Is there anything as funny as a person walking into a plate glass door? Clunk. As we laugh, we also wince. That has to hurt.
The picture is less amusing when applied to Britain’s exit from the EU.
Brexit has not brought benefits to Britain, says the public accounts committee. In fact, it has increased the burden on businesses with more red tape and delays.
If none of that sounds funny, you are right. Although it might raise a smirk on hearing that Jacob Rees Mogg has been appointed to the cabinet to hurry things along. When he walks into doors, he blames the footman.
This tendency for high promises and long disappointments when it comes to constitutional change is shared across the UK.
But this has yet to temper the SNP’s own act of political mis-selling.
This too can only lead to regret when people realise the bus has gone, its slogans undelivered.
SNP leaders’ empty promises on pensions
The SNP’s leader Nicola sturgeon and Westminster leader Ian Blackford were caught hawking a dodgy pension policy last week.
The pair claimed the UK would pay state pensions to Scots after Indy, since workers had contributed to National Insurance.
The example given to back this up was that of a Brit retiring to France, who still collected a UK pension.
No doubt loyalists will dogmatically assert this to be true, but the rest of the nation should be excused having to listen.
Fantasy economics from the SNP. Pensions will be Scotland’s responsibility if we are an independent country and SNP have no idea how they will pay for it. https://t.co/dv7Y6gSFR1
— Jackie Baillie (@jackiebmsp) February 6, 2022
There is no National Insurance pot of savings, no legal contract between the Treasury and citizens and finally, no chance of this happening.
The suggestion had the strange effect of forcing commentators to explain what independence means to the SNP.
In the event of Scots voting yes, the existing UK will cease to exist.
It will have no obligations to Scotland beyond international precedent and its own choices.
As for Scotland, isn’t the point of independence, according to the SNP, that it controls the levers?
That’s with the exception of state pensions, apparently.
Why no referendum on EU membership?
No sooner had Sturgeon and Blackford rubbed their noses and tried to regain personal dignity than the FM bumped into another glass door.
You will know she thinks it is abhorrent for arrogant leaders to deny referenda to the people.
It now turns out she is that kind of leader.
Johnson not granting Indyref2 is bad, but she will not grant a referendum on rejoining the EU.
Sturgeon asserts that choosing independence and applying to Brussels is a one-vote deal.
She says there will be no ballot in an independent Scotland getting back into the continental trade bloc.
It is devious position.
A blatant contradiction to resolve her own problems with the SNP’s ludicrously over-promised Indy prospectus.
A shameless trick.
What it would mean is that Indyref2 would become a debate about three things. Scotland’s possible future, the credibility of the SNP’s promises surviving negotiation with London and the merits of EU membership.
It may appear as if independence and EU membership went together last time, but the 2014 question did not mention Europe.
Sturgeon is saying the next question will link the two things.
Devo max re-framed as independence
Which takes us to the deeper truth.
On pensions, the SNP leadership are essentially describing a devo max policy.
This is because they accept an independent Scotland could not afford all the existing provisions of the British state.
Given that is their policy direction, it suggests the SNP leadership is managing expectations.
It is trying to frame devo max as independence.
The telling detail is Sturgeon’s strange conviction she has some kind negotiating strength with the UK after an independence vote.
Scotland will have legally and democratically chosen to be an autonomous state, but that’s the limit of the vote.
Yet here she implies she’s willing to trade things with London to get other things she wants.
Similarly, by insisting Indyref2 is a buy one, get one free vote, she makes it even less likely Westminster will ever grant one.
For a start, the Electoral Commission would never allow it on the grounds of confusion.
The questions are: what is she prepared to trade and why has she made getting Indyref2 even harder?
SNP are trying to save face on independence
This is a cabal of politicians who have finally come to realise their mistake.
In over selling independence, they created a promise that could never be delivered.
More importantly, they came to see they don’t actually want an independent Scotland if it imperils things they like, such as stable pensions.
The honest path to independence involves some tough years and lots of radical decisions about how to structure the state so it is more effective at less cost.
But the SNP leadership are not radicals. They are old fashioned Tories.
These are people walking into doors for deliberate effect.
They want to appear as if they are striving for independence while making human mistakes, when in fact they are retreating from independence and gearing up for a face-saving compromise.
It’s funny, to a point, but it’s also shameful.