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Thursday, 26th November 2009

Alex Salmond: Only the freedom of independence will allow our nation to succeed

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Published Date: 30 November 2008
SAINT Andrew's Day is a day of national celebration that allows all Scots to commemorate our patron saint and mark our distinctive place in the world.
But national optimism and good feeling cannot be fuelled on sentiment alone. We need to make sure our economy is given the best chance to ride out the tough times and emerge on the other side in as robust good health as possible.

For that to happ
en we need a stimulus package to galvanise our economy by focusing investment where it is most needed while at the same time offering targeted tax cuts. Above all, we need decisions taken in Scotland's best interests.

The Scottish Government has already gone a long way to meeting the current challenges. Our six-point economic recovery plan includes £100m in funding that has been brought forward for much-needed spending on affordable housing.

However, the scale of the current downturn underlines how necessary it is for the Scottish Government to have the full range of fiscal levers which any normal independent country takes for granted.

But until the people of Scotland are given the chance to claim those powers in the democratic referendum that we are offering, the country remains adversely affected by decisions taken at Westminster.

Those decisions, as borne out conclusively by Labour's Pre-Budget Report last week, have been made with scant regard to Scotland's interests. How else can we explain the move to cut half a billion pounds – roughly equivalent to half the annual universities budget or the entire prisons budget – from our finances in 2010-11? That cut will be repeated the following year, resulting in a one billion pound double whammy to Scotland.

Labour does not even dispute that these massive cuts are coming. Their Holyrood leader, Iain Gray, has said Scotland "must take its share" of cutbacks.

This at a time when Scotland's oil revenues are propping up UK finances on an unprecedented scale. A record £13.2bn is set to flow into Treasury coffers from North Sea oil this financial year, while the total over the next six years will come to a massive £55bn, compared to £41bn over the last six years.

Of course, Labour's cuts are being proposed only because, as we now know, the Treasury needed a last-minute plan to try to balance the books after its decision not to push ahead with the plan to push up VAT to 18.5%. This is no way to run public finances.

The Treasury is already hoarding £1bn of Scotland's money – including around £120m in the fossil fuel levy – even before the looming cuts are taken into account. And if any further proof were needed of London Labour's indifference to Scotland's needs then we need look no further than the debacle over the hike in whisky duties.

Alistair Darling may have recanted on his initial move to raise the tax by 8%, but the mere fact that his original intention to penalise one of our biggest industries was pushed through on the nod lays bare Labour's attitude to Scotland. Either it is monumental incompetence or it is monumental indifference.

Scotland is a country of vast potential, but is currently held back by its inability to take the crucial economic decisions needed in its own interests.

Control of all our own resources and the ability to borrow like any normal government would give us the chance to compete on a level playing field with the other countries currently able to use these tools to best suit them and see them through the global downturn.

Unlike the UK, some small independent European nations like Finland and Norway are projected to keep on growing, with marginal growth in the Euro area as a whole, while the UK plunges into the economic mire.

The SNP Government is determined that the people of Scotland should be given the choice to put our country on that level playing field. Our National Conversation on the country's constitutional future, which has so far gathered around 450,000 hits on its web pages, paves the way for the independence referendum we are proposing for 2010.

We believe independence offers the best future for Scotland, but we are open to suggestions as to what other options may be on that ballot paper. So far, however, all we have had from the London parties is obfuscation.

Their Calman Commission on the future of devolution has, in stark contrast to the inclusive nature of the National Conversation, deliberately excluded the option of independence. Calman is due to issue its interim report on Tuesday, but, based on what we have seen so far, no one should expect anything remotely matching the substantial new powers Scotland needs. There will yet again be more questions than answers.

Too often the debate on Scotland's future lapses into the politics of fear. Nowhere was that better demonstrated than in the fallout from the global financial crisis, which saw the resurrection of the old, discredited scare stories suggesting this country is incapable of governing itself.

But, as Barack Obama's historic triumph in this month's US presidential election shows, hope can triumph over fear.

Our whole message as a Government is founded on hope and aspiration. We believe Scotland should look after its own affairs not because we are intrinsically better than any other nation but because we are as good as any other.

We look forward with hope to the New Year and to the one beyond, when we offer the people of Scotland the chance to choose the independent future that our nation needs to succeed.





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  • Last Updated: 29 November 2008 7:35 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: St Andrew's Day
 
1

The Answer,

Glasgow 30/11/2008 01:09:31
Indepence for the scotch , will mean a burden lifted from the shoulders of the English, bring it on oh fat one!
2

Maisie from Morningside,

30/11/2008 01:40:28
Unfortunately 2 years of the SNP has suggested that Scotland would then become Europe's number 1 nanny state with interfering politicians ramming through legislation to ensure we were all eating, drinking, and thinking within government approved guidelines.
I voted for the SNP for over 30 years.

NEVER AGAIN.
3

First Minister,

Amsterdam 30/11/2008 07:05:47
#1- you are an idiot, 3 insults in one short ditty, you must feel good? rangers fan?
My son is 7, and if, by the time he leaves school, Scotland is not Independent, we will leave Scotland until such times as we are, i have already left Scotland once due to Tony Blair, and i ( with prob tens of thousands of others) will do it again. How sad?
4

Jo'Burg Jock,

South Africa 30/11/2008 08:14:40
From the "McCrone report" :- commissioned by the British government in 1974 and subsequently "buried" for 30 years due to its content:-

"It must be concluded therefore that large revenues and balance of payments
gains would indeed accrue to a Scottish Government in the event of
independence provided that steps were taken either by carried interest or by
taxation to secure the Government ‘take’. Undoubtedly this would banish any
anxieties the Government might have had about its budgetary position or its
balance of payments. The country would tend to be in chronic surplus to a
quite embarrassing degree and its currency would become the hardest in
Europe, with the exception perhaps of the Norwegian kroner. Just as deposed
monarchs and African leaders have in the past used the Swiss franc as a
haven of security, so nowwould the Scottish pound be seen as a good hedge
against inflation and devaluation and the Scottish banks could expect to find
themselves inundated with a speculative inflow of foreign funds."

SCOTLAND WOULD BE A BETTER PLACE WITH INDEPENDENCE
5

Unimpressed one,

30/11/2008 09:23:24
Salmond is already acting as a socialist nutter. God help us if he ever gets full power.
6

porker!,

stirling 30/11/2008 09:38:08
1 the thickest kind of anti-Scot.
2 Maisie voted SNP for THIRTY YEARS and after 18 months, never again! You never voted for the SNP in your life. What a silly person you are.
This country won an oil lottery and gave it away to England who then give us back some pocket money and told us to be grateful.Five million Scots 50 million in England thats where the money has gone and it is beyond my comprehension that there are Scots who are quite happy for that to continue.
The reality is Alex Salmond is the only Scottish leader who puts Scotland first.
7

Mr. Lachie Todd,

Edinburgh 30/11/2008 10:27:59
The Union is the only game in town.

All these little Scotlander and Englander Limeys scoring points of each other?

They all fail to recognise that even after the Welsh Tudors incorporated Wales into a formal Union with England 600 years ago, the Welsh are still, well.... Welsh. Anyone who watched yesterday's rugby test between Wales and Australia could not help admiring their fierce patriotism.

After hundreds of years of English/British domination
ending in Union, and despite the tragedy of Partition, the people of Ulster are still Irish, with a British prefix.

After 300 years, the Scots are presently running the British State!

Its the English I feel sorry for!
8

Kenny Farquharson,

SoS 30/11/2008 12:25:44
Hello.
If you're interested in Scottish politics take a look at The Steamie (www.scotlandonsunday.com/thesteamie), a new blog on Scottish politics brought to you by political journalists on The Scotsman, Scotland on Sunday and the Edinburgh Evening News. It's launched today, and will take a wee while to build up a head of steam, but I hope you'll agree it's a great innovation for Scottish politics online.
Kenny Farquharson
Assistant Editor, SoS
9

Rev. S. Campbell,

Bath 30/11/2008 15:01:51
#2 Yeah, right.

30 years voting SNP and you're gone forever because of a CONSULTATION DOCUMENT on the POSSIBILITY of restricting sales of booze to teenagers?

Pull the other one, dear.
10

Eve,

Scotland 30/11/2008 17:41:52
Roll on Scottish Independence.

Happy St.Andrews day to everyone.

Heres to many more of them and may some it the non so distant future be independent ones.
11

David55,

London 30/11/2008 18:25:19
The 'Comment on this Story' sections on this website are polluted by muppets.

The best thing the paper could do is stop allowing comments.

The internet just gives idiots a voice. Seriously, if some of you lot started talking to me in the pub and came out with this nonsense, I'd think you had escaped, finish my drink, and leave.

12

Iago,

Aberystwyth 30/11/2008 21:01:41
Happy St Andrew's Day to my Celtic brothers in the North from Cymru (Wales). Can I just say that, yes it was the Tudors who incorporated Wales, but not into England, into English law. It was not the Welsh Henry VII, but the English Henry VIII. Under this so called leader he ruined Wales. Welsh was spoken by over 95% of the nation, Henry VIII put it in the Act that anyone who spoke Welsh could not work, don't think this helped us and this is just one of the reasons why the proper Welsh want to leave the union. Flooding our valleys, stealing our water, coal, gold, etc. Merthyr should have been one of the richest towns in the world with all its coal, but under the union, it is one of the most deprived, where there are no jobs, people overweight and many turning to drugs and alcohol. This has also happened to many towns and cities all over Scotland, do you really want this to continue under the union, or do you want to turn things around? Lastly, please don't say that people from Northern Ireland are Irish, but they are still British; I'm sure both sides would disagree on you there. Northern Ireland should be reunited with the Republic and out of colonial hands; just like Canada, Australia, South Africa, etc. Scotland would be stronger independent, which has been the case for many nations that have split from their subjugators, and yes that does include Ireland, but also Finland and Poland. Salmond is doing everything in his power to better the lives of the people in Scotland, the only big party that has its HQ in Scotland and is devoted to putting Scotland first. For me I just hope that one day the people of Wales will vote for independence, as Plaid Cymru is the only party to put Wales first! Freedom is within our grasp, it is inevitable; not if, but when, let's hope its 2010! :)
13

KampungHighlander,

Jakarta 02/12/2008 02:02:59
#10 Kenny Farquharson

"The Steamie....a new blog on Scottish politics brought to you by political journalists on The Scotsman, Scotland on Sunday and the Edinburgh Evening News."

So Kenny can we expect the same journalistic standards we have come to expect from the Scotsman?

Namely Unionist and Labour Party propaganda with not even the slightest attempt at balance.

The Steamie is a good name, it makes one think of fresh jobbies, very fitting.

 

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