SCOT goes POP!
A pro-independence blog by James Kelly - one of Scotland's three most-read political blogs.
Saturday, May 17, 2025
BREAKING: Controversial "Stew" blogger rocked by AI falsification scandal as Grok confirms "the exchange in Campbell's 'screenshot' did not take place and he appears to have fabricated it"
"Why James Kelly won the Campbell v Kelly tactical voting debate": the astonishing in-depth verdict brought to you by science
Congratulations if you’ve made it this far through this epic bout of navel-gazing, but ChatGPT is the closest thing available to an impartial referee, and I do find its analysis fascinating.
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) May 16, 2025
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) May 16, 2025
This is absolute 24-carat gold. Stew Campbell: a man with such a fragile ego that he not only considered the possibility of giving a robot prompts to declare him the winner of a Twitter debate - he actually *went ahead and did it*.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) May 16, 2025
This guy is literally Rimmer from Red Dwarf. pic.twitter.com/tkPRPwaqJL
"Kelly didn't lose because Campbell was flawless"
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) May 16, 2025
Well, that's certainly true, Stew! Blimey, don't even you have an ego filter? Apparently not!
Friday, May 16, 2025
More analysis of the Clydebank Waterfront by-election result
Just a quick note to let you know I have a new article at The National about the Clybebank Waterfront by-election, which was won by the SNP but saw a really telling surge for Reform UK, who overtook Labour to finish in second place. You can read the article HERE.
The BBC have made a catastrophic error of judgement in the way they're handling Israel's Eurovision participation
"The game's a bogey": shocking 1.6% showing for Alba in the Clydebank by-election raises questions over whether the party will even survive until next year's Holyrood election
Clydebank Waterfront by-election result on first preferences (15th May 2025):
Reform UK 26.3% (n/a)
Labour 25.3% (-12.1)
Liberal Democrats 4.7% (n/a)
Conservatives 2.9% (-4.8)
Greens 2.6% (n/a)
Alba 1.6% (n/a)
Scottish Family Party 0.9% (-1.7)
What we learned from the Campbell v Kelly tactical voting debate (and it's quite a lot)
When Stuart Campbell theatrically unblocked me on Twitter at lunchtime and demanded that I do the same and engage him in public debate about "tactical voting on the list" (an issue he used to be in total agreement with me about until changing his mind at some point after May 2016), there may have been some people who were innocently asking themselves the question "do you think Stew genuinely wants to debate in good faith, or does he just want another platform to call James the C-word and all the synonyms of 'lunatic' he can think of?" In which case all I can ask is whether you even know the guy. I did go through the motions of asking him some searching questions at the outset of the debate, but the futility of the exercise was quickly brought home when he ignored all of my first five or six questions and carried on replying to his own tweets instead in a seemingly neverending monologue. After ignoring the fifth or sixth question, he said "I've been doing all of the talking so far, so I shall pause now and let you answer the following question", and the comic timing was just too exquisite, I properly cracked up and couldn't stop laughing. And of course the insanely abusive insults followed on not too long later - it was the quintessential Stew Experience that we've all learned to "adjust" to as the years have gone by and he's become ever more militant, extreme, and angry at the world.
The logic underpinning his destructive tactics is of course to make any sort of real debate totally impossible in order to ensure that the proceedings are more predictable and to make the outcome more likely to be a noisy stalemate rather than a clear defeat. Engaging in good faith is a risky affair, and that's a risk Stew simply isn't prepared to take. The reality is that he was probably frustrated that the exchange even went as far as it did - 99% of sentient human beings don't tolerate people talking to them like Stew talks to anyone who disagrees with him, so he's used to 99% of people walking away at a very early stage and leaving him free to declare a hollow triumph. I didn't, and it was pretty clear that annoyed him - he became progressively more agitated as the day and evening progressed.
Nevertheless, in spite of all the heat and the blue language, I do actually think it was a worthwhile exercise, because he revealed far more than he intended to or probably even realised that he did. A lot of the most interesting clues lay in what triggered him the most.
* It became very obvious at an early stage that he realised he'd been rumbled and that his claim that the SNP are certain to win a minimum of 65 constituency seats next year simply didn't stack up. What's still unclear is whether the claim was just a gigantic bluff from the start or whether he just didn't bother checking each constituency's numbers thoroughly enough. Before he descended fully into the insult-fest, I tried to probe him on whether he stood by his claim that East Lothian is a certain SNP hold (probably his dodgiest claim of the lot, although there are several others), and his reasons for standing by it if he did, but he just flatly refused to engage - he first tried to deflect by pretending it didn't matter whether he stood by the claim, and when that didn't put me off he then went full Trump and denied he'd ever made the claim in the first place! I'm afraid it's there in black and white - he declared on his blog that the SNP will win 65 seats and specified the eight that they will not win, and East Lothian was not on that latter list. He even helpfully provided a map in which East Lothian was shaded SNP yellow!
As for his suggestion that it doesn't even matter whether his 65-seat claim was valid or garbage, I'm sorry but it absolutely does matter, and I'll explain why. With 65 constituency seats, which would be an all-time record high for the SNP, it's at least arguable that the balance of probability might be against them winning any list seats at all. But once you accept, as it seems that Stew now tacitly does (although good luck to anyone in dragging a direct admission out of him), that a sub-60 haul is far more likely, the list arithmetic changes significantly and the probability moves in favour of the SNP winning at least some list seats, as they have done in every previous Holyrood election that has ever been held. That's crucial, because Stew's basic claim is that every single SNP list vote will be wasted. He's not just saying that some or even most will be wasted - for him it's absolutely essential that the claim is all votes because that's the only way he can mess with SNP supporters' heads and try to convince them that they are doing something counter-productive or even irresponsible if they don't vote "tactically" on the list for a fringe Yes party.
Unfortunately for him, the claim just doesn't make sense once the SNP are only in the 50s in constituency seats - but of course he flatly refused to accept that, and put up an alternative brick wall of utter gibberish about how the SNP would supposedly win zero list seats unless they "lost at least five constituency seats in a single electoral region". Anyone who was nodding along with that as if it was some sort of valid point needs to have a stern word with themselves. I asked Stew how it was possible that the SNP have list seats *right now* without having lost five constituency seats in a single region. Unsurprisingly he didn't/couldn't answer.
* In my previous blogpost, I've already drawn attention to the most significant part of the exchange, in which I invited him to take the opportunity to rule out endorsing Reform UK at next year's election and he flatly declined to do so. That's extraordinary, because any mainstream blogger or commentator who didn't want to be tied down would probably have said something like "I'm not going to be drawn on which party I might endorse, but it goes without saying that I won't be endorsing a far-right party like Reform". In Stew's case, he might also have been expected to rule out Reform on the grounds that they are anti-independence. But no. It seems that far-right anti-independence parties are not beyond the pale for Stew, and he expects people to regard it as normal that he deems them to be one of the menu of options he will be choosing from.
The issue goes beyond that, though, because literally in the minutes prior to him refusing to rule out the Reform endorsement, he had been repeatedly insisting that he was asking people to vote tactically on the list for a "non-SNP pro-indy party". Even by admitting to the mere possibility that he might endorse Reform, he was directly contradicting what he had only just said. The fact that he tied himself up in knots so quickly and without much prodding from me at all suggests that there's a basic lack of 'match-fitness' there - I suspect that these days he blanket-rejects all requests for media interviews that might conceivably be hostile, and so he's no longer used to being challenged or put on the spot (not least because he usually scares away anyone who tries it by calling them a c**t).
* It's obvious that Alba is an incredibly sensitive topic for him. He maxed out on the mockery as a way to avoid engaging when I asked him whether he condemned the expulsion of Chris McEleny, and whether he condemned the 2023 vote-rigging in the Alba internal elections, and why he refused all guest post submissions to Wings about the vote-rigging. I suspect he is close to McEleny and that he probably is outraged by the expulsion, and for him that may well mark the end of his relationship with Alba - but he perhaps isn't ready to admit that yet because he fears a hostile response among the many Alba members in his readership. But what was really weird was the sheer extent of his deranged fury (to use a classic Campbellite/McElenyite phrase), which he had clearly been nursing for several weeks, about the fact that I had identified him as the de facto co-author of the Wee Alba Book - something we might have expected him to be proud of, but which he apparently regards as a mark of shame. To be clear, Alex Salmond unambiguously named Campbell as the Wee Alba Book editor in his speech to the 2021 Alba conference, and when I was on the Alba NEC in 2021-22, Salmond also gave us verbal updates along the lines of "Robin McAlpine has nearly completed his first draft and will be passing it on to Stuart Campbell for editing shortly". Stew now claims that he didn't edit it at all, apart from "one word" (he refused to tell me what the "one word" was, and I'm sure we're all now gagging to know!). But why in God's name does it bother him so much? I think he's really, deeply embarrassed about his involvement with Alba - he knows he backed the wrong horse for a time, and that bothers him and almost shames him. The same thing bothers me too, of course, but at least I've owned up to it.
* Without any prompting from me, he pre-emptively tackled the quotes from him that I had dug up from 2016 when he was still opposed to tactical voting on the list. He clearly thought the most problematical quote was the one in which he claimed that tactical votes might completely backfire and leave us with five fewer pro-indy MSPs than we would otherwise have had. He tried to make that go away with bluster about how it's not 2016 anymore and how voting patterns have changed and how the arithmetic no longer applies, etc, etc...which is 100% sheer sophistry. If it was arithmetically possible for tactical voting to backfire in 2016, by definition it's arithmetically possible for tactical voting to backfire in 2026 - unless the electoral system itself has been altered in some way, which it has not.
* What I found almost dizzying from him was his Grand Old Duke of York routine about whether or not he was claiming to know the election result in advance. When it suited him, it was obviously possible to know the result a year early ("James, you are mentally ill if you think the SNP have any chance of winning dozens of list seats!", etc), but when it didn't suit him, suddenly it became obviously impossible ("polls change, James!", "I can't even predict whether I'll be voting fascist myself yet!", etc). I think to be charitable we were supposed to conclude that the election result is uncertain but only within very narrow and highly predictable parameters. The problem for him there is that there are twelve months to go until polling day - and yet how much has changed over the last twelve months? A Labour lead has been wiped out and replaced with a commanding SNP lead. It only took Stew himself five months to transition from "there is zero chance of a pro-indy majority" to "a single-party SNP majority is 100% certain". That's the extent of change that can occur over a short period of time, so Stew can't have it both ways - either all bets are off about how many list seats are up for grabs for the SNP, or he really is claiming to know an election result a year in advance, which is a fundamentally nutty claim.
Thursday, May 15, 2025
Moment of high drama in the Campbell v Kelly tactical voting debate as Wings blogger refuses to rule out endorsing Reform and Farage in the 2026 Holyrood election
Can you categorically deny that you will endorse Reform UK at the 2026 election? Let's at least achieve something concrete in this exchange: commit yourself publicly now that you will urge your readers to only vote for pro-indy parties.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) May 15, 2025
You've apparently mistaken me for *The Great* Stuey, legendary fortune-teller. I have no idea what the situation will be in 2026, nor do I give the tiniest sh*t about your opinion of what I decide to do when the time comes. I thought we were debating the arithmetic of AMS.
— Wings Over Scotland (@WingsScotland) May 15, 2025
Let's be absolutely clear: you are very specifically declining to rule out endorsing the anti-independence far-right party Reform UK, led by Nigel Farage, in the 2026 Holyrood election. That is not a surprise to me, but others will find it absolutely *extraordinary*.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) May 15, 2025
I've accepted Stew's "Twitter challenge" - but it's been eerily quiet so far. Buyer's remorse in Bath?
Challenge accepted, Stew. You're unblocked, so let's GET THIS ON. Looking forward to at last hearing a substantive response to my points, and to "debating" them as you put it. I confidently predict you'll quickly run away and block me again within six hours, but prove me wrong! https://t.co/nVwpukuCf9
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) May 15, 2025
One-hour update: silence from Stew.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) May 15, 2025
Two-hour update: silence from Stew. Hmmm. One might almost wonder if he never considered the possibility that I might say "yes" to his challenge, and is now getting cold feet.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) May 15, 2025
While we wait patiently to discover whether Stew still thinks, in the cold light of day, that his challenge was quite such a wizard idea after all, I may as well take this opportunity to provide an explanatory note for the gullible.
When I find myself in times of trouble, he comes to me does Father Stew, speaking words of wisdom, SNP 1 and SNP 2
Alas, the final paragraph of my post yesterday proved every bit as prophetic as I knew it would - there's been plenty more "James Kelly is a raving lunatic" flavoured content from Stew on Twitter since then (but rest assured he DEFINITELY doesn't stalk me!), but not even a trace of a substantive reply to the points I raised in the post demonstrating that his bizarre claim that the SNP are guaranteed to win 65 constituency seats next year, and thus that all SNP list votes will be "wasted", is fraudulent. It's safe to assume that if he was capable of providing a substantive, credible rebuttal to those points, he would have done so by now.
Luckily, though, help is at hand, and from an unlikely source. This revelation may make his 2025-vintage Fan Club feel somewhat queasy, but there was actually a time when Stew was not such a fan of "tactical voting on the list" - indeed, he used to very sensibly point out that it wasn't even a viable option. He was also a fervent proponent of what he would now (misleadingly) call "SNP 1, SNP 2".
It might be useful, then, to delve into this fascinating chapter of Stew History (it was only nine years ago) and see what arguments 2016-vintage anti-tactical-voting Stew would have deployed against 2025-vintage pro-tactical-voting Stew. Some of those arguments are extremely powerful and I don't think there's much doubt that 2016 Stew would have come out on top in any head-to-head showdown.
Stuart Campbell, 7th January 2016: "If you’re primarily or solely contesting regional seats, and you’re chiefly (as seems to be the case) targeting people who are going to use their first vote for the SNP, “Vote for us so that we can provide strong opposition to the SNP” is a pretty weird pitch.
You’re basically asking people to use their second vote to cancel out their first. And that’s quite a tough angle to be trying to sell them. Just saying, like."
That's an absolutely superb point, 2016 Stew. You're talking about RISE there, but beyond question what you say also applies equally to Alba in the present day, and given that we know they hang on your every word, it's doubtless something they'll want to reflect on.
Stuart Campbell, 20th April 2016: "RISE AREN’T GOING TO WIN ANY SEATS. They’re just not. They could multiply their current support by 10 in the next two weeks and still be nowhere near. In terms of winning representation at Holyrood for the next five years, a vote for RISE is – categorically and indisputably – a wasted vote. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t vote for them if you agree with their policies...But in THIS election, right here right now, voting for RISE is saying “I’m going to leave who Scotland’s list MSPs are to fate, because my vote will count for nothing”."
2016 Stew has pretty brutally slapped down 2025 Stew there. 2025 Stew argues that you can move pro-indy votes around in huge numbers as if they're pieces on a chessboard, and that it's perfectly possible to get fringe pro-indy parties to win list seats just by instructing SNP supporters to vote for them. But 2016 Stew is having none of it, and quite rightly points out that some parties are so small that they have no realistic chance whatsoever of reaching the threshold for winning list seats - thus guaranteeing that all list votes for them will be totally wasted and will only help unionist parties. Again, he's talking about RISE, and points out that if they multiplied their support by ten, they still wouldn't be winning seats. In the case of Alba in the present day, they would need to treble or quadruple their 2021 support to win seats, so exactly the same principle applies - it's simply not credible to think they can pull off that feat, and there's no sign in the opinion polls that they will. As 2016 Stew so wisely says, a vote for Alba would be "categorically and indisputably a wasted vote".
Stuart Campbell, 20th April 2016: "A “PRO-INDEPENDENCE OPPOSITION” IS IMPOSSIBLE. The only thing even remotely akin to a meaningful runner-up prize in an election is to be the largest opposition party, which gets you privileged treatment in parliament and the media. But the second-biggest pro-independence party is hoping, at best, to come fourth in this election, which gets you nothing...Whatever else happens in May, “the opposition” will still be Unionist."
We can only imagine how much more scathing 2016 Stew would be about Alba in the present day, who at best are aiming to be in sixth place. If he thought that fourth place gets you "nothing" and isn't a prize worth having, he'd doubtless be urging voters to steer well clear of any self-styled contenders for sixth place. 2025 Stew will be fuming about it, but 2016 Stew is arguably being harsh but fair here.
Stuart Campbell, 20th April 2016: "A “PRO-INDEPENDENCE OPPOSITION” IS MEANINGLESS ANYWAY. There are only two possible outcomes of a Holyrood election – either the governing party gets a majority or it doesn’t. If it does, then the composition of the opposition is irrelevant, because the government can pass whatever it wants."
Crikey. Forthright stuff from 2016 Stew here. So what Alba is aiming for is not only impossible but undesirable - if a party can't get into government it's completely pointless to even attempt to give them any seats. 2025 Stew will NOT be happy about this.
Stuart Campbell, 20th April 2016: "THE SNP AREN’T GOING TO WIN EVERY CONSTITUENCY SEAT. Whatever polls say, realistically it simply isn’t going to happen."
Without wanting to sound too sycophantic, I feel this is one of the most crucial points Stew has ever made. It's vitally important to maintain a healthy scepticism about wild claims that "the SNP are going to clean up in the constituencies and therefore won't need any list votes at all". And I know that 2016 Stew would agree with me that if it was important to maintain that scepticism in spring 2016 when the SNP were polling in the high 40s in the list ballot, it's even more important in 2025 now that they're polling only in the low 30s, which leaves any suggestion like the one 2025 Stew is making that they're guaranteed to win 65+ constituency seats looking fanciful in the extreme.
Stuart Campbell, 20th April 2016: "there are at a minimum 15 constituencies where the Nats will face, at the very least, a serious fight. If they were to lose just over half of them they’d fall short of a majority and would need list seats to get across the line."
Yup. Really, really important to not only take into account the best-case scenario in the constituency seats, but also the worst-case scenario, and to bear in mind that the SNP might need a Plan B of lots of list seats if that worst-case scenario plays out. 2025 Stew wants SNP supporters to abandon that back-up option, but 2016 Stew would give short shrift to such a profoundly irresponsible attitude.
Stuart Campbell, 24th April 2016: "The refrain we kept hearing this week from advocates of “tactical” list voting in the name of getting more pro-independence MSPs was “but this is what the polls say!”
Now, there are all sorts of obvious holes in that premise – polls are never exactly correct, and have also historically significantly underestimated the SNP list vote"
An essential and eloquently-expressed point, 2016 Stew. People can't just pretend, in defiance of all past evidence, that opinion polls are some sort of infallible God, or that they give us precise advance knowledge of what the result of the election will be, or that we can use that knowledge to somehow make "tactical voting on the list" safe and effective. 2025 Stew won't want to hear that truth - in fact he'll probably stamp his feet and furiously denounce it as "the most dishonest, knowingly false and wildly extreme lie about Scottish politics we’ve ever seen anyone tell in the 13.5 years of Wings Over Scotland’s existence".
Well, tough. Because 2016 Stew is right.
Stuart Campbell, 24th April 2016: "what we find is that a very significant swing towards the Greens in the list vote actually results in FIVE FEWER pro-independence MSPs on the list...if you’re going to put your faith in numbers, it’s always worth doing your sums first."
Cripes. So what you're saying, 2016 Stew, is that there are circumstances in which "tactical voting on the list" can totally backfire and leave you with FEWER pro-independence MSPs than you would otherwise have had, and that people who claim that this danger does not exist are lying to you.
A timely warning, 2016 Stew, and we are grateful to you for it. Not least, of course, because one of the liars you're warning about is none other than 2025 Stew himself.
This 2016 Stew chap seems a remarkably sensible fellow. Maybe we could start a Change.org petition to get him back?
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
As requested, here's more statistical detail on why Stew's nutty claim that the SNP will win an all-time record of 65 constituency seats, and no list seats at all, is so obviously wrong
Several of you have asked me to go into more statistical detail about my blogpost on Sunday, which pointed out why Stuart "Stew" Campbell was so obviously wrong in the angry claims he made about the supposed certainty that the SNP will fail to win any list seats at all in next year's Holyrood election.
So I'll do that, but first of all it's worth pointing out that three days have now passed since that Sunday blogpost, and in that time Stew has continued to post repeated tweets about me (so good luck to him the next time he tries his "I don't stalk James, I barely even mention the guy" schtick!), and one of those tweets even references the Sunday blogpost, so it's highly likely that he read it. But what we haven't seen from him is any substantive reply to the points I made in that post, most importantly the specific constituency seats I identified that the SNP are actually unlikely to win even though Stew insisted they were nailed-on certainties. I think it's fair to say that if Stew was actually capable of providing a credible rebuttal of those points, he'd have done so by now. The fact that all we've seen from him instead is a continuation of his usual "James is a raving lunatic" repertoire ought to tell his cult followers something rather important.
There was a huge amount of padding in what Stew called his "stats post", but his basic claim can be condensed to the following:
* The SNP are certain to reach the target of 65 seats for an overall Holyrood majority, and they will do it on constituency seats alone.
* They will have so many constituency seats that for the first time in their history they will not be allocated any list seats at all, and therefore all of their list votes will be "wasted".
That's an extraordinary and wildly implausible claim in umpteen ways. It directly contradicts Stew's own insistence from five months ago that there is "zero" chance of a pro-indy majority at Holyrood after the election, let alone a single-party SNP majority. It means he is predicting that the SNP will win a majority for only the second time in their history, and will do it on constituency seats alone for the first time ever (when Alex Salmond led the SNP to their only majority to date in 2011, he was nowhere near the target of 65 on constituency seats and required substantial numbers of list seats to get over the line). And Stew is saying that all of this will happen in spite of the fact that the SNP are only polling at 33-34% of the constituency vote at present, which is between thirteen and fifteen percentage points lower than they received in the 2016 and 2021 elections, when they failed to win a majority. It's all, to put it mildly, a bit bonkers.
The best way of visualising Stew's nutty claim that the SNP are guaranteed to win at least 65 constituency seats is to look at the eight other constituency seats that he is conceding they won't win or might not win. (By the way, all of this is massively complicated by the fact that there's a boundary revision going on, but it hasn't been completed yet so we just have to work with what we've got.) As I understand it, the Stew Eight are:
Edinburgh Southern
Caithness, Sutherland & Ross