CAMPAIGNING FOR SCOTLAND
(Owned, Edited and Printed in Scotland since November
1926)
"Promoting all that is best in Scottish
Nationalism and all that is best in Scotland."

Compiled by Jim Lynch
[Issue 89 - 15th
February 2002]

NO SILVER LINING - YET
It has long been my
contention that it does not really matter what the Opinion Polls say when
there is not an election in the offing, and that they only really matter in
the run-up to an election. Having
said that, the SNP standing in the opinion polls was high in the run-up to
the 1999 Scottish Parliament Elections, but plummeted just before them, so
maybe my contention is not so clever.
However it would be nice to
see us showing some improvement and there is not much sign of that at
present; how much of that is due to a general disillusion with the
Parliament, 90% of which is engendered by a combination of the Executive and
Westminster, is a moot point. In 1999, I hoped that the SNP would not form
the first administration because we would get the blame for all the teething
troubles; seeing the supine approach of the Scottish Executive to their
masters in Westminster, and their various cantrips that have brought the
Parliament into disrepute, I concede I might have been wrong. At
least we would only have had one First Minister.
Scottish Parliament Voting
Intention
| |
LABOUR |
S N P |
LIB DEM |
TORY |
OTHER |
| |
1st % |
2nd % |
1st % |
2nd % |
1st % |
2nd % |
1st % |
2nd % |
1st % |
2nd % |
| Election |
39 |
34 |
29 |
27 |
14 |
12 |
16 |
15 |
3 |
11 |
| Last Year |
39 |
33 |
35 |
33 |
9 |
13 |
10 |
9 |
6 |
12 |
| Last Month |
39 |
33 |
32 |
29 |
12 |
15 |
10 |
11 |
6 |
13 |
| Now |
40 |
33 |
31 |
30 |
13 |
17 |
9 |
9 |
6 |
11 |
The
position from last month has not moved much. The SNP down one point on the
constituency vote, and up one point on the second vote; Labour up one point
on the first vote, but level pegging on the second. The Liberals have gained
one point on the first and two points on the second, apparently at the
expense of the Tories, not entirely surprising as I have always regarded
Liberal votes as second class Tory votes; in Scotland they are also trying
to be second class Labour votes as well, but one thing is common to both,
second class. The Tories, led by Smug (or Smaug) McLetchie, are regressing;
so much for his being, in his own words "the effective leader of the
Opposition". How very effective! The motley crew comprising the "others"
have also gone back a bit, but maybe Tommy Sheridan being arrested at
Faslane will perk them up a bit; there are always large numbers of the
electorate who approve of politicians being locked up.
Westminster Voting Intentions
| |
Lab % |
SNP % |
Lib % |
Con % |
Others % |
| Election |
45 |
27 |
14 |
15 |
4 |
| Last Year |
46 |
28 |
11 |
13 |
2 |
| Last Month |
46 |
23 |
12 |
15 |
5 |
| Now |
47 |
24 |
13 |
12 |
4 |
And now for how commentators
(myself in this instance) can finish up with egg all over their faces; last
month I commented that the SNP was down four points on its General Election
result, which had not been one of the better ones. This month as I perused
the General Election figures in the Herald, the General Election figures
looked a bit different; so, last month System Three gave the wrong General
Election percentages, and I never noticed them, but made pompous predictions
(as my mother used to say "Aye, weel, that’s the price of ye.") The figures
were also wrong in November and December, and prior to that I did not show
the figures for Westminster; I only noticed they were wrong when they
printed the amended figures, which I checked independently - with the BBC
website.
Right that’s the sackcloth
and ashes over, and this just the start of Lent too, so what can we make of
the poll? SNP and Labour up on last month, and on the real General Election
result, Liberals up on last month and down since the Election, and the
Tories down on last month and on the election; I’m never convinced by the
Tories’ standing in opinion polls. Very few people like to admit that they
are greedy arrogant Tories, but in the privacy of the polling booth.......
We are doing better than before, but it will be four long, long years until
the next Westminster election, and anything can happen; the Blessed Tony
might have saved the world by then, or not, as the case may be, or perhaps
Prime Minister Gordon Brown will have saved Fife. Who knows?
AND TALKING OF
FIFE...
The
ongoing scandal in Fife, involving Henry McLeish MSP, and until November
2001, Scotland’s First Minister, Fife Council, and the Fife branch of a
charity called Third Age, which seems to be as elusive as the Third Way,
rumbles on.
Tricia Marwick, SNP, MSP, who
lives in Glenrothes, used to work for Shelter, and has been active in
politics for at least 20 years, had never heard of them. According to
reports, the charity received two annual grants of £20000 per year after it
had been wound up; it seems to have started operating around 1996, and
rented part of Henry McLeish’s constituency office for about two and a half
years. The word used for the rent was "peppercorn", but it amounted to £25
per week, and it was Mr McLeish’s failure to mention this that led to his
resignation.
The charity at one stage
employed Lynda Struthers, who was Henry McLeish’s election agent; Ms
Struthers now works for Fife Council as a debt officer. The group’s
management committee consisted of six council officials, Ms Struthers,
Maureen Rodger, an election agent for Henry McLeish and also a Fife social
worker, Fife Labour Councillor Angela McCallum, Fife Labour Councillor
Elizabeth Henderson, Brian Wilson, former head of the council’s elderly
care department, and Christine Latto, a Fife social worker. The group was
wound up in February 1998, but was given grants of £20089 in April 1998 and
April 1999; the meeting in March 1999 was attended by Mr McLeish’s wife,
Julie, who was a regional manager for elderly care.
All this may be perfectly
legal, and moral, and there may well be good and cogent reasons for these
actions; an investigation by Fife Council has revealed that everything was
above board, but then it was investigating itself, so one would expect that
result. Two things make this seem suspicious; in the first place, it seems
passing strange that Mr McLeish would "forget" rent from a charity which had
involved two of his election agents, and his wife, albeit in a more remote
way, and secondly, although charities are required by law to retain accounts
for a period of six years after cessation of their activities, somehow Fife
Council had shredded all records appertaining to the charity, "due to lack
of storage space". It is not clear whether the shredding took place before
or after the Glasgow Herald started making enquiries. We do know from Peter
MacMahon, Mr McLeish’s special adviser that when the Herald went a looking
that the Chief Executive of the Council contacted the Leader of the Council,
Labour Councillor, Christine May, who contacted Mr MacMahon, who said "Tell
them nothing".
In
the Scottish Parliament, John Swinney, SNP , asked the First Minister, Jack
McConnell, if he would support an investigation into the matter by Audit
Scotland; Mr McConnell replied "If he did his homework he would know that an
inquiry is already under way." As the subject only came up because the
Herald and the SNP had pursued it, Mr McConnell’s point score was
understandable. John Swinney replied "What we have here is a Labour council,
giving money to an organisation run by Labour activists, renting office
space from a Labour MP. The connection is Labour, Labour , Labour, and it
stinks. Will he clean up Scottish politics and start with Fife council?"
This is not the first
instance of Labour organisations destroying evidence; when Mr McConnell’s
own constituency secretary was asked at the time of the Lobbygate enquiry
into Beattie Media and its relationship with Jack McConnell what had
happened to the notebook in which she had taken notes of a call from Beattie
Media, she said that she had destroyed it "as was her routine". At that time
she had been in the job for almost six weeks; some routine! Other notorious
political shredders were Westminster and Brent Tory Council, who shredded
evidence in the "homes for votes" investigations; Dame Shirley Porter, (venerated by Baroness Thatcher) has been told to pay back the council £26
million (or about that sum) but flew back to Israel whence she has
transferred her £58 million fortune. The latest example is the auditors,
Arthur Andersen, who shredded evidence relating to Enron before they were
subpoenaed by the US Congress.
Incidentally, Mr McConnell
said in the course of the Parliamentary exchange that he did not accept the
practice of shredding documents so soon; admirable, we think his
constituency secretary burned them.
WHO’S DIED?
A
football journalist at the Hearts - Rangers match was astonished when after
a garbled announcement over the tannoy system (aren’t they all) the crowd
got to its feet and just stood there.
When he asked what it was all about he was told it was one minute’s silence
because Princess Margaret had died, and we are reasonably sure that most of
the crowd would not have had a clue about her, but they profess to be
"loyal".
I would like to think that if
I had been there I would have remained seated, but I don’t think I would
have the moral courage! Her passing will not make the slightest difference
to the scheme of things, and thankfully we will not see any of the
hysterical hypocrisy that occurred when Diana died, when football matches
were postponed, and the Referendum for the Scottish Parliament was
endangered. One year after that episode hardly anyone turned up on the
anniversary of her death, because the day of instant mourning was past.
The press is still playing
the monarchic game, with headlines like "A Nation Mourns", but in practice
nobody really noticed, leading one to think that the fuss about Diana was of
the popstar culture, rather than the royal one. The press are trying to stir
up interest, as they have papers to sell, but even they are coming round to
the view that royalty has had its day; while the Blessed Tony is supposed to
be abolishing the House of Lords, with all its pomp and privilege, all he
is doing is creating a new batch of privileged people, by patronage, which
is how it all started in the first place. A reform of the whole system is
required, but we should be wary of the Australian example; they voted on
whether or not to keep the Queen as Head of State, and when the Aussies
sussed out that it was either the Queen or a politician, they picked the
Queen as the lesser of two evils. We see Tony Blair acting like a President,
and Margaret Thatcher thought she was a Queen herself, so there might be
some merit in royalty - I said might.
What Mr Blair could and
should be doing is to repeal the Act of Succession, which prevents the
monarch from marrying a Catholic; the irony of this is not lost. The purpose
originally was to prevent the Pope exerting influence on the country, so it
was enshrined in law; society has moved on, and power is now exercised by
the Prime Minister, not the Queen, and Mr Blair is married to a Catholic,
and the world has not come to an end! It could just be that repealing the
Act could at a stroke demolish the spurious "loyalty culture" which elements
in Northern Ireland still cling to. The world has moved on, but the British
constitution hasn’t.
LIFE - OR DEATH - IN
THE FASLANE?
One
of the things I started to do, probably after I retired, was to read
newspaper editorials, and very soon I learned to distinguish between a good
editorial, and a bad one. It was simple; if I agreed with it, it was a good
one, and if I disagreed with it, it was a bad one! Would that all things in
life were as straightforward.
What set me off on this
kick was an editorial in the Scotsman (usually more bad than good) deploring
the fact that John Swinney attended a demonstration at Faslane; at that
demonstration, Tommy Sheridan of the SSP, and Lloyd Quinan of the SNP got
themselves arrested. Taking part in campaigns against nuclear weapons over
the years have been such luminaries as Tony Blair, Robin Cook, Gordon Brown,
Lord George Robertson, and many others in the Labour Party too numerous to
mention; they have now seen the light, and wish to keep nuclear weapons
because it gives Great Britain status in the world.
John Swinney said in his
Conference speech in Dundee in September 2001, that the SNP had consistently
opposed weapons of mass destruction since they were imposed on Scotland in
the Sixties and that the party would keep that faith, so I can see no
ambivalence there; if he had not gone to Faslane then he might have had to
explain his absence. The Scotsman editorial somehow infers that this would
keep the wild eyed left wing bolsheviks of the SNP (like masel’) happy, but
would not cut much ice with the good solid peace loving citizens who want to
sleep sound in their beds at night, secure in the knowledge that enough
nuclear weaponry to blow up this planet and a few others was safely stored
within a fifty mile radius of their houses. There seemed to be a few
ministers there; ministers of religion, not government ones, but some female
ones too, ensuring gender balance, but none of them looked swivel eyed to
me. It must be what they put in the Scotsman tea machine, or maybe, just
maybe, acting under instructions from Baroness Thatcher who is urging the
American President to invade Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya, Sudan and North
Korea, on the basis that Islamic extremism has taken the place of bolshevism
and has to be rooted out. Who’s swivel eyed now?
The concept that being
opposed to Trident is anti American or even anti Nato is nonsense; we could
all wish that Mr Bush would listen to Colin Powell rather than Donald
Rumsfeld, but that is merely the voice of commonsense, and American
Presidents come and go, so nothing is forever. But as most observers are
aware, the biggest danger of nuclear weapons is the accidental one, not the
deliberate starting of a war, and if England wants Trident, they can have
it. After all, the Tories took the refitting of nuclear submarines away from
Rosyth, "only and alone for purely cost savings"; it now turns out that the
cost of Devonport will be about £400 million more than originally estimated.
This of course will be paid out of general taxation by we poor subsidised
Scots; I wonder what Malcolm Rifkind thinks of his decision now?
THE GLASGOW KISS - 2002
STYLE
This
year, the city of Glasgow is being called the City of Love; a festival to
celebrate this commenced on Friday 8th February, and will run until Sunday
17th February; there will be exhibitions (not unknown in one way or another
in Glasgow) special events in shops, bars, theatres and galleries all over
the city.
The Lord Provost of
Glasgow, Alex Mossom, opened the week at an ecumenical service at the church
of Blessed John Duns Scotus in the Gorbals; the church houses relics of St
Valentine, yes the very man whose martyrdom is celebrated on 14th February
each year.
St Valentine, who lived
before Catholics and Protestants were invented, was executed on 14th
February 269, because he was a priest, and he persisted in marrying Romans
with a Christian ceremony. His remains were kept by a French family, who
gave them to a Franciscan monastery which was founded in the Gorbals in
1868; when the monastery closed the relics were transferred to the new
church.
So, who would have thought
it, the remains of St Valentine, the patron saint of love and romance, in a
church in the Gorbals , Glasgow; a very unlikely place, but then perhaps
Rome , and Paris, and Venice all have their equivalents of the Gorbals. We
would suggest that the Speaker of the House of Commons, who has been dubbed
"Gorbals Mick" by a parochial London press, might wish to pay a visit to the
relics, as at the moment he appears to be very much unloved . The reasons
for this are not clear; some say that he is making a mess of the job, some
say that he is unintelligible, and others are suggesting he moves to the
House of Lords as Glasgow will lose about three MPs before the next
election. We have no particular animus against him, apart from the fact that
he is a Labour MP from Glasgow, and that city is a shambles not helped by
Labour domination, St Valentine or no St Valentine.
It might be that he was one
Scot too many; Tony Blair, psuedo Scot, Gordon Brown, Robin Cook, Alastair
Darling, Dr John Reid, Lord Derry Irvine - all in the Cabinet, and not
dealing with Scottish affairs. Whatever, if the visit to St Valentine and
love thy neighbour does not have an effect, then perhaps a judicious Glasgow
kiss to the toffy nosed here and there might work wonders.
(A Glasgow kiss, for the
uninitiated, is a head butt, usually leaving the recipient with a broken
nose.)
FOOT IN THE MOUTH
NOTES
The 8 foot
marble statue of Baroness Thatcher is needing a home; apparently they cannot
put it in to the House of Commons while she is still alive.
We would suggest they put it in
Fraserburgh, where they are having terrible troubles with seagulls; if it
does not frighten them off, at least they can then do to her what she did to
the people of Scotland during her reign.
Speed cameras are to be painted in bright
colours so that motorists can see them; in England and Wales they will be
coloured yellow, but in Scotland the executive want them to be red and
yellow in case they are mistaken for SNP posters.
Wait for the retaliation on the red
pillar boxes, as they obviously must support Labour.
A 17 year old pupil was expelled from Fettes
College, Edinburgh, for telling the press about drug use at the school;
Prince Harry was not expelled from Eton (usually automatic ) after he
admitted smoking cannabis.
Nice to see democracy in action.
After the admission of masonic membership by
some MSPs, the Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Scotland wrote in an
article that most of the drafters of the American constitution were
freemasons.
So that’s where the Fifth Amendment came
from then.
The Chinese New Year begins this week;
this year will be the Year of the Horse.
Bookmakers are rubbing their hands.
And still on
the subject of horses; an American, Tom Johnson, outran an Arabian horse in
a 50 mile race; he beat it by 10 seconds.
Some of the horses I’ve backed would have
been beaten by someone with a zimmer.
The Treasury has been selling off gold
over the last two years despite public protests; the price of gold has now
surged and we would have been £350 million better off if we had kept it.
If they were bookies they would lose
money.
SYNOPSIS
A selection of items from the SNP Daily News over the
past week:
BLAIR "MISLED
PARLIAMENT" OVER STEEL DEAL
Plaid
Cymru has accused Tony Blair of "misleading" the House of Commons over his
support for an overseas steel deal. Carmarthen East MP Adam Price has
exposed a letter in which the Prime Minister expressed support for a British
consortium's takeover of the Romanian national steel producer. Mr Price is
angry the prime minister wrote to the country's leader Adrian Nastase two
days before a UK-owned firm bought Sidex for 300 million pounds - as British
giant Corus was shedding over 3,000 Welsh workers. Indian-born steel tycoon
Lakshmi Mittal had donated 125,000 pounds to Labour before his LNM Group
made the deal. Mr Price, heaping allegations of "sleaze" on Mr Blair, said
the Indian businessman's company was registered in the Dutch Antilles - a
Caribbean tax haven - and was, therefore, a rival to Corus. He accused Mr
Blair of "intervening in the strongest possible terms in the interest of a
company which is undermining British jobs". Plaid Cymru now plan to raise
the matter in the Welsh Assembly chamber in questions to First Minister
Rhodri Morgan. The SNP is backing Plaid's calls for the Committee on
Standards in Public Life to investigate the affair. SNP Westminster group
leader Alex Salmond commented: "Since Tony Blair promised to clean up
Westminster, we've had Formula One and cash for policies, Peter Mandelson's
unique approach to the right to buy, passports for donors, rows over the
office expenses claimed by Labour MPs, financial links to the collapsed US
energy giant Enron, and now letters to foreign leaders to smooth the path of
Labour-supporting contractors. New Labour has not just failed to deliver its
promise to clean up Westminster, it now looks every bit as bad as the old
Tories."
BORDERERS IN PLEA OVER
CUTS
Campaigners
are planning to march on the Scottish Parliament in protest at proposed cuts
to services in the Borders. Budget cuts are expected to be approved later
this week when Borders councillors meet to decide on a way out of a
financial crisis caused by a 3.9 million pound deficit in the education
budget. But the plans have provoked anger and hundreds of people joined a
protest at proposals to close Eyemouth's swimming pool and community centre
on Monday evening. The Scottish National Party's Christine Grahame said the
Labour and Liberal Democrat administration must intervene. The South of
Scotland MSP said: "This will not stop until the coalition in Edinburgh
provide this council with some borrowing so that they can work out this mess
and not punish the people." A delegation from the Borders is due to present
a petition to the Scottish Parliament calling on the Scottish Executive to
intervene.
MSP QUERIES NEW ROLE OF
TOP FISHING CIVIL SERVANT
A
row is brewing over a shake-up at the Scottish Executive's fisheries
department. It is believed that fisheries secretary Paul Brady has now also
been given responsibility for rural development. Following the division of
the ministerial portfolios in December, Richard Lochhead says the move
appears to confirm that fishing is a "low priority" for the coalition. The
SNP's fisheries spokesman will be tabling a Parliamentary question today in
a bid to find out the reasons for the change. "If it transpires that the
role of fisheries secretary has been diluted this will be another example of
Labour and Liberal ministers downgrading the fisheries department," he said.
"It seems that not only has the portfolio been split between two ministers,
who themselves have a range of other responsibilities, but now the
long-standing post of fisheries secretary has been burdened with quite a
number of other rural responsibilities, such as land reform. Given the
importance of the fishing industry to the Scottish economy, and in
particular our coastal communities, it is only right that should be
recognised by designating particular ministers and civil servants as
dedicated points of contact and ambassadors for the industry." A cabinet
reshuffle by First Minister Jack McConnell saw Mr Finnie taking over the sea
fisheries and Scottish Fisheries Protection Agency elements of what had been
junior minister Rhona Brankin's brief and Ayrshire MSP Mr Wilson being given
responsibility for aquaculture and freshwater fisheries.
HOSPITAL DEATHS RATE RISE
The
number of patients who die after emergency surgery in Scotland has
increased, a report into hospital mortality has revealed. It said that poor
post-operative care could be one of the contributing factors to the one in
700 death rate. The Scottish Audit of Surgical Mortality was asked to
examine the deaths of all patients under hospital care for the year 2000.
Approximately 4,500 deaths were reviewed and more than 1,100 consultants and
anaesthetists were questioned. SNP shadow health minister Nicola Sturgeon
said: "There is a wealth of information that people should have access to in
a modern NHS and the performance of surgeons is part of that modern NHS."
The kind of information on hospital performance, which is available in
England, should be made public in Scotland. The MSP said: "No-one
underestimates the problem of presenting the information properly but those
problems are not insurmountable. We live in an information society and the
fact is we need information for patient of hospital is unacceptable."
MINISTERS CHALLENGED ON
DEFENCE PROCUREMENT SPENDING
Ministers
have been pressed in the Commons on the level of defence procurement
spending in Scotland. SNP defence spokesman Angus Robertson challenged
Junior Defence Minister Lewis Moonie over figures he had recently been given
in a written reply. At question time, Mr Robertson said: "Can you comment on
the answer given to me on February 1 with regard to procurement expenditure,
which showed the figure in Scotland was only 4.3% of UK expenditure - half
our population share? Do you believe this level of expenditure is too much,
too little or about right?" The junior minister claimed the government would
spend more money on procurement in Scotland were there more companies
producing goods the MoD could buy. Speaking outside the chamber, the Moray
MP described the minister's defence as "pathetic".
SCOTS TWICE AS LIKELY TO
BE SPIED ON
Scots
are twice as likely to have their telephones tapped and mail intercepted as
other Britons. A Sunday newspaper investigation has revealed that
surveillance by the security services and police has reached record levels
north of the Border. Scottish ministers are giving approval for snooping
operations at a much greater rate than their counterparts in London. The
number of Scots put under surveillance after being dubbed potential 'enemies
of the State' has risen by 500% in the past 10 years for which figures are
available. Roseanna Cunningham, the SNP shadow justice minister, described
the figures as "extraordinary". She said: "For the first time in Scotland's
history we have a Liberal justice minister who looks far more illiberal when
it comes to surveillance than ministers south of the Border. The present
establishment has to explain itself because it is difficult to see on what
basis this could be justified." Ms Cunningham now intends to table questions
on the matter in the Scottish parliament.
UEFA's TOP SCOT VOICES CONCERN AT JOINT BID
Former SFA
secretary Ernie Walker, who is now a major figure within UEFA, has expressed
his concern over Scotland's failure to submit a solo bid for Euro 2008. SNP
spokesman on sport Mike Russell said: "It is increasingly clear that Jack
McConnell has botched the Euro 2008 bid. Jack McConnell has badly damaged
our credibility with UEFA and if he cannot convince Ernie Walker that this
is a serious bid, what chance is there of convincing the rest of Europe?
Obviously, the suspicion is growing that the joint bid is designed to be a
good loser."
CHALLENGE TO NEW NUCLEAR POWER STATIONS
The
Scottish National Party has challenged the first minister to oppose the
introduction of new nuclear power stations on Scotland. Environment
spokesman, Bruce Crawford, said a majority of Scots would not support Energy
Minister Brian Wilson in plans for expanding the nuclear industry. He said:
"Brian Wilson seems intent on putting the profits of the nuclear industry
before the will of the people of Scotland. Jack McConnell must stand up and
fight this undemocratic plan and protect Scotland's veto."
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SCOTTISH FOOD, TRADITIONS
AND CUSTOMS
(if you have any suggestions on what you'd like us to include email peter@scotsindependent.org)
 In
the History Date section of The Flag, you will have hopefully noticed last
week, the death of Kenneth MacAlpin, the first 'historically recognised'
King of Scots, at Forteviot on 13 February 858. His achievement in uniting
both the Picts and Scots was considerable. The Scots first arrived in
Argyll from Ireland in the 5th century and Kenneth MacAlpin succeeded his
father as their King in 841. He later became King of Picts in
circumstances which remain obscure but seems to have been accepted in
Pictland from 843 onwards. Hence his recognition as the first 'King of
Scots'. His House were to reign in the united Scotland until the tragic
death of Alexander III in 1286. This weeks recipe is a reminder of the
early Irish contribution to the formation of the Scottish Nation as it
comes from a new cookbook produced by The Kerrygold Company, famous for
their Kerrygold Pure Irish Butter and Dubliner Cheese. Kerrygold invited
professional chefs, from leading restaurants in Scotland, England and
Ireland to create recipes for their cookbook. The outcome is thirteen
taste bud tantalising recipes with four of the contributions coming from
Scotland. The Dubliner Irish Cheese Cookbook from Kerrygold, a 32 page
colourful and beautifully photographed book, features a wide range of
appealing dishes, and thanks to Kerrygold we are able, for the first time,
to make available a 'Reader Offer' on The Flag.
The first 50 readers who send an A5 ( 160 mm X 230 mm ) 33p stamped
addressed envelope to :-
Dubliner Cookbook/ Scots Independent reader offer
PO Box 513
Derby
DE1 9NW
England
will be sent a free copy of the cookbook ( worth £2.49 ).
This weeks recipe is taken from the Dubliner Irish Cheese Cookbook and is
a delicious contribution by Howies Restaurant , 50 Chapel Street, Aberdeen
- Chicken Breast with a Hot Balsamic Dressing and Dubliner Cheese Rostis.
Chicken Breast, Balsamic Dressing and Cheese RostisServes 1
Ingredients : 2 chicken fillets; 100ml / 3 1/2fl oz balsamic vinegar;
100ml / 3 1/2fl oz olive oil
Rosti : 1 large sweet potato, grated ; 50g / 2oz Dubliner Cheese, grated;
seasoning; 2tbsp olive oil
To serve : 1/2 leek, cut in very fine strips; 300ml / 1/2pt oil
Method
1 In a heavy based frying pan pre-heat 2tbsp of olive oil.
2 Slice chicken fillets into four, add to the pan and fry until the
outside is sealed and the chicken is a golden brown colour.
3 Mix balsamic vinegar and remaining olive oil and add to the chicken,
continue cooking for 10 minutes.
Rosti
1 Pre-heat oven 200 deg C / 400 deg / Gas Mark 6.
2 In a bowl mix the grated sweet potato and Dubliner cheese. Add
seasoning.
3 Heat oil in a frying pan. Place two medium pastry cutters into the pan,
fill the cutters with the potato mixture, pressing down
well.
4 Brown the rosti on one side then carefully turn over and remove the
cutters. Place in the oven for 8-10 minutes to cook
through.
To serve
Pre-heat the oil and deep fry the leek strips until crisp. Drain on
kitchen paper. Place rosti in the middle of a large plate, build up the
chicken into a tower, drizzle with the balsamic vinegar sauce and top with
crispy leeks.
Don't delay - send for your copy of Dubliner Cookbook today - 15 February
2002.
See our Scottish Food,
Traditions and Customs in our Features section
DATES IN HISTORY
19 February 1314
Roxburgh Castle retaken by James Douglas and razed to the ground - 'lest
the English should ever hereafter be able to lord it over the land
through holding the castles.'
17 February 1944
In a three-cornered contest, Douglas Young, Chairman of the Scottish
National Party, took 41% of the vote in the Kirkcaldy Burghs
By-Election, ( caused by the death of Labour MP T Kennedy ), as
runner-up to the successful Labour Party candidate T F Hubbard.
19 February 1995
Death of Sir Nicholas Fairbairn QC, Conservative MP for Perth and
Kinross. Roseanna Cunningham, Scottish National Party candidate, won the
subsequent By-Election.
See Dates in History in our Features
Section
SING A SANG AT
LEAST
(compiled by Peter D Wright)
"That I for poor auld Scotland's sake
Some useful plan or book could make
Or sing a sang at least ........"
- Robert Burns
COULTER'S CANDY
Robert Coltart
Mammy gie me ma thrifty doon,
Here's auld Coulter
comin' roon',
Wi' a basket on his
croon,
Sellin' Coulter's Candy.
Ally bally, ally bally bee,
Sittin' on yir
mammy's knee,
Greetin' for anither
bawbee,
Tae buy some Coulter's
Candy.
Ally bally, ally bally bee,
When you grow up you'll
go tae sea,
Makin' pennies for your
mammy an' me,
Tae buy some Coulter's
Candy.
Oor wee Annie's greetin' tae,
So whit can puir
auld mammy dae?
But gie them a penny atween them twae
Tae buy some Coulter's
Candy.
Puir wee Jeannie's lookin' awfy thin,
Jist a rickle o' banes
covered ower wi' skin,
But noo she's gettin' a
double chin,
Wi' sookin' Coulter's
Candy.
Footnote : Coltart's Candy (
pronounced Coolter ) is a well-known and still popular children's song
which Robert Coltart wrote himself, ( an early form of advertisement !
). It was made in Melrose by this colourful travelling man who attracted
children like a Pied Piper so popular was his aniseed-flavoured candy.
The recipe died with Coltart in 1890.
See the
SING A SANG AT LEAST in our features section
A KIST O FERLIES
A Keek at the Guid Scots TungA Keek
at the Guid Scots Tung

By Peter & Marilyn Wright
(Note: All words underlined in this section
are RealAudio links)
siccar:
fix firmly; sure; staunch; true; loyal; resolute
siller: silver;
money
smeddum: pith;
vigour; animation; drive; spirit
stoit/stoiter:
reel; stagger
tent: listen to;
notice; care for; attention
trig: tidy up; neat;
smart; attractive
True Thomas lay on Huntlie
bank;
A ferlie he spied wi' his e'e;
And there he saw a ladye bricht
Come riding doun by the Eildon Tree.
Her skirt was o' the
grass-green silk,
Her mantle o' the velvet fyne;
At ilka tett o' her horse's mane
Hung fifty siller bells and nine.
Complete Poem
Wee Freenly Doug
by W D Cocker
See Scots Language in
our Features Section
for other poems, stories, songs, sayings and words in the Scots language
THE MONTHLY PRIZE
CROSSWORD
Each month the Scots Independent Newspaper
offers a prize crossword and we're now offering this online in the Flag in the Wind as
well. Should you complete the crossword by the deadline you can fax it over to
the SI and the first correct one opened on the closing date will win a £10.00 book token.
SI Prize Crossword No. 26
FEBRUARY 2002
[Click here to bring up the crosswords]
AND
AS WE CONTINUE...
If you read our first issue of The Flag in the Wind you will know that
this is a weekly Internet commentary on the Scottish political scene; if you desire
further erudition click on Archives.
SOME OF OUR FEATURE
SECTIONS....
About Us
Our mission is to fight for an Independent Scotland and to promote its history,
heritage and culture. Learn all about us here.
Events
A running event guide to what's on in Scotland.
The Scots Language
A great introduction to the Scots Language, produced by Peter and Marilyn Wright,
and added to each week both in text and RealAudio. Enjoy listening to words, poems and
stories told in a real Scots accent!
The Rebels Ceilidh Songbook
An excellent introduction to traditional songs from Scotland.
Sing A Sang At Least
Our collection of Scottish songs. A new song is added to the collection each week.
Scottish Food, Traditions and Customs
Enjoy our collections of recipes and our comments on them.
The Prize
Crossword
Each month the newspaper edition produces the Prize Crossword and you can now try it for
yourself with this online edition. We carry previous copies here as well.
Notable
Dates in History
Each week we add three new notable dates in history building this into an historic
timeline for Scottish history.
Features
Lots more stories, recipes, historical articles and even whole books are added here on a
regular basis.
The Oliver Brown Award
An annual award given to an outstanding Scot(s) each year. Also included picture
galleries from the annual lunch.
THE SCOTTISH NATIONAL PARTY
The Scots Independent Newspaper is independent of the Scottish
National Party, but we support the Party in its drive for Independence; while space
precludes us commenting on all the issues raised by the 35 MSPs, 5 MPS and 2 MEPs, also
the Party Office Bearers, we have provided a link to the SNP Website.
THE FLAG IN THE WIND
The above was the title of a book written in the early Fifties by John
MacDonald MacCormick, one of the founder members of the Scottish National Party in 1934.
The sub-title was "The Story of the National Movement in Scotland". His comment
in the book said "It is perhaps in the symbols which men use that their deepest
sentiments are most readily expressed. Flags as well as straws show which way the wind is
blowing". A fuller account appears under
Features.
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