I was against the notion
of this referendum, deeply distrustful of any nationalist stance. And for a long time I was in the NO
camp. It’s possible that I would have
been swayed by YES eventually – I’m a lefty idealist, easy pickings for the
heady optimism of the YES campaign, but that’s not what happened. What happened is that NO lost me, NO pushed
me to the YES side, and I can remember exactly when it happened.
George Osborne journeyed
to Edinburgh and announced that Scotland could not have the pound, and then
Cameron gave his silly little speech at the Olympic Village. That’s when NO lost me.
Osborne calculated that
the fear of not having the pound would galvanise business and voters into the
NO camp. It might have worked but for
the fact that this is such a patently stupid idea. The UK currency needs every asset it can lay
its hands on in order to support an extra-ordinary and dangerous deficit. The over-inflated pound based on an
over-inflated banking sector cannot afford to lose the security of Scotland’s
oil and whiskey. Osborne’s move
encouraged many of us to look into the details of this state of affairs. And most of us who did were shocked at the
precariousness of the UK economy and saw how the monied classes, typified by over-privileged
Osborne, benefitted from this whilst the rest of us wallowed in ‘austerity’.
It could have been a lot
different. If Osborne had said that
Scotland probably could have the pound but the whys and wherefores of this
would be difficult he would have opened a debate the fundamental
conclusion of which would have been – What
on Earth is the point of being an independent country if you accede control of
your currency to a much larger economy? This
is a massive weakness in the YES stance, and yet it has scarcely been aired
because YES have been able to steal the initiative with slogans like It’s our pound too (and those English
twits are trying to bully us).
Had Osborne taken this route
we could have had a much more mature debate about monetary policies; we could
have exposed the dangers to rUK of an independent Scotland. This would have swayed the debate towards a We need you Scotland, rather than the You need us Scotland. All the arguments of the You need us Scotland would still have been aired, but the stance is
fundamentally different, more respectful, honest and with an integrity that the
Cameron love-bomb, Osborne shit-bomb dualism simply doesn’t have.
This lack respect, borne
of an empire-stained Eton/Bullingdon superciliousness and above all the
consequent lack of integrity of the NO campaign that has been it’s fundamental
weakness. And the blame for this lies
squarely on Cameron and Osborne.