Hello everyone, I trust you are all well? I see we have had much good discussion of the election and its aftermath. I personally don't know how to feel about it all. I think if the SNP had lost to a centre-right labour party (led by David Miliband for example) I would have felt infinitely worse. I don't want to say I'm hopeful because I have no faith in the system or the Labour party and I am deeply suspicious of Corbyn and his allies (backpedaling on Trident anyone?) but I know this kind of situation is the best I could have hoped for.
The SNP losing wasn't a surprise to me, but I was surprised at just how much they lost. I think Nicola Sturgeon's indyref2 proclaimation will be looked at in years to come as her gravest mistake, but how was she to know Theresa May would call an election so soon after? I think if we look at the 2016 results for the Scottish Parliamentary election we can see how things could have gone without her playing that particular card. Last year the Tories did well, SNP pushed Labour back a bit (but not completely, due to PR voting system) and the Lib Dems held on. No colossal defeats for the SNP though. That came this year as a kind of punishment from the public and the backlash was strongest in pro-Brexit areas like the North East, formerly our heartlands (though they did vote No convincingly in 2014). I was surprised at the Labour swing though, but that was due to younger people voting Labour for Corbyn, but considering how little the SNP are doing in their newly-won "heartlands", even taking them for granted, who can blame them? I must say though there is a considerable difference between Scottish Labour and UK Labour now. Scottish Labour are more centrist and are opposed to Corbyn - the only thing that matters to them is preserving the Union, just like the Tories, and there are reports in the papers of their leadership team cheering with delight last week when the Tories beat the SNP in the North East and the Loyalist vote started to rear its ugly head in the South.
As unfortunate as this is, and as much as I detest the Tories, I think the SNP needed a good kick up the backside. Winning everything in 2015 and gaining 70,000+ members didn't really bring about that much change. They continued to try to be all things to all people, talking the talk on progressive politics in Scotland without really bringing in any tangible, game changing policies. The party itself is run by a small group of control freaks who are terrified of the activist base and actively discouraged any of the meetings and rallies that got people engaged in politics in the first place. They completely squandered that energy and good will through their lack of imagination. I personally didn't want indyref2 at all, not for a good few years at least, simply because we wouldn't win it. We only get one more chance.
I don't know how things will go. I think Sturgeon needs time to reflect on what has happened and reassess her relationship with Corbyn, but keeping indyref2 off the table for now while Brexit unfolds is no bad thing in my eyes. Now more than ever we need to concentrate on building the distinctive, socially just society we wanted in 2014 as much as we can within the current framework and demanding the powers needed to do so.