Charlotte is First Mentee

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced the winner of the ‘First Mentor’ competition yesterday – Charlotte Liddell of Buckhaven in Fife. Launched on International Women’s Day in March, the initiative will see the successful applicant mentored by the First Minister for a period of one year – and it is designed to highlight the importance of women in leadership roles mentoring young women. Continue reading Charlotte is First Mentee

Getting it fixed first time: new plan to improve city’s roads

A plan to improve the way the Council carries out road repairs is set to go before councillors this week. A report on the Roads Services Improvement Plan, which will be considered by the Transport and Environment Committee on Thursday, states that: “the Council needs to maintain a high-quality road network to ensure the safety of road users, to ensure road users can freely travel around our network and to protect the overall appearance of Edinburgh as a city”.  

Continue reading Getting it fixed first time: new plan to improve city’s roads

Exam Results Helpline ready for calls

Today is SQA results day

A free national helpline offering advice, information and support for young people and their parents has gone live, ahead of SQA results day.  Skills Development Scotland’s (SDS) free helpline will be open from 8am until 8pm today and tomorrow (Tuesday 8 and Wednesday 9 August) and from 9am until 5pm from 10 to 16 August. The number to call is 0808 100 8000. Continue reading Exam Results Helpline ready for calls

Cramond’s Alistair performs in Fringe ‘trash-hit musical’

A talented young performer from Cramond is currently making his professional debut in a popular musical at the world’s largest arts festival.

Alistair Robertson has secured a role in a new production of The Great American Trailer Park Musical at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The 21-year-old recently graduated with a diploma in Musical Theatre from The MGA Academy of Performing Arts in Edinburgh and will spend his summer taking to the stage as part of the fun show, which will run at the city’s C Too venue throughout August.

The hilarious off-Broadway musical, which explores the relationships between the quirky tenants of the Armadillo Acres Trailer Park in Florida, has been given a new lease of life from Beyond Broadway Productions and the team behind 2015’s standout Fringe hit Zanna, Don’t!

Alistair, a former pupil of Stewart’s Melville College, explained: “The Great American Trailer Park Musical is a very high-octane show featuring lots of country-style music. I am playing a character called Duke who is a young anarchist who is chasing after his ex-girlfriend who has gone on the run. He is the villain of the show and playing him has been great fun.”

Alistair (above) has spent the past four years honing his craft at the renowned Edinburgh institution, which earlier this year became the first full-time professional training academy in Scotland to be awarded accreditation by CDET, the UK’s quality assurance and membership body for the professional dance, drama and musical theatre industries.

He said: “I have had so many great opportunities whilst training at The MGA Academy. I have learnt so much and gained lots of practical experience which I think will help me when it comes to moving to London and auditioning for more professional jobs. Ideally, I’d like to gain employment as a performer in the musical theatre industry but I’d also eventually like to work as a director.”

Andrew Gowland, Director of The Great American Trailer Park and Managing Director of The MGA Academy, said: “Everyone at The MGA Academy is very proud of Alistair and all he has achieved since he started training with us. We are confident that the training he has received here will ensure he goes on to be a great success in the future and we look forward to supporting him during the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.”

He continued: “We are currently accepting applications for places on our full-time diploma courses. Our next set of auditions will take place on Sunday 13 August in central Edinburgh and we would welcome applications from anyone with similar aspirations to Alistair. Application forms can be downloaded from our website.”

Recent graduates of The MGA Academy include Disney film star Thomas Doherty (The Lodge, Descendents 2) and West End star Fergal McGoff (Matilda, Mamma Mia and The Bodyguard).

The Great American Trailer Park Musical runs daily as part of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe from Tuesday 3 August to Monday 28 August, 8.40-10.15pm at C Too (St Columba’s by the Castle, Johnston Terrace). Tickets, priced £13.50/£11.50, can be purchased via edfringe.com or via 0131 226 0000.

 

Do the Kiltwalk for carers

VOCAL is looking for supporters to take part in the 2017 Edinburgh Kiltwalk on Sunday 17 September and help raise funds for carers. Registration is open now and there are plenty of spaces still available.

This year the Hunter Foundation is giving every charity a 40% bonus for every £100 raised – that means that VOCAL will receive £140 for every £100 you raise!

VOCAL counselling service manager Lorraine MacKenzie is taking part to celebrate a significant birthday this year, and she urges others to join her.

Lorraine said: “To celebrate my birthday, as well as taking up running, I’ve signed up to do the Kiltwalk for VOCAL. The more people we can get to take part, the better it will be for everybody because we’ll get an extra 40% donation for every £100 each person raises. It will just make such a difference to carers to get that extra money.”

Join Lorraine in the Kiltwalk on Sunday 17 September: 

Register here and choose VOCAL as your nominated charity.

Referendums: breaking the mould of party politics?

The Indyref and Brexit referendums have ‘completely transformed’ the party political system in Scotland, according to a new academic study. The British Election Study’s A tale of two referendums – the 2017 election in Scotland, has concluded that the referendums, which cut across political party lines, have brought about ‘major disturbances’ to the ordered party system.

The study, by Dr Chris Prosser and Prof Ed Fieldhouse from Manchester University, examined how voters changed their preferences between the 2015 and 2017 elections, focusing on how they voted on independence and Brexit.

For both political anoraks and those interested in our changing democracy, it’s an interesting read …

Only two years after the astonishing rise of the Scottish National Party at the 2015 election, the SNP juggernaut seemed to come to a crashing halt.

Although the SNP remained the largest party in Scotland at the 2017 election, they lost more than a quarter of their vote share and 21 of the 56 seats they had won in 2015. Conversely, the Scottish Conservatives performed exceptionally well, nearly doubling their vote share from 2015, picking up 12 seats, and becoming the second largest party in Scotland (the first time they have beaten Labour at a general election in Scotland since 1959). Labour modestly improved their vote share by 2.8% and picked up six seats, and the Liberal Democrats managed to gain three seats despite a slight decrease in their share of the vote.

What explains these sudden changes in electoral fortunes? We have previously examined how the 2014 Independence referendum lead to the rise of the SNP in 2015 and showed how the political divisions created by a referendum can overrule traditional party loyalty, leading to dramatic changes in the party system. In this blog, we use the newly released 2017 British Election Study Internet Panel datato explore how the interaction of two referendums – on Scottish independence and the UK’s membership of the EU – helps explain the outcome of the 2017 election in Scotland. In a separate blog, we also examine the impact of Brexit on the 2017 election in the rest of Britain.

In terms of party policy, the Scottish independence referendum created clear divisions in Scottish politics. The SNP, the cheerleaders for independence, were unambiguously in favour of staying in the EU, and after the vote tried to leverage Brexit to force a second independence referendum with the aim of keeping Scotland in the EU. The Scottish Conservatives, united against independence, were divided over Brexit during the EU referendum campaign, but took a clear stance in favour of Brexit following the referendum result (albeit one that is generally seen as more soft-Brexit supporting than their English counterparts). Scottish Labour, also against independence, tried to carve out a position on the EU in between the SNP and the Conservatives.

Amongst voters, the EU referendum clearly cut across the divisions over Scottish independence, with about 60% of both ‘Yes’ and ‘No’ voters in the 2014 referendum voting to remain in the EU. Using data from the British Election Study Internet panel on how people voted on four occasions – the 2014 Independence referendum, 2016 EU referendum, and the 2015 and 2017 general elections – we now examine how the two referendums interacted to produce the outcome of the 2017 election. In order to do so, we analyse the 2015 to 2017 vote flows amongst four categories of respondents, grouped according to their combination of referendum votes (excluding respondents who did not vote in one or more of the four electoral events):

Yes/Remain voters (27% of sample)

Amongst these voters, whose votes on independence and the EU are congruent with the SNP’s positions, we can see that the vast bulk (about 9 in 10) voted SNP in 2015 and all but a small proportion (about 1 in 10) stayed loyal to the SNP. They also managed to win over the majority of Green voters in this group.

Yes/Leave voters (17%)

In 2015, around 9 in 10 Yes/Leave voters supported the SNP – the same proportion as Yes/Remain voters. Unlike the Yes/Remain SNP voter however, Yes/Leave voters were much more likely to defect from the SNP in 2017, with 4 in 10 switching to another party, with similar proportions going to the Conservatives and Labour. It appears that just as Labour’s position on the Independence referendum lost them votes to the SNP, many 2015 SNP voters were driven away by the party’s strong pro-remain stance.

No/Remain voters (34%)

No/Remain voters are the largest of the four groups in the Scottish electorate. In 2015 Labour dominated this group, with around half voting Labour. In 2017 Labour lost about 1 in 5 of these to the Conservatives, with a smaller chunk going to the Liberal Democrats. Smaller numbers of 2015 Conservatives and Liberal Democrats also shifted to Labour, cancelling out some of these loses, and altogether Labour won about 4 in 10 of No/Remain voters in 2017. As a result of picking up a large number of Labour voters, and 3 in 10 2015 Liberal Democrats, the Conservatives increased their share of this group of voters from two in ten to three in ten between 2015 and 2017. Although nationally the Conservatives were more clearly associated with a hard Brexit, the softer approach from the Scottish party, together with a strong position against a second independence referendum and Ruth Davidson’s effective leadership, clearly resonated with this group.

No/Leave voters (21%)

No/Leave voters, whose referendum votes are most in line with the Conservative positions on independence and Brexit (post-EU referendum), were almost evenly split between the Conservatives and Labour in 2015 (though the Conservatives had a slight edge). In 2017 the Conservatives picked up nearly half the 2015 Labour voters, six in ten 2015 Liberal Democrats, and the vast majority of 2015 UKIP voters. Combined this nearly doubled the Conservative share of the vote in this group, with nearly two-thirds voting Conservative in 2017.

Referendums and the remaking of Scottish politics

In the space of three general elections, the Scottish party system has been completely transformed. The SNP moved from third place in 2010 to first in 2015 and 2017, Labour has fallen from first to third, and the Conservatives have risen from fourth to second. It is not hard to see how the referendums on Scottish independence and the UK’s membership of the EU have been the catalyst for these changes.

In 2015 the Yes side rapidly shifted to the SNP. In 2017, Yes/Remain voters stayed loyal to the SNP but they suffered heavy losses amongst Yes/Leave voters. The relative success of the Conservative in attracting a substantial minority of No/Remain voters (33%, compared to Labour’s 43%) in spite of the national party’s hard line position on Brexit made a significant contribution to their increase in vote share. In contrast, Labour performed relatively poorly amongst the No/leave group, losing a large proportion of voters to the Conservatives. The ability of the Conservatives to capture No/Remain voters as well as No/Leave voters is may be partly attributable to their strong campaign, but also reflects the relative importance of the two referendums in defining Scottish voters political identities.

We asked a battery of question about identification with the Yes/No side in the Scottish referendum (in wave 11) and with the Leave/Remain side in the EU referendum (based on similar questions relating to social identities) and found that a large number of No/Remain voters more closely identified with ‘No’ than with ‘Remain’ (39%). Amongst this group the Conservatives led Labour by 45%-34%. Among those who identified more strongly as ‘Remain’ than ‘No’ (36%), Labour led the Conservatives 53% to 20%.

The last few years of Scottish politics have a clear tale to tell: referendums that cut across party lines can lead to major disturbances in the party system.

The British Election Study 2015 is managed by a consortium of The University of Manchester, The University of Oxford and The University of Nottingham. The Scientific Leadership Team is comprised of Professors Ed Fieldhouse, Jane Green, Hermann Schmitt, Geoff Evans and Cees van der Eijk. The team is supported by researchers Dr Jon Mellon and Dr Chris Prosser and also by BES 2015 consultant Professor John Curtice (University of Strathclyde). The BES 2015 is working in close collaboration with colleagues within the Universities of Manchester, Oxford and Nottingham, and is partnering with a wide variety of affiliated datasets and projects (and proposed projects) to link BES voter data to other data on election candidates and campaigns.