• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • blog
  • About
  • Book Publications
  • Other Reading
  • Social Wall
  • Back Pages
  • Contact Me

Scottish politics

The Long and Winding Road to What Kind of Scotland?

June 23, 2013
The Long and Winding Road to What Kind of Scotland? Gerry Hassan The Scotsman, June 22nd 2013 The Scottish independence debate has not so far connected or impacted on the vast majority of Scots beyond the politically committed. It is a point Alex Salmond reflected on this week, for his own obvious reasons, but true nonetheless. A small but significant watershed moment took place this week with the conclusion of ‘Road to Referendum’, a three part STV series on Scotland’s recent political history presented by Iain Macwhirter. ‘Road to Referendum’ was well made, persuasive and accessible with good choices of

Continue Reading The Long and Winding Road to What Kind of Scotland?

The Voices of Tomorrow’s Scotland: A Challenge to All Our Politicians

June 16, 2013
The Voices of Tomorrow’s Scotland: A Challenge to All Our Politicians Gerry Hassan The Scotsman, June 15th 2013 For once young people have become central to the Scottish political debate due to the Scottish Government’ giving 16-17 year olds the vote in the September 2014 independence poll. Rarely do we hear directly and in detail from young people which is why I was enthusiastic to participate this week in the National Museums Scotland conference in Edinburgh bringing together over 300 pupils from more than 20 state schools from Glasgow and Coatbridge to Biggar and Inverkeithing and further afield, to discuss

Continue Reading The Voices of Tomorrow’s Scotland: A Challenge to All Our Politicians

Time for a Radical Scotland to challenge our forces of conservatism

June 2, 2013
Time for a Radical Scotland to challenge our forces of conservatism Gerry Hassan The Scotsman, June 1st 2013 Scotland has long prided itself on its radical and socialist traditions, from Red Clydeside and UCS to rent strikes, occupations and the campaign which achieved the Scottish Parliament. This week Alex Salmond faced more criticism over his corporation tax policy from predictable quarters such as Johann Lamont and less predictable ones such as pro-independence supporters and economists Jim and Margaret Cuthbert and Council of Economic Advisers member Professor Joseph Stiglitz. This raises all sorts of questions: about the nature and dynamics of

Continue Reading Time for a Radical Scotland to challenge our forces of conservatism

Can Scottish politicians understand that social justice is about everyone?

May 26, 2013
Can Scottish politicians understand that social justice is about everyone? Gerry Hassan The Scotsman, May 25th 2013 There was a revealing exchange on Newsnight Scotland this week which got to the heart of the matter of the substance (or lack of) in much of the independence debate. Asked to elucidate on what social justice measures an independent Scotland could advance SNP MSP Kenny Gibson first stuttered and then at second attempt offered as a contribution, the abolition of the bedroom tax. Then it was Labour MSP Ken Macintosh’s chance to show his mettle on social justice and what his party

Continue Reading Can Scottish politicians understand that social justice is about everyone?

Nigel Farage, the Scottish Debate and the Future of Europe

May 20, 2013
Nigel Farage, the Scottish Debate and the Future of Europe Gerry Hassan Open Democracy, May 19th 2013 This is an age of uncertainty, crisis and doubt. The UK is experiencing multiple crises: political, constitutional and economic, of the UK in Europe and of Europe itself as an idea and project. And underneath all of this is a deep-seated Western fear, of loss of confidence in Western modernity and anxiety about the future. The lack of sureness now being displayed in Britain’s political elites is one manifestation, as is the rise of Nigel Farage’s UKIP. The Westminster village has been

Continue Reading Nigel Farage, the Scottish Debate and the Future of Europe

Who Speaks for Scotland and Where are the Empathy Makers?

May 12, 2013
Who Speaks for Scotland and Where are the Empathy Makers? Gerry Hassan The Scotsman, May 11th 2013 These are baffling times – of big issues and challenges, but of a politics and political conversations which are increasingly problematic, not just in Scotland but across much of the world. How many times have we been told that the independence debate is a ‘once in a lifetime opportunity’ or ‘a historic moment’? Funny that, because it doesn’t feel like that too many people outside the ‘bubble Scotland’ that lives and breathes politics. There have been comedy wars, twitter spats, stupid interventions, and

Continue Reading Who Speaks for Scotland and Where are the Empathy Makers?

What Difference Does It Make? Making Explicit the Change of Independence

May 5, 2013
What Difference Does It Make? Making Explicit the Change of Independence Gerry Hassan The Scotsman, May 4th 2013 It has been another fast-moving week in Scotland’s constitutional conversation even leaving the comedy controversies aside. There was Denis Canavan, chair of ‘Yes Scotland’, distancing himself from SNP policy in suggesting Scotland that should have its own currency; while the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee made the startling observation that independence will involve shaking things up for the UK. Then there was Alex Salmond’s announcement that an independent Scotland would not have a central bank. This is part of the

Continue Reading What Difference Does It Make? Making Explicit the Change of Independence

Seven Suggestions for Scottish Labour to be the Party of Change

April 21, 2013
Seven Suggestions for Scottish Labour to be the Party of Change Gerry Hassan The Scotsman, April 20th 2013 It seems to be the age of seven questions as Tony Blair once again acts as an uncomfortable sage for Labour and Ed Miliband. With Labour meeting in Inverness this weekend and the party’s Devolution Commission interim report out, it is time for Scottish Labour to assess where it is and what it needs to do to change and to start shaping the political weather. Here then are my seven observations and suggestions for you Johann: 1. Careless Talk Costs Political Lives

Continue Reading Seven Suggestions for Scottish Labour to be the Party of Change

On Living in an Old Country: The Power of the Past after Thatcher

April 15, 2013
On Living in an Old Country: The Power of the Past after Thatcher Gerry Hassan The Scotsman, April 15th 2013 The last week has effectively been an elegy on Britain’s recent past and present rolled into one. This is not just about Thatcher, but the numerous references to the Churchill and Attlee funerals and how we marked these past titans. Is this who we really were, we ask with curiosity? Are we still that same people who dreamed dreams, stood alone against the Nazis, and built a welfare state, we ask, with a hint of anxiety? Britain seems increasingly a

Continue Reading On Living in an Old Country: The Power of the Past after Thatcher

Games with Shadows: Living in Thatcher’s Scotland

April 10, 2013
Games with Shadows: Living in Thatcher’s Scotland Gerry Hassan Open Democracy, April 10th 2013 We live in Thatcher’s Britain, yet that statement is obvious, contentious and deeply divisive. And this is all the more true of Thatcher north of the border. Thatcher is simultaneously both history and present day. You can hear this in the differing accounts on TV and radio; with conservative figures claiming she remade the modern world from knocking down the Berlin Wall and freeing Eastern Europe, to preventing a future ‘socialist Britain’; while elements of the left wail in pain and agony at how events have

Continue Reading Games with Shadows: Living in Thatcher’s Scotland

< Older Entries
Newer Entries >

Primary Sidebar

categories

  • Blog
  • Events
  • Futures Thinking
  • International Conversations
  • Longer Essays
  • Short Essays
  • What Gerry's groovin' to
  • What Gerry's reading
FacebookTwitter

featured publication

Scotland Rising: The Case for Independence

Click here to buy Gerry’s latest book.

what Gerry’s groovin’ to

My Music Albums of the Year

January 2, 2025

what Gerry’s reading

Books of the Year: Politics, History, Culture and Ideas

December 26, 2024

tags

Scottish politics | Scottish Independence | Scottish Review | British politics | The Scotsman | Scottish Nationalists | Scottish Nationalism | Open Democracy | Nicola Sturgeon | Scottish Labour Party | Sunday National | Scottish society | The British State | Sunday Mail | Brexit | Scottish National Party | Boris Johnson | Social Democracy | British Labour Party | Conservative Party | Bella Caledonia | Alex Salmond | Jeremy Corbyn | Scottish Parliament | Popular Culture | David Cameron | The National | Scottish Independence Referendum | British Conservatives | Labour Party | Scottish Media | British Nationalism | Social Justice | SNP | British Society | Scottish Unionism | The Future of the Left | Scottish Men | 2021 Scottish Parliament elections | Scottish Culture

Categories

Footer

about Gerry

Gerry Hassan is a writer, commentator and thinker about Scotland, the UK, politics and ideas.

More >

recent

  • Lonely at the Top: Sturgeon, Leadership and Regrets: Review of Nicola Sturgeon, Frankly, Macmillan £28.
  • Dreaming of Post-War Scotland: How do we tell the full complex stories of ourselves?
  • Scotland and Independence need a new approach and agenda

search

FacebookTwitter

Terms of Use | Privacy Statement
Copyright © Gerry Hassan - writing, research, policy and ideas. All Rights Reserved.
Illustration and website design by Infinite Eye