Wednesday, 22 March 2023

SCOTLAND WITHIN THE UNITED KINGDOM (2007)

 
 Sixteen-years-ago today – March 22, 2007 - this was my final contribution to the Scottish Parliament. It came in a Labour-LibDem Scottish Executive (government) debate on a motion titled 'Scotland in the United Kingdom'. It was supposed to be a platform for Labour and the other British unionist parties to promote Scotland the devolved region of the UK ahead of the 2007 Scottish Parliament Election to be held a few weeks later.
 
My speech features a short intervention from my old pal Margo MacDonald. It should be noted that Margo and I were sitting as Independents: I had been expelled by the SNP and Margo was forced-out of the party under the disastrous 'leadership' of devolutionist John Swinney.
 
Regarding my comment in the last sentence, I never for one moment thought we would still be waiting 16-years-later.
 
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Scottish Parliament Official Report
March 22 2007
 
Debate on Scottish Executive Motion 'Scotland in the United Kingdom'
 
Campbell Martin (Ind):
The Minister for Parliamentary Business said that she - I think she meant the Labour Party - came to the Parliament to manage devolution. Well, I did not come here to manage devolution, which partly explains why I now sit as an Independent.
 
Personally, I came here to do my best for the people of Scotland. I do not think we can achieve the best for the people of Scotland in a devolved, constrained, limited Parliament.
 
Margaret Curran (Minister for Parliamentary Business):
Will the member take an intervention?
 
Campbell Martin:
No thanks. We have had three-hundred years of apologists for the British Union. We don't need to hear any more.
 
The people of Scotland have always known their place within the Union, because we have always been told our place within the Union. The Scots' role has been as a labour-force and, in times of war, cannon-fodder.
 
It is not just British political parties or the British establishment that have kept Scotland in its place within the Union; the north-British subsections of the British Labour Party and the other Unionist parties, members of which have spoken in this debate, have conspired to tell the people of Scotland that we are too wee, too poor and too stupid to govern ourselves. That is the reality of Scotland within the United Kingdom.
 
It is not normal for one nation to be governed by another. However, that is the situation we have today. This is only a devolved Parliament, which is answerable to the Westminster Parliament. This Parliament is totally subservient to the Parliament in London.
 
We need independence because only with independence can we deal with the bread-and-butter issues that affect Scots every day of their lives. The Unionist parties have told us they want the election to be about the bread-and-butter issues, not about constitutional change. I argue that we need constitutional change to give us the full powers and full resources we require to deal with the problems - the bread-and-butter issues - affecting Scots today. Without the powers that come only with independence, we will continue to target initiatives at symptoms, rather than at the actual problems.
 
We know that Unionist political parties do not always tell the truth when they are talking about the constitution and independence. Back when the constitutional reality was a Scotland governed directly from London, we were told that devolution would be a leap in the dark and probably would be the end of civilisation as we knew it. That, clearly, was not true. Now we are told that, if we move to independence, it will be a leap in the dark and probably the end of civilisation as we know it. That, too, is untrue. Then again, as I said, Unionist parties have a history of not telling the truth.
 
Charlie Gordon referred to the sweeping-to-power of the Wilson Government in the mid-1970s and how great that was. I remember that, too. I was a teenager in the mid-1970s, and I remember being told by the then Labour Government that Scotland was an economic basket-case and that we couldn't stand on our own two feet and govern ourselves.
 
Margo MacDonald (Ind):
Will Campbell give way?
 
Campbell Martin:
Of course.
 
Margo MacDonald:
I was not at school in the mid-1970s; I was in Westminster. I was told, privately, by the Chancellor of the Exchequer a few years later that Scotland was not, in fact, an economic basket-case; that my case was watertight, but that he would oppose me every inch of the way. That was Denis Healey.
 
Campbell Martin:
Yet Denis Healey was the very man who said, publicly, that we were an economic basket-case and could not stand on our own two feet. As I said, unionist politicians and political parties do not always tell the truth when they are talking about the constitution.
 
Dr Gavin McCrone supplied a report to the Labour Government at that time. The Labour Government had told us that Scotland was an economic basket-case and that we were too wee, too poor and too stupid, but, at the same time, McCrone was telling them that Scotland could quickly become one of Europe's strongest economies with embarrassingly large surpluses. McCrone told the Labour Government that oil revenue would: "transform Scotland into a country with a substantial and chronic surplus." I imagine, from a Unionist perspective, such Scottish wealth would result from a 'plague' of oil.
So, British Unionist parties have a track record of not telling the truth. The people of Scotland would vote for independence if Unionist politicians did not lie to them. Those politicians know they are lying because they are intelligent people; well, relatively intelligent people.
 
Why is Scotland - alone among all the nations in the world - unable to stand on its own two feet or to manage its affairs better in its people's interests? Why do Unionist political parties have to do Scotland down and scare the people of Scotland away from their democratic right to retake their independence?
 
Roll on the day - it is coming, and members know it - when the people of Scotland retake their independence for the benefit of all the people of Scotland.
 
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Books by Campbell Martin:
 

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