Rewinding a bit, I was musing on the great desire for minimum turnout and such ploys, apparently to be sure that voters really mean it. There's another aspect that hasn't been considered. Differential funding.
It's a bit obvious at the moment. I've run out of one of the leaflets I was circulating, and can't get any more. There are no posters, and no car stickers. There are rumours of a few posters next week, especially if I can get myself to Dumfries to collect them. Maybe. I'm thinking of running off a few on my own computer - I've done that before.
However, I see no representatives of the other parties out and about. There are a couple of LibDem posters in a field, that's all. Lots of stuff is coming through the letter-box, but it's the postman who's delivering it. Yes, every party gets one free communication delivered that way, and we're saving ours for next week, but I've had about three from the Conservatives already, including one facsimile of a hand-written personal letter from the candidate, in its own personally-addressed envelope. Another activist in the village tells me the Conservatives have employed a firm to go round in a van and put up posters (haven't seen that myself yet).
I don't know the overall SNP budget for this, but I think it will be lucky if its gets into seven figures. It's always been like that. In 1992, the reason the SNP campaign faded in the last week was that there was no more money - the total budget was only £100,000. In comparison, the three main Unionist parties have many millions to play with. Indeed, they need more, because they're fighting more constituencies, but it's way out of proportion.
It's even more pronounced at Holyrood elections, and at by-elections, when Labour (for example) can bus in student activists from all over Britain, and fund the campaign from a pretty big UK war chest. The differential spending at the Glasgow East by-election was way skewed.
We still won that by-election.
We won the European elections, on a shoestring. We won the last Holyrood election (just), with far fewer resources than the other parties.
There is no newspaper in Scotland that supports the SNP, or that supports independence. The BBC, by its charter and establishment, overtly supports the union. The other three main political parties, all much better funded, all strongly support the union.
And yet we're not doing so badly.
I don't know how much money and posters and leaflets and campaigning draws in votes, but experience suggests it's quite significant. I don't know how much media exposure and media support sways voters, but again, experience suggests it's quite significant. You need money, lots of it, and good media coverage, to hold your own in present-day politics.
If there was a level playing field in an independence referendum, with both sides being equally funded and receiving equal treatment at the hands of the media, I wonder how it would pan out?
Rolfe.