Saturday, November 22, 2025

My response to Chris McEleny's allegation that I defamed him in reference to his role in the 2023 Alba vote-rigging scandal (the short answer is: no I didn't)

I received an unsolicited email out of the blue a few hours ago from the Alba Party's disgraced former General Secretary, Chris McEleny, who was sacked and then expelled from the party due to his "gross misconduct".  Any email from him is the marker of a veritable red letter day, because as long-term readers of the blog will recall, I made umpteen efforts to obtain information and clarification from him during the sham "disciplinary" process against me in late 2024, but with one exception he simply ignored my emails.  Many other people had a similar experience.  It's lovely to see that he's belatedly located the "send" button in his email account.

The purpose of his message was to accuse me of defaming him in one specific sentence of my blogpost from Thursday night, entitled 'Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh: the ego has landed', and to demand that I delete the sentence.  As the name implies, the post is in fact primarily about Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh's role in the death of the Alba Party, not about McEleny's role, and indeed it only mentions McEleny once in passing.  However, he is claiming that I was factually inaccurate and defamatory when I said that Alex Salmond had involved him in the rigging of the 2023 Alba internal elections in order to ensure that Jacqueline Bijster and Denise Findlay, the rightful winners of the Membership Support Convener election and Organisation Convener election respectively, were not allowed to take office (or rather to retain office, because they were both incumbents).  There is no direct legal threat made against me, but presumably I'm supposed to infer that it's there by implication.

My view is that McEleny is trying it on here, and is basing his allegation of defamation on an unrealistically narrow definition of what the term "election-rigging" means.  That won't wash, because in numerous blogposts over the last year I have actually defined specifically what the nature of the rigging of the 2023 Alba internal elections was.  It did not involve literal falsification of election results (as far as we know, anyway - there have been vague rumours of falsification but nothing has ever been established).  What actually happened fell into the following three broad categories:

1) The 'pay-per-vote' system for electing ordinary members of Alba's NEC was exploited by a wealthy individual, who bulk-purchased dozens of votes which were effectively cast as a bloc.  The main purpose was to ensure that Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh comfortably topped the poll in the female ballot, and thus to make it less likely that any questions would be raised about her moral right to remain as Party Chair.  However, the tactic went badly wrong because the Tasmina voters also voted as a bloc for the little-known Abdul Majid, who by all accounts topped the male ballot by such an implausibly huge margin that if the results had been published, it would have been blindingly obvious that the process had been hopelessly tainted.  That was why the results were controversially kept secret, and why a variety of contradictory and unconvincing excuses were given for that decision (including by McEleny himself).

2) The Alba membership's decision to re-elect Denise Findlay and Jacqueline Bijster was thwarted by means of a cynical two-step plan.  Firstly the original results were nullified just before they were due to be announced, with an extremely elaborate and convoluted cover story put forward by Alex Salmond at the party conference to attempt to justify the voiding of elections that had been properly-conducted and fairly won.  Secondly, intolerable pressure was then to be put on the winning candidates to 'voluntarily' withdraw from the reruns of the elections, which it was obvious they were likely to win again.  As it turned out, this pressure was only necessary in the case of Ms Findlay, because Ms Bijster withdrew in disgust before any pressure had been really applied.  

3) Ms Bijster's name was unilaterally removed (according to her supporters by McEleny) from the list of candidates for female ordinary members of the NEC, even though she had only withdrawn from the rerun of the Membership Support Convener election and thus remained a properly-nominated candidate for the NEC.

In his email to me, McEleny has effectively disputed the third category by arguing that Ms Bijster was no longer eligible to stand because she had by then "publicly resigned from the party".  I very much doubt if that's true - it's certainly possible she was certified as having publicly resigned, but that's not the same thing as an actual public resignation, as numerous other victims of the McEleny Purges can readily testify.  However, that's an irrelevant point in this particular instance, because the sentence McEleny is complaining about does not relate to that part of the election-rigging.

The nub of the issue is whether McEleny played a significant role in thwarting the democratic decision of Alba members to re-elect Ms Bijster and Ms Findlay to their office bearer roles, and in spite of his protestations, the evidence confirms that he did.  He claims in his email that Alex Salmond made the decision to nullify the election results in agreement with the Party Chair (Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh) and the Depute Leader (Kenny MacAskill).  But that does not even tally with what Alex Salmond himself said in his announcement to conference at the time, when he stressed he had made the decision "after consultation with the General Secretary", ie. with McEleny.  The Party Chair and Depute Leader were not even mentioned.  (I have a transcript of the Salmond speech, before anyone tries to quibble.)

Furthermore, Mr Salmond did not in fact have the constitutional power to nullify the election, which under the party's rules was being administered by McEleny.  It would therefore have been impossible for Mr Salmond to improperly usurp McEleny's role in this way without McEleny's consent.  We can only speculate as to whether that consent was given willingly or grudgingly, but we know it was given because the only real alternatives to consent were for McEleny to either block Mr Salmond's decision, or to resign as General Secretary and make clear that his position had been left untenable by the leader's actions.  He did not take either course.  

Incidentally, there was an Alice Through The Looking Glass moment during the review of Alba's constitution in early 2024, of which I was a part.  It was suggested that we should probably change the constitution to allow the party leader to do things like unilaterally nullify internal elections, because Mr Salmond had made clear through his actions that he intended to do stuff like that, and it was a great pity he'd had to breach the constitution to do it!  None of the leadership loyalists - not Daniel Jack, not Suzanne Blackley, not Robert Slavin, not Shannon Donoghue, not Chris Cullen - disputed the fact that Mr Salmond had acted outside his constitutional powers, which by definition means that McEleny had permitted him to do so.

As far as the improper pressure on Denise Findlay to withdraw from the rerun of the election is concerned, McEleny openly admits in his email that this happened, but claims that he was not directly involved.  He portrays himself as having done nothing more than passively "listened in to the call" in which she was told to withdraw.  It's becoming something of a pattern for McEleny to try to get off the hook by saying "nothing to do with me, guv, I was just sitting there at the time, that's all".  It's amazing how often he just happened to be sitting there when these dreadful things were done.  However, it doesn't strike me as hugely important whether he's being honest about his passivity or not, because his key involvement in the voiding of a properly-conducted election is sufficient to demonstrate that the claim I made in Thursday's blogpost was true.

Nevertheless, McEleny has a long track-record of litigiousness, and defamation law in this country is known to often work unfairly against those who tell the truth but who don't have fabulous monetary resources to call upon.  I've therefore spent the last few hours considering carefully whether or not I should take any precautionary action simply to protect myself.  What I've decided to do is amend the wording of the sentence McEleny has complained about, not to change its meaning in any way, which was entirely accurate, but simply to introduce greater precision and to make clearer what is meant by election-rigging and by McEleny's own role in it.  I don't think he's going to be any happier with the new version, but that's not of any great interest to me - all I care about is making sure that nothing can be 'creatively misconstrued' and that I'm being accurate in the clearest possible manner.

I'd actually like to finish by offering McEleny some free advice, which of course he'll ignore.  I'm not sure he realises just how obviously he telegraphs his insincerity at times, and just how much of a handicap that is to going to be to his political ambitions, regardless of which party he ends up in.  Take for example the quote he gave to newspapers a couple of weeks ago when the Electoral Commission forcibly removed him as Alba's registered Nominating Officer.  He took his trademark claims of passivity to a new extreme by portraying himself as a private citizen, an 'umble electrician who was just minding his own business and who was being inexplicably picked on by the Alba leadership.  He claimed to be delighted to have been relieved of his burdensome duties as Nominating Officer, and that he had wanted to relinquish them voluntarily but had been totally unable to because Alba had failed to provide him with the paperwork in the required manner.  

Pretty much all of that is the polar opposite of the truth.  There's no doubt that he desperately wanted to remain Nominating Officer (even if we don't know exactly what he planned to do with the powers of that role) and will have been gutted when that wheeze unexpectedly didn't work out.  He is massively overestimating the stupidity of his fellow human beings if he thinks they can't see straight through him, but apparently that's exactly what he thinks.

*  *  *

Now be honest, Stew, do you REALLY think there's the remotest chance of that happening?  This looks set to be your worst prediction since the celebrated "I'm calling it now, Humza has lost" in early 2023.  And the competition is stiff.

*  *  *

Friday, November 21, 2025

BREAKING: Stew ducks the debate - it turns out he's NOT a Charlie Kirk type after all and doesn't believe in debating his political opponents - his claim after Kirk's death to have never run away from a debate in his time as a blogger now lies in tatters - WELL THAT'S A SURPRISE NONE OF US SAW THAT COMING DID WE

After issuing my video debate challenge to controversial blogger Stuart "Stew" Campbell, I said this: 

"Please do let me know your thrilling excuses for ducking / ignoring this debate challenge at your earliest convenience."

It turns out I didn't have long to wait.

Yup, my bingo card is more or less full already.  "Crazy", "obsessed" (thanks for the "man"!), "flat-out lies" (yeah, what are those flat-out lies specifically, Stew?), "drive traffic", "122 articles", "basically Hitler", etc, etc.  Disappointed we didn't get a "deranged" or a "demented" or a "lunatic", but we can't have everything.

Not to worry, Stew, I'll use the extra time for Christmas shopping instead.  But let no-one say I didn't make the offer or that I wasn't serious about seeing it through.  And it's had the highly useful effect of forcing you to tacitly admit to your readers that you are not in fact a Charlie Kirk type, and that you do not in fact believe in open debate with your political opponents - something that I suspect you would have much preferred not to concede, however indirectly.  We'll just have to call you Rev "No Debate" Stew from now on.

The offer, needless to say, remains open.  If you ever change your mind and locate a spine, you know where to find me.

And hey, Stoo, make mine a double.  #BothVotesSNP

A challenge to Stew: you claim to be a debate-loving Charlie Kirk type, so it's time to put up or shut up. It's time for a debate on video. No more excuses: let's set a time, agree on a neutral moderator if required (and I do mean neutral, not Andy Ellis) and let's get this done.

Wow.  Where to begin with this little lot?  First of all, Stew, you'll have to forgive me for neither knowing nor caring what "this Bindel-Webberley thing" is when it's at home, although I don't suppose any of us are going to faint with amazement to learn that it's got something to do with the trans issue, the one and only subject that you have obsessed about twenty-four hours a day for years on end.

Secondly, and I don't know how to break the news to you, but "Both Votes SNP" is not some kind of metaphysical concept like gender ideology that you can claim doesn't exist in the real world.  Nor can it be proved or disproved by science.  It's simply an option that voters can freely exercise in an election, whether you like it or not.  That's kind of the nature of democracy - you can scream "SNP BAAAAAD" and "NO VOTES SNP" at voters as much as you like, but it's still their prerogative to say "actually we have minds of our own and we'll choose how to vote for ourselves".  Almost certainly hundreds of thousands of people will choose the Both Votes SNP option next May.  I mean, if you really want to, you can channel your inner Tom Baker and chant "I DENY THIS REALITY" throughout election day, but it'll still be happening just the same.

Thirdly, you're probably not ideally placed to brand other people's arguments as "intrinsically nonsensical" or "obfuscatory" given that your own critique of Both Votes SNP, such as it was, evolved in the following manner over the space of just a few months:

* First you claimed there was "zero chance, none" of pro-independence parties winning a majority of seats at next year's Holyrood election, and therefore it was pointless to vote SNP on the list for that reason.

* Then you dramatically U-turned and said that not only was there a 100% chance that pro-independence parties would win an overall majority of seats, but that the SNP had a 100% chance of winning a majority on their own, and that they even had a 100% chance of winning that majority on constituency seats alone - ie. that they were certain to win at least 65 of the 73 constituency seats.  Therefore, you claimed people should vote tactically for non-SNP parties on the list, because the SNP were certain to win so many constituency seats that they couldn't possibly win any list seats at all, and list votes for them would consequently be wasted.

* In a thrilling plot twist that not even Jane Austen could have dreamt up, you then claimed to have never called for tactical voting in the first place, and pretended you had simply been saying that people shouldn't vote for the SNP on either the constituency ballot or the list, because you think they're a rubbish party.  Astonishingly, you also claimed never to have said that the SNP were going to win 65 seats - even though you had supplied actual maps showing the exact 65 you were talking about!

After a rollercoaster ride like that, I'm not even going to try to predict which version we'd be treated to if somebody asks you about the subject this week.

Fourthly, you're self-evidently correct that it would have been foolish to engage me - or anyone else! - in debate on a subject that you're all over the place on, but luckily you're incorrect in your claim that you actually did try to engage.  What you instead did, of course, was launch into an epic multi-tweet monologue and pretend not to notice that I had replied umpteen times to each individual tweet.  After about half an hour of talking pompously to yourself, you then said something like "I realise only I have said anything in this debate so far, so I will now stop and allow you to say something if you wish".  The comic timing was impeccable, I'll give you that, but I'm afraid I can't give you much else.

You then got so frustrated with someone actually replying to you (gosh! the impertinence!) that you then reblocked me, and went full Arnold J Rimmer by getting ChatGPT to declare you the winner of the debate, and - get this - you even published what the AI bot had said in reply to your pleading prompts.  Most people would have stopped themselves before doing that, but the Stew Embarrassment Threshold seems to be somewhat higher than for most mortals.  To demonstrate what you had just done and how you had done it, I invited Grok to give its own verdict on the debate, and it actually provided a remarkably detailed and compelling case for concluding I had won.  You then claimed to think it was hilarious that I had published Grok's analysis, apparently oblivious to the fact that the joke was still on you, and that Grok was simply smoking you a kipper, in anticipation of you being back for breakfast.

I don't think anyone can seriously deny that I've patiently humoured you as you've advanced these excruciatingly bad excuses for panicking and bailing out of the Twitter debate, but I must say that after your two latest tweets my patience on that score is now at an end.  Let me remind you that after Charlie Kirk's murder, you said you were heartbroken.  That startled many of us, because the systematic extermination of hundreds of thousands of innocent Palestinians had left you at best unmoved.  At worst, you were actively angry at the victims of the genocide for allowing themselves to be filmed and thus ill-manneredly distracting you from the vital task of bullying people with gender dysphoria around the clock.  And yet, Kirk's death, just one death, a tiny fraction of the Gaza tragedy, and suddenly there was emotion from you.  You gushed that emotion.  Paragraph after paragraph after paragraph.  What we had all overlooked, of course, was that Kirk was not Palestinian and was therefore an actual human being in your eyes.

What moved you so much about Kirk, you claimed, was that he believed in actual debate with his political opponents, just like you always have, or so you said.  You insisted that you had never run away from a debate in your time as a blogger, except with people who already agreed with you.  Well, I think we've safely established that I do not agree with you about much, so I qualify and it's time for that debate to actually take place.  And this time there must be a format that ensures that you cannot get away with your party trick of pretending not to notice that the person you are debating with has actually replied to you.  It must be, in a nutshell, a video debate.  If you wish, we can have a neutral moderator to keep order and to ensure fairness, although note I do mean neutral and not Andy Ellis.  As Scotland is probably too distant a country for you to realistically travel to, I would suggest doing it by Zoom call, with both of us given permission to record the call, so neither of us can pull a fast one with the editing.

The debate can if you wish touch on the Both Votes SNP issue, although I suspect that part of it won't take very long.  It'll just be a case of me saying "I agree with every word of your blogposts in 2016 explaining why tactical voting on the list doesn't work, and can't work, in the Additional Member System, and as the Additional Member System hasn't changed one iota since 2016, what's your point?"  More interesting topics for the debate, I would suggest, will be your controversial views on the genocide, your provocative wish to eradicate the Gaelic language, and your extraordinary claim on general election day last year that your readers should vote Labour because that would bring us closer to independence.  Perhaps we could have a progress report from you on that one, particularly in view of your tweet the other day mocking Owen Jones for making vaguely supportive noises about Keir Starmer in 2020, long before it became clear what Starmer was like, which strikes me as considerably less embarrassing than actually telling people to vote for Starmer on general election day 2024.

I'd also like to explore with you the interesting football-related metaphor you attempted the other night after Scotland's victory.  You said it showed that you can achieve things in politics if you actually attack rather than shuffle sideways.  But perhaps the correct lesson is that you can win at politics if you don't keep self-harming by shooting at your own goal, by for example constantly telling your readers to vote for unionist parties?  Unless, of course, you've already switched sides and just haven't bothered changing your jersey yet.

Please do let me know your thrilling excuses for ducking / ignoring this debate challenge at your earliest convenience.  You know my email address - it's the same one you sent an almost-certainly illegal unsolicited message to in 2021 calling me a "wretched little c**t", and it's also the same one you cowardly instructed your solicitor David Halliday to send legal threats to 24 hours later.  Looking forward to hearing from you in much happier circumstances, Stew!  

Debate is everything.  Let's do it for Charlie.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh: the ego has landed

If the history books even bother telling the story of how the Alba Party died, their verdict will probably be a paradoxical one: that the party failed because it was fundamentally un-Salmondite in nature.  By "Salmondite" I'm not referring to policy or ideology (although Alba certainly strayed much too far from the common sense centre-left policy profile of the Salmond-era SNP), but to a philosophy of party management.  Nothing better encapsulated how Mr Salmond ran the SNP than the incident in 1995 when a vetting committee of party elders blocked Roseanna Cunningham from standing as the SNP candidate in the Perth & Kinross by-election - a completely indefensible decision given that it was based on an ancient episode in Ms Cunningham's personal life, and given that she had been permitted to stand in the same constituency in the 1992 general election.  Mr Salmond turned on the charm in all directions, ensuring the decision was overturned, while somehow keeping on board (and on message) those who had made the decision and had been hellbent on thwarting Ms Cunningham.  If charm and flattery could be used to keep people of sharply different views and temperaments inside the tent, that always seemed to be Mr Salmond's first recourse, and it usually worked.

In a very small way, I experienced a bit of that myself in the early days of Alba, just after I was elected to the party's NEC.  I had been astonished to see "Barrhead Boy" mounting a soft coup of sorts by repeatedly insisting that Alba had to basically fiddle the franchise for any future indyref by excluding many English-born residents of Scotland from the voters' roll - an idea that was totally irreconcilable with the values of the Salmond-era SNP, and that I had naively assumed would also be irreconcilable with the values of Alba.  But Mr Salmond very noticeably failed to shut Barrhead Boy down, probably because he was fretting about alienating the aficionados of "Prism", most of whom were Alba people at the time (how times change).  Instead his main priority was to stop Barrhead Boy and myself disagreeing about the subject in public.  So of course we both received phone calls.  I can only tell you for sure about the content of my own call, but it was 0.1% menace and 99.9% charm.  He said he totally agreed with me about the whole thing, and that Barrhead Boy was bang out of order.  He said that no party led by him would ever support anything other than a civic franchise for a future indyref, meaning that he would never support the exclusion of English people.  But he added that he needed space to sort things out with Barrhead Boy quietly and away from the public gaze.  At the end of the call, he asked me rather beseechingly whether I would be prepared to trust him to do that.  It's very hard to say "no" in response to a question like that, and of course I did not say no.

My guess is that Barrhead Boy's call will have been just as charm-heavy but with very different content.  Mr Salmond probably will have assured Barrhead Boy that he was going to "sort me out" but that he needed space to do it away from the public gaze.  "Will you trust me to do that, Roddy?" he would have beseechingly asked, and Barrhead Boy would have replied of course, Alex, yes of course I trust you.  And just like me, Barrhead Boy immediately and magically became much more muted in his public comments.

Charm works.  It really does.  So where the hell did it disappear to?  When Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh delivered her outrageous, jealousy-fuelled "either they go or I go" demand to Mr Salmond in the summer of 2023 about Alba's popular Organisation Convener, Denise Findlay, and the Membership Support Convener Jacqueline Bijster, why didn't he do what he'd done in 1995?  In other words, why didn't he ensure that Ms Findlay and Ms Bijster stayed in harness while using his charm to mollify Tyrannical Tas?  Why did he instead do the complete opposite and essentially sign Alba's death warrant by instructing Chris McEleny, who was administering the party's internal elections, to allow that role to be unconstitutionally usurped so that the election process could be rigged and the Alba membership's decision to re-elect Ms Findlay and Ms Bijster could be thwarted by any means necessary?

Again, in a smaller way, I had direct experience of this total sea-change in Mr Salmond's approach to party management.  When I stood up to both in-person and online bullying from Shannon Donoghue and Chris Cullen in early-to-mid 2024, and they submitted a malicious complaint about me in response, Mr Salmond did absolutely nothing to try to defuse the situation.  The Salmond of old would at least have attempted to knock heads together, but instead he poured fuel on the fire by breaking off all communication with me and putting his full weight behind a process that he knew would lead to my expulsion - and he did that for exactly the same reason, ie. simply because Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh, who is very close to the Donoghue/Cullen faction (the so-called Corri Nostra), demanded it of him.  Frankly, I regard his decision as a personal betrayal, given that he had gone to considerable lengths to cultivate my support in the months leading up to Alba's creation, and particularly given that I had suffered a significant personal cost as a result of sticking my head above the parapet and backing him in the spring of 2021.  No good deed goes unpunished, as the saying goes.

The bottom line is that Ahmed-Sheikh had some kind of massive hold over him by 2023/24, and he literally seemed to find it impossible to say no to her, even when he knew that what she was asking of him (ie. the vote-rigging to eject Ms Findlay and Ms Bijster) was terribly, terribly wrong.  I've heard a rumour, which has the ring of truth to it, that not long before his death he visited the home of one of the party's main financial backers, looked sadly into his eyes, and said that what had gone wrong with Alba was that "the women fell out".  I'd suggest that's as close as he ever got to admitting to himself or to others that Ahmed-Sheikh was the problem, and that the party had been destroyed by her raging jealousy, her personal vendettas, and her wider egotism.

I've also been told by multiple different sources, indeed there's a near-total consensus on this, that what Alba is really about to Ahmed-Sheikh is personal status.  Being chair of a party with parliamentary representation for four and a half years has allowed her to tour Europe and attend conferences with an impressive-sounding title against her name.  Now that Ash Regan has consigned Alba to fringe status by stripping them of parliamentary representation, things may get trickier for Tas, but she's presumably hoping that the party's connections with the late, great Alex Salmond will keep the invitations coming and allow her to keep rubbing shoulders with wealthy, glamorous, influential people.

Ahmed-Sheikh may be utterly insufferable, but she's no fool, and she can read opinion polls and local by-election results just like the rest of us can.  She knows there isn't a cat in hell's chance that Alba will win even one list seat next May, but she's full-bloodedly selling that false hope to all and sundry to preserve her precious personal status.  Anyone seriously considering voting for Alba needs to ponder on that as a matter of some urgency.  It's one thing if you're casting a positive vote because you think Alba's policy programme is the best, but if you're instead casting an essentially hollow "tactical" vote because you've been cynically hoodwinked into thinking that will somehow increase the number of pro-indy MSPs, then you are being made a schmuck of.  You aren't "Maxing the Yes", you're just maxing Ahmed-Sheikh's access to champagne and sycophancy.

If you're in any doubt as to how Ahmed-Sheikh has poisoned Alba's internal culture, consider what happened at the recent Dundee conference when she publicly treated the former MEP Hugh Kerr like dirt and threatened to eject him from the hall.  He quite naturally decided to preserve his dignity by instead walking out voluntarily, spending a nice day out at the V&A, then defecting to the new Corbyn/Sultana party and writing a lengthy, prominent article for The National that effectively functioned as Alba's obituary.  That chain of events was easily foreseeable, and if the Salmond of old had been around, he would probably have literally intercepted Mr Kerr en route to the V&A to tell him how valued he was and to promise to have a quiet word in the ear of Tas.  Instead, the Alba leadership just seemed to be really rather satisfied that yet another person of substance had left the sinking ship, and Kenny MacAskill (wryly referred to in some quarters as "Cruella's Hostage") later gratuitously directed petty, puerile insults at both Mr Kerr and Craig Murray.  These are actions devoid of all class.  What little remains of Alba in late 2025 is a pale shadow of the Salmond-era SNP, indeed it's a perverted caricature.

UPDATE (Saturday morning): The wording of this blogpost has now been very slightly amended, for reasons you can read about HERE.  

* .* .*

With less than two months of the year left to go, the 2025 Scot Goes Pop fundraiser is still short of its target figure.  If you'd like to help keep the lights on during the several months it will take me to find out whether an alternative funding model is viable (realistically it could be a wait of around four months or more), card donations are welcome HERE.  Or, if you prefer, direct donations can be made via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Many thanks to everyone who has donated so far.

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

18th November 2025: WHAT A NIGHT to be Scottish, as the SNP rack up yet ANOTHER double-digit lead in a YouGov subsample

As you may have seen, The National actually contacted YouGov and asked them for a reaction to my video from Monday, in which I pointed out that they seemed to have suppressed an independence poll in September showing a big three-point surge in the Yes vote.  

In the new video below you can see my rather incredulous reaction to their explanation.  You'll also hear all the details of the latest GB-wide YouGov voting intentions poll, including the results of the Scottish subsample.


* .* .*

With less than two months of the year left to go, the 2025 Scot Goes Pop fundraiser is still short of its target figure.  If you'd like to help keep the lights on during the several months it will take me to find out whether an alternative funding model is viable (realistically it could be a wait of around four months or more), card donations are welcome HERE.  Or, if you prefer, direct donations can be made via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Many thanks to everyone who has donated so far.

Monday, November 17, 2025

Support for independence SURGED in "secret YouGov poll in September" - so why were we kept in the dark?


* .* .*

With less than two months of the year left to go, the 2025 Scot Goes Pop fundraiser is still short of its target figure.  If you'd like to help keep the lights on during the several months it will take me to find out whether an alternative funding model is viable (realistically it could be a wait of around four months or more), card donations are welcome HERE.  Or, if you prefer, direct donations can be made via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Many thanks to everyone who has donated so far.

There is a YES MAJORITY in the average of all Scottish independence polls conducted in 2025 so far


* .* .*

With less than two months of the year left to go, the 2025 Scot Goes Pop fundraiser is still short of its target figure.  If you'd like to help keep the lights on during the several months it will take me to find out whether an alternative funding model is viable (realistically it could be a wait of around four months or more), card donations are welcome HERE.  Or, if you prefer, direct donations can be made via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Many thanks to everyone who has donated so far.

Friday, November 14, 2025

Uncharted territory as party in favour of Scottish independence takes second place in GB-wide poll


* .* .*

With less than two months of the year left to go, the 2025 Scot Goes Pop fundraiser is still short of its target figure.  If you'd like to help keep the lights on during the several months it will take me to find out whether an alternative funding model is viable (realistically it could be a wait of around four months or more), card donations are welcome HERE.  Or, if you prefer, direct donations can be made via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Many thanks to everyone who has donated so far.

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Why independence would save money for HARD-WORKING SCOTTISH TAXPAYERS

I hope you appreciate these, because it took about fifteen attempts before Grok gave me versions with only minimal spelling mistakes.  And yes, I know they're too wordy, but regard them as a work in progress.  I do think we missed a trick in 2014 by not turning the tables on the No campaign about the jaw-dropping wastefulness of British vanity projects that clearly an independent Scotland wouldn't bother to waste even a penny on.




Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Another week, another majestic SNP lead in YouGov's Scottish subsample


* .* .*

With less than two months of the year left to go, the 2025 Scot Goes Pop fundraiser is still short of its target figure.  If you'd like to help keep the lights on during the several months it will take me to find out whether an alternative funding model is viable (realistically it could be a wait of around four months or more), card donations are welcome HERE.  Or, if you prefer, direct donations can be made via PayPal.  My PayPal email address is:  jkellysta@yahoo.co.uk

Many thanks to everyone who has donated so far.