Inquiry promise
- Brian Taylor
- 4 May 07, 04:54 PM
Alex Salmond has said that Labour has lost the moral right to dominate Scotland.
Speaking in Edinburgh, he said that, if given the chance to lead, he would take Scotland forward with humility, in the interests of Scotland.
Mr Salmond also said that - if installed as First Minister - he would immediately announce a judicial inquiry into the voting confusion.
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I'm Brian Taylor, 大象传媒 Scotland's political editor. I'll be blogging the election here. |
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Comments Post your comment
There has to be another election before anyone (including the politicians) can feel any pride in our democracy and themselves.
Mr Salmon must be given credit for capturing 14 seats from the minor parties etc. But he has taken only 4 seats from Labour when Labour are at rock bottom after the disasterous consequences of the Iraq War and its failure to control government spending - and more importantly get value for money in its spending. Moral-Fibre Fatigue has beset Labour as it did the Tories.
However its a bit early to say that he has changed Scottish politics. Rather it is a case of where else do you go once labour has at last had its chance and been tested in office and has thereby evidenced its vulnerability.
Salmond says labour has no moral right to govern scotland .Then he has no moral right to achieve his dream Independence.
I like many others didnt vote for him and will never vote for him.I look foward to his first defeat and his resignation and he goes back to his rich friends.
Salmond says if installed as First Minister he will see to it that his own election is the subject of a judicial inquiry. Is this cause for confidence? Perhaps he will also have himself audited regarding tax payments?
The first electronic vote counting, and as a matter of fact not a single human being has personal knowledge of the count. The computers that malfunctioned are nevertheless trusted to announce "final" numbers. First SNP victory in 50 years. Nothing to look into here, the winners will investigate themselves.
Hey, I'm just an election lawyer from the United States and we've had electronic voting "anomalies" starting in 2000 when Bush was first elected. Over 80% of e-voting is used in the USA now and it is 100% secret vote counting. I should be more familiar with Scotland's political situation, yet I feel confident in guessing that counting the votes in secrecy is as much an affront to democracy in Scotland as it is in the USA or anywhere else.
When voters vote, they are exercising their sovereignty as "masters" to select governmental "servants." There's no basis to hide the count from the citizens/masters, elect a new government that eliminates Labour's lock for the first time in 50 years, and then have the winners investigate themselves. No matter how humbly.
Perhaps all of Scotland likes the political direction they've seen since 2000 in the USA, but that is still no substitute for a proven and openly transparent demonstration of an election's validity -- not secret electronic counts.
Alex Salmond has to shoulder much of the blame for the mess. Putting his party in as Alex Salmond First Minister meant that the Holyrood ballot had two lists which apparently began with People rather than one People list and one Party list.
If the SNP had put their party in as Scottish National Party, then the confusion would have been a whole lot less. I am not sure if it would have altered the result, but a lot more voters would have had their opinions counting, instead of ending up in the bin.