stand for Westminster

Jackson Carlaw MSP has said that, if he is elected Leader, sitting MSPs will no longer be able to stand for election to Westminster unless they resign from Holyrood at the point of their selection.

Speaking at a Conservative lunch in Glasgow to about 40 members on Monday, Jackson said:

“It is a tremendous privilege to be elected to serve in the Scottish Parliament. With even more responsibility set to transfer to Holyrood as a result of the Scotland Act it is also, more than ever, a full time job.”

“Given the additional responsibilities coming to the Scottish Parliament, I think it would be inappropriate for sitting Conservative MSPs to campaign in future elections to Westminster as candidates while continuing to serve as MSPs. Nor should taxpayers be underwriting campaigns for Westminster while paying MSPs to serve the interests of their constituents at Holyrood. The job of MSPs is to hold the government of Scotland to account and in a Scottish Parliament dominated by the SNP this is more vital than ever.”

“I want to lead a group of Scottish Conservative MSPs fully and exclusively committed to the job in hand.” “If those of us privileged enough to serve in the Scottish Parliament see ourselves in future as sitting in the waiting room for Westminster then is it any wonder that the people we seek to serve view us with disdain and contempt? We can’t ask our fellow Scots to take us seriously if we don’t take ourselves seriously.”

“So in future, if I am elected Leader, Conservative MSPs wishing to stand for choice to Westminster will have to resign from Holyrood on their selection as a candidate for Westminster by a constituency Conservative Association.”

“Together with my proposal to set term limits for List MSPs, I am determined to create real opportunities for the emerging generation of Scottish Conservative talent.”

Further to this, in answer to questions as to the momentum of his leadership campaign, Jackson responded by stating that if it was an endorsement contest then he would be losing, but he made a point that it was more about appealing to the ordinary members of the party, not ‘celebrities’. According to people who attended the lunch, Jackson’s speech went down well. How many people he will have convinced as a result remains to be seen, but in the words of one of Murdo Fraser’s supporters, “if the reception Jackson received today is anything to go by, it is still very much a three horse race.”

A ‘Made In Scotland’ Conservative Affiliate? We should remember the one we ‘Made in Ulster’

Henry Hill is the Editor of http://www.openunionism.com/ and author of the blog Dilettante. He is an active member of the Conservative and Unionist Party.  Henry argues that Murdo Fraser’s plan for a ‘Made in Scotland’ Conservative Party will  be just as bad for the Conservatives and the UK as the separation of the Ulster Unionists was, if not worse.

 

Murdo Fraser has launched his leadership bid for the Scottish Conservatives by suggesting they disband. The idea is not, as pointed out on ConHome and elsewhere, without precedent. Before 1965 the Unionist Party represented the Conservatives north of the border and were, on national issues, essentially indistinguishable.

Nor is the idea without international precedent. The oft-cited example is Germany, where the Christian Democrat Union is represented by the Christian Social Union in more conservative, Catholic Bavaria. In Australia, the principle has been taken so far that the right is represented by no less than five parties, three with regional distinctions, that are collectively referred to as ‘The Coalition’.

Yet for all that, I remain deeply sceptical of, and opposed too, Mr Fraser’s proposal. The reason for this is simple: based on the plan’s historical augers and its own political logic, I don’t think it will work in the interests of the party or the country.

Let’s look at why. The old Unionist Party is often cited by proponents of this scheme as part of the ‘proud tradition’ of Scottish Conservatism, as indeed it is. But the nature of its historical significance has been fundamentally misread. It was not successful in Scotland merely because it bore a different name and had a Scottish leadership: a number of other social, cultural and political factors played a fundamental role. The Unionist Party operated in a political climate completely alien to the Scotland of today, and the idea that we can simply re-establish it is little short of fantasy.

Yet the UK does have an example of branch of the Conservative Party that separated from, but remained within, the party in a similar manner to what Murdo Fraser is proposing: the Ulster Unionist Party. Originally simply a Conservative branch in the six counties of Ireland that remained within the union, the UUP originally functioned much as Mr Fraser’s new party (hopefully not styled the Freedom Party or anything similarly American) is apparently intended to. It focused on the devolved legislature while providing Unionist MPs who took the Conservative Whip at Westminster.

Yet over time, the two diverged. The UUP was after all subservient to a distinct electorate. When that electorate was at odds with the national Conservative Party, it had no reason to support the Conservatives. Thus the UUP MPs withdrew the Conservative whip in 1974 and the Ulster Unionist Council withdrew from the Conservative Party altogether in the mid-eighties.

This left the national Conservative Party with no means of exerting its influence in Northern Ireland, a sorry state of affairs that contributed to the complete de-normalisation of that province’s politics. The prospects of a Scottish affiliate are scarcely more promising.

As has already been said, a name change is not enough. But if the party doesn’t succumb to the temptation to start ‘standing up for Scotland’ by attacking the ‘English’ Conservatives, what progress is it expected to make? Why should this party be expected to assist the Conservatives in enacting policy that is unpopular in Scotland? If being the third-based party and sticking to conservative and unionist principles is not good enough for Mr Fraser, how far might he or his successors as leader go to win votes? Federalism, or perhaps even further? The recent Northern Irish tuition fee decision – supported by the unionist parties – demonstrates how hard it can be for a regional party to keep the national interest first and foremost.

Unlike the CDU, which can keep the CSU in line by threatening to contest Bavarian elections, the national Conservatives can no more credibly threaten a Scottish affiliate than a Northern Irish one, at least if the defeatist logic behind this plan is correct. If and when it does pull out, the national Conservative Party will have simply made a big donation of material and political capital to an unreliable ally beholden to an electorate in which it has little faith, and hammered another nail into this country’s coffin.

Davidson calls for sentencing changes

ruth-davidson

 

Scottish Conservative Leadership contender, Ruth Davidson MSP, today called for stiffer sentences for those committing crimes under the influence of drink and drugs.

 

Commenting, Ruth said: “Being under the influence if drink or drugs should never be an excuse for committing crime.

“Last year, being drunk stopped being a mitigating factor in crime – but this change does not go far enough. It should be an aggravating factor that is reflected in sentencing.

“People who lose control through drink and drug use before committing a crime have made an active choice to affect their own behaviour and judgement. They have chosen to affect the control they have over their own actions. Society has had to pay for the crimes they have committed while under the influence. I believe that such pre-meditation should be recognised at the point of punishment. There are times when being drunk or on drugs should make the sentence stiffer, not softer.”

MURDO ANNOUNCES NEXT TWO WEEKS OF TOUR DATES

Leadership candidate Murdo Fraser has announced details of the nationwide tour he will be taking over the next two weeks.

Having been in Glasgow, Stirling and South Perthshire over the last few days, and held conference calls with members across Scotland, including Orkney, Murdo’s tour will now take him to:

Dundee Tuesday 20th September
Largs Thursday 22nd September
Oban Friday 23rd September
Inverness Saturday 24th September
Newton Stewart Monday 26th September
Lockerbie Monday 26th September
Strathpeffer Tuesday 27th September
Aviemore Wednesday 28th September
Edinburgh Thursday 29th September
Glasgow Friday 30th September
St. Andrews Friday 30th September
Manchester (Party Conference) Sunday 2nd – Wednesday 5th October

October tour dates will be announced in due course.

Murdo said:

“I have spoken to hundreds of members since I launched my campaign. There is a reassuring enthusiasm amongst members of all ages and from all regions of Scotland for my proposal to transform our party into a new, centre-right, progressive party for Scotland.

“Our members know better than anyone the problems our party faces. They are out on doorsteps election after election and their efforts are not being rewarded. They are fed up of fighting and fed up of losing; I share their frustration.

“Our new party will get us winning again. I want to take us back to our roots. Before 1965, we had a distinct, Scottish party which was extremely successful, and my new party will operate on a similar basis.

“Our current party has a severe identity crisis and is losing almost 40,000 votes between every election. This is not the time for more of the same. A new captain is not enough. We need a new ship.”

Murdo joins Ruth Davidson who has already begun a tour of all 59 seats in Scotland.

Davidson gives Toryhoose a Campaign up-date!

ruth-davidson

The constituency tour has begun!

On Friday I took an early flight up to Stornoway, right on the periphery of Scotland. But just because places like Stornaway are at the edge of our country doesn’t mean they should be ignored in our policymaking. Scotland is a country where there are huge differences. What works in the Central Belt is often ineffective or irrelevant up in the Highlands or the Isles. I want to lead a party for the whole of Scotland. I want to understand the issues affecting everyone in Scotland. That’s why I am touring the whole country during this campaign. If you want to follow my progress there is a nifty map showing where I have been at www.ruthdavidson.co.uk/campaign-tour. Saturday provided me with a chance to go down to Ayrshire, a part of Scotland where the Conservatives have been able to keep winning. It was great to meet so many people, and incredibly gratifying to have so many local members tell me they are supporting me to be the next leader of the Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party. John Scott MSP, the constituency MSP, three Ayrshire Provosts (Winifred Sloan (South Ayrshire),Pat McPhee (North Ayrshire), and Stephanie Young (East Ayrshire) along with other councillors; have all declared they are supporting my campaign. I was just as delighted to receive the support of Lord Sanderson for my candidature as well.Lord Sanderson has been a great servant to the Scottish Conservatives, and of course party members overhwhelmingly endorsed his report into the best way forward for the Conservatives in Scotland. So it meant a huge amount to hear him say: “I have been impressed by Ruth Davidson and her vision for taking our party forward. In the evidence I heard as part of drawing up my report into the future of the party, it was clear that we need to make changes in order to strengthen the party. I am keen to support a young and able candidate who has great leadership potential.”

Former Aberdeenshire MP backs Ruth Davidson

Former Aberdeenshire MP Sir Albert McQuarrie has become the latest senior Tory to give his support to Ruth Davidson’s campaign to become leader of the Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party.

Sir Albert said: “I have decided to give my support to Ruth Davidson in her campaign to be the next leader of the Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party.

“In placing my confidence in Ruth I am convinced she will lead the Party with a strong personal commitment to achieve the success which has eluded the Party since the catastrophic result in 1997 from which it has never recovered.

“We want no new name. We are the Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party and that is what we should remain. What we do want is dedicated leaders in all sections of our Party, a revitalisation where necessary of local Constituencies and an intensive drive for new members. As almost half a million people voted for our Party in the recent elections for Westminster and Holyrood it is our job to attract many more into the Party as members by producing policies of benefit to the people of Scotland within the United Kingdom.

“All of this can only be possible if the Party has an outstanding leader who will inspire others. I am convinced in Ruth Davidson the Conservative and Unionist Party in Scotland will have the leader it needs at this time. We should all work together to restore the Party to its former glory with many Scottish Conservative and Unionist Members of Parliament being elected to serve in Westminster and Holyrood.

“I would encourage other members of the Party to give their support to Ruth Davidson in her campaign to lead this great Scottish party. Success can be won if we work for it nationally and locally to regain the trust of the people of Scotland.”

‘A new captain is not enough. We need a new ship.’ – by Murdo Fraser MSP

murdo-fraser

 

On Friday we launched our first article from the leadership campaign. Today we give you the third and final article from the leadership contest, Murdo Fraser, Regional MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife

 

The Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party keeps losing.  We lost all our MPs in 1997.  We lost vote share in 1999.  We lost seats and vote share in 2007, and then again in 2011.  It wasn’t for the lack of trying.  Our people worked hard, and we had good, strong leaders in David McLetchie and Annabel Goldie.

We thought that Scotland, like all other developed countries, needed a strong, centre-right force, and we thought that things would get better and we would fill the void.  We were right about the first part.  But we were wrong about the second part.  Because, despite all our efforts, things didn’t get better.  We didn’t fill the void.  The void just became bigger.

So we need a reality-check.  Our party – the Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party – will never succeed.  It will never be able to promote the values we stand for – the values which Scotland needs.

Why? Because we haven’t practised what we preach. We are a party which believes in devolving power to people.  But we haven’t devolved power to ourselves.

As a Party we needed a distinctive Scottish identity in order to attract the votes of people who used to vote Conservative and have left us, and of people who have never voted Conservative.  They’re not nationalists – they just want the best deal for Scotland, and think that the Conservatives are too English to deliver it.

Many Conservatives will be surprised at my proposals.  Some will agree, and some will disagree.  My message to one and all is clear.  Like you, I am fed up of losing.  Fed up of working and fighting so hard for such little return.

I want us to start winning again.  But we can’t start winning unless we understand why we keep losing.  And the brutal, honest truth is that we keep losing because our party is not fit for purpose in its current form.

That’s why I think it is time to start again.  So if I am elected leader, I will turn the party into a new party for Scotland.  A new party, distinctly Scottish, standing up for Scottish interests.  A new party which supports the excellent work David Cameron’s Westminster government is doing and whose MPs support a Conservative Prime Minister, but which is not afraid to disagree with it if it’s in Scotland’s interests.  On fisheries, or the future of our historic army regiments, for example.

A new party, with a new name, and a new, positive approach to the Scottish Parliament and the decentralisation of power.  It is our only future.

We are at the stage where change – real, meaningful change – is not an option, but is a necessity.  And I don’t mean superficial change.  A fresh, new Captain of the sinking ship is not going to be enough.  We need a new ship.

Or, to be more precise, we need to build a new ship modelled on one which sailed extremely successfully in Scottish waters before 1965.  Before 1965, our party was distinct from the UK Conservative party, and had its own name.  And it was successful – so successful that in 1955 it gained the only absolute majority of votes in Scotland in the period of modern democracy.

After 1965, we centralised.  We gave power away – transferred it from Scotland to London.  Our fortunes declined, to the point where, only 46 years later after gaining a majority or votes, we sit at just over 12% of the popular vote.

Enough is enough.  I want to be the captain of a new ship.  Our new party will be the vehicle by which we can start winning again.  It will be the foot-in-the-door that we need in order to make people give us a fair hearing again.

It will help us build a new centre-right movement in Scotland – a country which has a huge number of centre-right people, but a small number of centre-right voters.  It will rejuvenate our own party from the grass-roots up.  It will reinvigorate our members and our volunteers.  It will encourage those voters who have left us for the Lib Dems and the SNP to come back.  And it will make many voters who have never considered voting Conservative before think: “Maybe next time.”

The party could reject my ideas.  It may choose to elect someone else.  It may choose the old approach of disengagement from the wishes of the people of Scotland and negativity towards our country.  I’ve seen that movie many times before, and it doesn’t have a happy ending.  Einstein said that insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

It’s time to learn the lesson.  It’s time to change.  It’s time for a new party for Scotland.