There wasn’t a political earthquake in Scotland after all with a bigger majority for the no vote against independence than was being predicted, but, anyone who thinks it can be business as normal after the huge turnout is very much mistaken.
The Tories manoeuvring for political advantage on constitutional matters in the middle of the night, as soon as the result for the no vote became clear, had Cameron looking to his backbenchers and Farage while setting a trap for Ed Miliband. But it is exactly this sort of manoeuvring that has turned people off in their droves.
For the Labour party – despite the no victory – there was a political earthquake which the leadership and the party must not ignore. Glasgow, the crucible for Labour’s core vote, rejected the pleas to vote no. Glasgow of the Red Clyde had an alternative and turned its back on its history to go it alone. Nothing is simple and sectarianism reared its head with the Orange March that we saw only days before the vote. Arguably it had some impact on the vote nevertheless there remains big lessons for the party and the leadership.
When people are fed a diet of austerity for an economic crisis they had no responsibility for then sooner or later they are going to rebel and on 18 September in Glasgow, Dundee, North Lanarkshire and East Dunbartonshire – solid working class areas – that is exactly what they did.
Scots had queued up in their hundreds of thousands first to register and then to vote. Turnout, disengagement from the political process has been a defining feature of British politics over the last two decades.
With the general election months away we have to capture some of that longing for change that drove turnout and involvement up, but without something for people to vote for – turnout will once again be derisory.
The People’s Assembly Against Austerity has captured the imagination. In the summer 50,000 people marched through central London to the belly of the Westminster beast. It was a protest that turned into a carnival.
Diane Abbott MP told a packed fringe meeting last night that Tory cuts have pitted one set of people against another and nothing is as toxic as the ‘scapegoating of immigration’. She argued that too many people are convinced that eastern Europeans are the cause of workplace insecurity rather than exploitative employees. None of this is new but it is toxic and it is fuelling the propaganda pumped out by the Tories and Ukip.
Katy Clark, MP for North Ayrshire and Arran, said that she’d lived with the referendum campaign for two years and it is crucial that we equip working people with the arguments to fight austerity. “We need progressive taxation and a redistribution of wealth in this country not the Tories/Lib Dem’s race to the bottom.”
I am very clear we have to mobilise. We have gained nothing without a struggle. Everything we have we have fought for. We are a movement. We need to inspire people, not with a pessimistic programme of austerity ‘lite’ but with genuine hope.
Steve Turner is the Unite assistant general secretary
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