Quote Originally Posted by BCram View Post
I have been interested in this idea for a long time. When you look at other countries, mainly in Africa but elsewhere too, the people who were given the right to form the first government were usually members who had led the campaigns for independence. Some of them became dictators some were overthrown by armed struggle and all have not thought that being part of the British Empire was a better option. I think the SNP have distinct groupings within their party. They started out as Tartan Tories and once they were able to show that they were an effective opposition to Labour they swing to the left and picked up the anti Tony Blair loyal Labour voters who believed in clause 4.
I was hopeful that Holyrood would not be dominated by one party if we voted for independence. That hope has been dented quite a bit by the trouble that The Salmond committee has encountered. This was a major surprise to me. It looks like all governments who have power act in their own rather than the national interest. It is possible to see Brexit as a discussion that was designed to save the Conservative party rather than an honest attempt to return power to the electorate.
If we ever do vote for independence I hope that we do not end up with a one party state. I think the voting system is designed to create multi party governments and am hopeful that we will not face decades of single party governments.
Interested on your take of the one party state,
Years ago before a Scottish government and even when the British government was a Tory government, Scotland was still labour for a great number of years, almost like a one party state.
I remember in Dundee, if the Labour Party in Dundee had put up a cardboard cut out for election, they word still have been elected.
One party states in Africa are different because there are no politics in Africa because it always comes back to one thing, tribalism.
The best example is Rhodesia (Zimbadwe), which was the bread basket of Africa, a rich country with minerals, mining, tourism and agriculture, which was destroyed by Robert Mugabe.
Nykomo was pro-British, but More tribes had allegiance to Mugabe and stayed in power for decades.