Fifty-six years ago, in Hamilton, Winnie Ewing won the SNP its first Westminster seat, with 46 per cent of the vote. A landmark in Scottish politics, the 1967 by-election gave the Scottish question momentum. It welcomed the SNP to the political mainstream and forced Labour and the Conservatives to articulate their vision of Scotland in the UK.
Fast forward to 2023, and the momentum is with Labour, who are keen to frame as āseismicā their by-election victory over the SNP in Rutherglen and Hamilton West earlier this month. With 58.6 per cent of the vote, it was a remarkable win. Writing in the Times, Prof. John Curtice projected a similar swing could increase Labourās Scottish MPs from 2 to 40 in a general election.
As the first by-election defeat the nationalists have suffered at Westminster, Rutherglen plays into a narrative of SNP decline. Amidst investigations into party finance and a lacklustre leadership in Nicola Sturgeonās vacuum, the lack of enthusiasm amongst members debased Scotlandās governing party to outsource leafleting to a private firm. Having long mastered their role as a Janus-faced government of opposition, the SNPās machine is running on empty.
At Labourās conference, Keir Starmer was triumphant, emphatic that āScotland can lead the way to a Labour government.ā Which is just as well, because the route to Downing Street demands Labour gains north of the border. But with talk of 40 MPs, āseismicā change, and a Scotland āat the heart of a Britain built to last,ā is Labour getting ahead of itself? Absent at conference was any articulation of Scotlandās constitutional future under a Labour government. This poses a problem, as despite the SNPās political woes, support for Scottish independence remains high, hovering between 45 to 48 per cent.
Yet this stasis in the polls obfuscates a shift in nationalist thought. In 2014, there was a thin divide between nationalism and unionism. Both sides shared a vision of a strong welfare state, membership of the EU, and greater Scottish control of Scottish affairs. Stressing continuity, Alex Salmond located Scotland within six unions: political, monarchical, monetary, defence, European, and social. Independence was to sever the first of these, but to leave the others intact.
Just as the SNP has lurched left-ward in government with the Greens, however, so it has become more separatist. Not only the political union but now the monarchical, monetary, defence, and ā thanks to Brexit ā the European and social unions would alter. As the SNP move towards republicanism in Europe, requiring membership of Schengen and calling into question free movement within the British Isles, independence has less in common with unionism than ever before. In turn, the Scottish Tories have moved in a unitary direction to bypass Holyrood and interfere directly from Westminster in devolved matters. All the while, Scottish Labour are yet to articulate an answer to the Scottish Question beyond a vapid promise to āprotect devolution and stand up for Scotlandās role in the UK.ā
It has now been a year since Gordon Brown published his committeeās report on the UKās future, imagining a āreunited kingdom.ā Brownās key recommendation, to abolish and replace the House of Lords with a democratically elected Assembly of the Nations and Regions, has yet to translate into Labour policy. Coupled with Brownās recommendations on increased fiscal power for devolved administrations and ādouble devolutionā from Westminster and Holyrood to local communities, this would be the seismic change Labour desperately needs.
It would give voice to a de-centralising unionism that makes permanent and enhances the devolution settlement, whilst building consensus in a polarised Scotland. For Brownās recommendations bear striking similarity to Alex Salmondās āCouncil of the Islesā proposed during the 2014 independence referendum: bringing together the UKās four nations to work collaboratively on issues that affect everyone. Such policy would reinvigorate Donald Dewarās āindependence within the UK,ā and reclaim Labourās place as champions of devolution. It would see a return to the spirit of 1707 unionism, which sought to safeguard Scottish nationhood and civil society, whilst joining with our larger neighbour to pool resources and work collaboratively on issues that affect us all. Labourās history of progressive collaboration ā on the welfare state, the NHS, social housing ā make the unionist arguments most likely to sway Yes voters. James Callaghanās argument for devolution in 1976 still stands, that ānational identity and a United Kingdom are not competitors or rivals,ā but rather āpartners, each enriching the otherā.
But without firm policy on devolution or ālevelling up,ā Labour risks peddling a unitary unionism that bursts at the border; riding the polls only whilst Scottish voters prioritise the cost of living above independence. This unitary unionism bears the spectre of Thatcherite misunderstanding in red, white, and blue; wary of difference, rendering devolution as āseparation by degrees.ā It risks returning to Labourās pre-1970 scepticism of devolution as anathema to socialist solidarity: to a centrally planned economy, nationalised industries, and full employment.
Each of these strands of unitary unionism were evident in Keir Starmerās keynote speech to conference. Standing in front of a huge Union Jack, with the slogan āBritainās futureā on his podium, Starmer echoed Margaret Thatcher in 1984, with a patriotic rebranding designed to appeal to English Conservative swing voters. Likewise, the tricolour placards happily brandished at the by-election wins in Tamworth and Mid Bedfordshire enjoined āLetās Get Britainās Future Back.ā By contrast, there were no Union Jacks (or Saltires) on the placards at Rutherglen, where Michael Shanks and Anas Sarwar campaigned for āthe change Scotland needs.ā
Starmerās speech made no reference to the United Kingdom, or its constitutional future, but mentioned Britain forty-five times, working up to Labourās central policy for āGreat British Energy,ā a publicly owned green energy company. The difference between the United Kingdom and Britain may seem semantic – the difference between four nations and one ā but points to a fraction between Westminster and Holyrood in unionist thought and campaigning. A general election fought with UK Labourās British branding may not resonate with Scottish voters or deliver the success of Rutherglen. The Union Jack may have been conceived to combine symbols for Scotland, Ireland, and England, but for many Scots it is now synonymous with āBritishā identity, set against Scottishness.
If this really is āa changed Labour party,ā as Starmer declares, it needs a better policy on Scotlandās future. A general election focused on the economy and the poor governance of the Tory party might just land Labour more seats north of the border. But to sustain a lead over the SNP and to win control of the Scottish Parliament in the 2026 elections, Labour needs an answer to the Scottish Question, and to deliver change for Scotland within the first term of a Labour government.
As far as there is a āsettled willā of the Scottish people, we are still split right down the middle. If Labour seeks not only to win power but to retain it, the party needs to articulate a deliverable vision for Scotlandās future within the UK ā one that can reclaim the constitutional centre ground.
Image Credit: Keir Starmer/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 via Flickr