Indy Debate with Unison
Saturday, 9 March 2013
Full text of my speech to the AGM of Unison Highland Branch this morning, on behalf of Better Together. With acknowedgements to Douglas Alexander MP for the inspiration!
Good morning.
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak to you on
behalf of Better Together
You will probably be expecting a well-rehearsed list of scare
stories about independence.
Fears about access to NHS specialists, joining the Euro, Bank
of England control, can we afford our pensions?
What happens when the oil runs out?
As even John Swinney is now asking.
Well I'm not going to do any of that.
I'm going to talk about my vision for Scotland and why I
think we really will be Better Together.
I'm going to make the case for why staying in the UK will
better deal with the big issues that are important to the Labour and Trade
Union movement.
I’d like to start by taking Nicola Sturgeon’s advice.
I’d like to start by taking Nicola Sturgeon’s advice.
In her speech in December last year, the Deputy First
Minister said this:
“I ask you, as you make up your minds over these next two years, to
base your decision not on how Scottish or British you feel, but on what kind of
country you want Scotland to be and how best you think that can be achieved.”
Well I believe the kind of country I want Scotland to be is
best delivered by progressive politics based on fairness, equal opportunity and
social justice.
A Scotland with its own distinct political and economic
identity but which is part of a socially progressive United Kingdom which
shares those values.
Because we should not confuse the arguments of nationalism with
those for advancing social justice.
We live in an unfair society right now as the Tory & LibDem
Coalition shrinks the economy, cutting jobs, benefits and services for the
poorest whilst protecting their rich friends.
But the great advances that were struggled for and secured by
working people across the UK – the Welfare State, Trades Union Rights, Equal
Pay, a National Minimum Wage - were secured by the votes of working people in
Cardiff, Liverpool and Newcastle, just as surely as people in Dundee, Inverness
or Glasgow.
It was the votes of Yorkshire miners and Lancashire
mill workers which helped deliver a National Health Service, not Edinburgh
consultants, Fife Farmers or Glasgow captains of industry.
Socialism doesn’t stop at a border.
We need to fight together to create the UK society we
want.
Better together means social justice is not just an
ideal for Scotland but is a statement of solidarity and connectedness with our comrades
and fellow workers across the UK.
We must maintain a distinctively Scottish view on public services regardless of who is in power at Westminster.
We must maintain a distinctively Scottish view on public services regardless of who is in power at Westminster.
The NHS has been much safer in the SNP’s hands than the
Coalitions.
We need to get away from the neo con view that the private
sector is always best, that local government is just an expensive bureaucracy.
That decent public services are a burden on the state rather
than a measure of the health of our society.
At the risk of arguing the case for small independent
nations, Norway, Denmark and other European countries manage to run social
democratic economies with high quality public service, low unemployment and
decent workers’ rights.
Paid for by higher taxes.
So can we, but we need to argue that case.
And we need to win that argument TOGETHER or the banks, the tax avoiders and the big corporates will pick us off just as they have done with the other “arc of prosperity” countries.
And we need to win that argument TOGETHER or the banks, the tax avoiders and the big corporates will pick us off just as they have done with the other “arc of prosperity” countries.
And we don’t need to look far to see how badly wrong things
can go in a small independent country.
From the early 1990s, the combination of the Celtic Tiger
phenomenon and Trade Union engagement in the Social Partnership Agreement
worked to drive up real wages in Ireland, especially in the public sector. By 1999 the country attracted up to one quarter of all US direct investment for the EU with a total of over 1,000 multinationals employing over 100,000 people in electronics, software and pharmaceuticals.
Much of that investment, however, came at a cost of
sweet-heart non-union deals to attract the big corporates.
The IFSC was in effect a “free port” for big capital.
When the crunch came, ordinary working people paid the
price. Unions were undermined and
isolated.
Would an independent Scotland have to go down the same route
of low taxes and low regulation to attract big business?
Is that what the business backers behind the SNP are really looking
forward to?
Competing with our comrades in the rest of the UK for
investment, in a race to the bottom driven by the big corporates?
That’s not the Scotland I want to live in.
I want to live in a Scotland where….
We can share the costs of developing Green energy across the
rich UK tax-base not just those in Scotland.
We can ensure a level playing field for jobs and the minimum
wage which does not allow workers in one part of the country to be exploited by
another.
We can devote much bigger resources to engineering and
medical research in centres of excellence right across the country instead of
having to fund it ourselves.
It won’t just happen; we will all need to work hard to elect
governments in Westminster and Holyrood which share those ideals.
Tory government is not inevitable.
But a free market UK economy will drag down an independent
Scotland.
A rightward drifting Tory party in England needs to be
defeated by a Labour government not given its head by Scotland walking away.
We must fight for decent public services and the kind of NHS
we all believe in right across the UK and not abandon working people in other
parts of the UK to the worst of Tory free market dogma.
Scotland can prosper as a social, economic and politically
devolved country…..
.. making its own choices about what works for us…
…… but able to flex its economic power as part of a joined up
UK which shares the same core values.
That’s why we are Better Together.
Thank you.
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