Last Monday I saw something I didn’t ever think I’d see. In Dundee, I saw people queuing up – and it wasn’t a short queue, it was a long queue – to register to vote … almost reminiscent of scenes in South Africa from 20 years ago when people queued up to vote in the first free election.

– Alex Salmond

 

For all his undoubted talents and qualities, Alex Salmond is no historian. If he were, perhaps he would be more respectful of the inequity and barbarity suffered by millions of South Africans whose government inflicted upon them white supremacist rule.

This criminal lack of perspective, one that equates the institutions of modern Britain, however imperfect, with those of racial domination, is part of a wider pathology that characterises Scotland’s present and historical relationship with the rest of the United Kingdom as one of utter servitude.

Such an interpretation pays no attention to the prominent role played by Scots in the imperial project, also ignoring the predominance of Scottish intellectuals and politicians in shaping, and running, Britain’s political and economic institutions over the last two centuries.

Unsurprisingly, this narrative conveniently also ignores the very existence of that institution over which Mr Salmond exercises supreme authority, the Scottish government.

And here in a nutshell is the single biggest deceit of the Scottish National party campaign, in that a campaign that portrays itself as anti-establishment is being run by members of that very same establishment.

If your own independence white paper really only contains one redistributive tax policy and a corporation tax cut which rewards big companies, you are not running against the establishment, you are running for it.

And if your own members of parliament in Westminster cannot bother to turn up to vote against a tax as cruel and unfair as the bedroom tax, then you are not anti-establishment insurgents, but its apologists.

The support of the world’s most powerful media mogul, Rupert Murdoch, someone Salmond has courted in secret and praised as a ‘remarkable man’, should perhaps serve as another reliable indicator of where the SNP’s true priorities and allegiances lie.

Equating the independence campaign with the struggle against apartheid in South Africa is either delusional, or more likely another indication that Salmond is willing to do or say anything to achieve his aim of separation.

In an unguarded moment, Salmond once admitted that to him the ends justified the means. He should not, however, diminish the suffering of the South African people by using such grotesque and inaccurate comparisons.

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George Foulkes is a member of the House of Lords. He tweets @GeorgeFoulkes.

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Photo: Ewan McIntosh