Thursday, 18 September 2014
Scottish independence: Five reasons Salmond is secretly hoping for a 'No' vote, The Independent
He
has made realising the dream of an independent Scotland his life’s work. But as
the nitty-gritty issues behind that dream have been debated endlessly over
recent months deep down is the leader of the ‘yes’ campaign is having second
thoughts? Here are five things that maybe keeping Alex Salmond up at night, and
why he may be secretly praying his countrymen vote No tomorrow.
1)
He’s
taking a huge gamble on oil. All of the Yes Campaign’s budgeting for the future
depends on the ability to raise a certain amount of revenue from North Sea Oil.
But that is horribly unpredictable. All of the published predictions – both
optimistic and pessimist are just that: predictions. It’s a pretty scary thing
to base the future of an independent country on.
How Alex Salmond cheered on his pal Fred the Shred as he ruined Royal Bank of Scotland , Daily Mail
Alex Salmond blithely declares that an independent Scotland would be a land of milk and honey in which business magically flourishes, the economy will outgrow England’s and taxes will be slashed.
This crazily unrealistic and deeply irresponsible prospectus is very reminiscent of another Scot, whose arrogance and monumental incompetence cost British taxpayers £45 billion when they had to bail out the Royal Bank of Scotland, of which he had been boss.
Step forward Fred ‘The Shred’ Goodwin, who walked away from the wreckage of the once-proud institution with a £693,000-a-year, index-linked pension. It was his management of the Edinburgh-based bank that helped to trigger the worst recession since World War II — the financial crash in 2008.
Read more here:
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The man determined to shatter the UK: He is a gambler and former Maoist rabble-rouser who favoured direct action. Whatever else Salmond might lack, it is not self-belief . Daily Mail
Today Alex Salmond could preside over greatest upheaval in 300 years
It
is climax of long journey for boy raised on Linlithgow council estate
He
was key member of far-left faction of SNP and was kicked out of party
But
slow rise has continued since 1987 when he was elected as an MP
Employees
describe him as quick to anger, a
bully - and a gifted orator
Few people noticed the attractive,
middle-aged woman nervously watching the First Minister from the spin room on
the night of his second debate with Alistair Darling.
Elegant and discreet, with a bright
smile and an easy manner, Claire Howell has got closer to Alex Salmond in these
last few months than most do in a lifetime.
She is his longstanding ‘happiness
coach’, an enthusiastic ray of sunshine brought on board by the SNP to re-brand
Team Salmond as friendly, approachable and electable.
In the run-up to the debate she had
often been by his side, sitting in on high strategy Yes meetings and attending
a Business for Scotland dinner at the Glasgow Marriott where Mr Salmond was the
guest of honour.
But on that August night, under the hot lights of Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Mr Salmond went off script.
Gone were the conciliatory gestures,
the smiles and the softer language. Instead, Salmond the bruiser was back – his
grin crumpling into a grimace, his hand a resolute fist, his manner loud and
hectoring.
Read more here:
Wednesday, 17 September 2014
how to make a paper airplane that flies far and straight step by step
Alex Salmond's Build's his own airforce
Triple blow for Salmond – on finance, the EU and the NHS, Daily Express
ALEX
Salmond was last night accused of trying to hoodwink Scots as his campaign to
break up Britain suffered a series of damaging blows.
Critics
said the SNP leader’s case for separation had stalled with just hours left
until votes are cast in tomorrow’s referendum.
It
came after a damning report warned an independent Scotland would collapse
within a year if it kept the pound and walked away from its share of the UK’s national debt.
Respected
think-tank the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) said
that reneging would freeze the country out of the EU and international markets,
triggering “unprecedented austerity”. Meanwhile, the Spanish government
directly contradicted Mr Salmond’s claims by warning a breakaway country would
be forced to wait at least five years to join the EU and then sign up to the
euro.
And
in a further blow to the First Minister a leaked report revealed hospitals
faced a funding black hole of up to £450million in a separate nation despite
his claims only a Yes vote can save the NHS.
Scottish
Lib Dem leader Willie Rennie MSP said: “Today the SNP’s three main arguments on
the NHS, EU and sterlingisation fell from under them.
“With
only hours until the crucial vote, Alex Salmond has been caught out trying to
hoodwink the people of Scotland.”
Independence
referendum: Nationalism's aim was to divide us from England but it's split us
from ourselves
Gordon Brown roars into life: On the eve of historic vote, ex-PM gives the speech of the campaign so why wasn't he in charge of the No campaign from the beginning? Daily Mail
Former
Prime Minister launches most passionate defence of the union yet
Destroys
Alex Salmond's attempt to 'own' Scotland as a country
Brown
bellows: 'What we created together, let no nationalist split asunder'
Extraordinary
speech reignites talk that he should have led No campaign
Poll shows 60% of Scots think Darling has done
badly, but Brown 50%
Gordon Brown today delivered the speech of the referendum campaign, urging voters to have the 'confidence' to say No to independence.
Gordon Brown today delivered the speech of the referendum campaign, urging voters to have the 'confidence' to say No to independence.
The former Prime Minister tore into Alex Salmond, insisting
Scotland does not belong to him or any other politician, declaring: 'Scotland
belongs to all of us.'
Speaking without notes, he urged anyone with doubts about
the risks of separation to vote No to save the Union, adding: 'What we created
together, let no nationalist split asunder.'
The speech could become seen as one of the defining moments
of the campaign, and reignite questions about whether Mr Brown should have
fronted the No campaign from the start.
Mr Brown addressed hundreds of UK supporters at a community centre in Glasgow, standing shoulder to shoulder with his former Chancellor Alistair Darling, leader of the Better Together campaign, and Scottish leaders from Labour, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.
In a direct challenge to Mr Salmond's claim that to vote Yes
is the patriotic thing to do, Mr Brown said: 'Tell the Nationalists, it’s not
their flag, their culture, their country or their streets.
'Tell them it’s everyone’s flag, everyone’s culture,
everyone’s country and everyone’s streets.
'And tell them that our patriotic vision is bigger than
nationalism; we want Scotland not leaving the UK, but leading the UK, and
through leading the UK, leading in the world.'
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