Well that's the second TV debate down in the Scottish Independence Referendum campaign. The first one, between Alistair Darling (figurehead of the Unionists) and Alex Salmond (leader of the Scottish Government) was won by Darling according to an ICM/Guardian poll, showing that 56% of a sample of 500 people thought he won compared with the 44% that thought Salmond won. On the basis of that poll the BBC reported quickly that Darling had narrowly won, while the biased press (by that I mean all Scottish newspapers bar one) heralded it as "Darling draws first blood" and stuff like that. You may recall how terrible I felt after that and I quickly conceded the referendum to the Unionists.
This latest debate was summed up by the BBC as one with "no clear winner", although "the supporters of Salmond will be the happier ones tonight". Commentary on national news described it as "rough" and "heated" and other nonsense, trying to portray it as one of those "more heat than light" debates they are so fond of complaining about. The Scotsman newspaper's editor claimed it was a "close draw".
The thing is, BBC, you terrible people, there was another poll after this debate just like the last one, by the same pollster. It showed that Alex Salmond won by 71% vs Darling's 29%. He had over 40% of the vote over Darling. Despite having sworn not to I actually caught the end of it when I was making a cup of tea. Salmond was on top form and effectively demolished Darling. In my eyes he was statesmanlike. Darling looked rattled, nervous and he was actually apologetic in his closing statement when he said "and yes, I know I did talk about currency again but etc" - he certainly did. He knew that currency was a winner in the first debate but he parroted the old lines and jibes all over again and made a fool of himself. He was a self parody.
As an aside, the sample of 500 people were also asked their voting intentions. 51% would vote No, 49% would vote Yes. I'm not going to crow about that, despite it being pretty damned good, because I know the sample is very small.
I think that regardless of how the referendum goes from here on out, tonight (and the newspaper headlines tomorrow and the days after) will be the best example of how the BBC and the majority of the Scottish press organisations are biased in favour of Unionism and the British State. If some blasted hack writing for the Scotsman or something tomorrow claims that Salmond "edged a victory" I will scream.