Alba Activism 11


There are two drivers behind my support for Scottish Independence.

The first and most obvious is to see our ancient land restored to the place it held so long in the community of free and self-governing nations, and end the colonial exploitation of our people and resources.

The second is to destroy that Imperialist rogue state, the United Kingdom. With the UK actively participating in the Gaza genocide through supply of arms, intelligence, military assistance and diplomatic cover, that need has become ever more acute.

Were that not bad enough, the London government is now overtly militarist and looking to provoke conflict with Russia which could lead to nuclear holocaust. There is something in the UK nationalist soul which has an addiction to war, and Keir Starmer stands in the long line of British politicians who look to increase their dire domestic popularity ratings by killing people abroad.

It is a matter of deep sadness to me that the formerly radical and pro-Independence Scottish National Party has become a classic example of a local colonial puppet elite serving the interests of the colonisers and anxious to adopt conspicuous markers of loyalty, in order to continue to benefit personally from their position in the London-ruled political Establishment.

We therefore have the Scottish National Party seeking to outdo the UK Labour Party in its militarism and commitment to needless conflict with Russia, absolutely against the interests of Scotland.

The SNP is massively infiltrated by the UK and US security services, including at senior levels. Plus many of its leaders are easily captured by the wealth and circumstance coming from their position within the UK state.

The SNP was finished as a force for Independence when Sturgeon accepted that Scotland could only exercise its right of self-determination with the permission of London.

If you consider it coldly and logically, it cannot be a right of self-determination if it requires the permission of somebody else to exercise it.

So for me the SNP is trash, useless, a vehicle for self-enrichment of some of the most repulsive parasites of the political class.

As the SNP had succeeded in becoming the automatic recipient of the votes of the large majority of those Scots who want Independence, that is a real conundrum for progress. It is particularly galling that, now we finally have achieved a consistent and growing majority in favour of Independence, politics remains dominated by the SNP, who have no intention whatsoever of doing anything about it.

Which is where Alba comes in, the new pro-Independence movement founded by former SNP leader and Scottish First Minister, the late Alex Salmond.

I am a member of Alba, the fundamentalist Independence party which is also anti-NATO, anti-neoliberal, anti-monarchy and anti-EU membership.

I might perhaps clarify that I am now very firmly anti-EU, given its extraordinary anti-Palestinian and anti-Russian positions and its plans for massive military expansion. The EU has morphed into something very sinister indeed.

Alba is a very small political party. In Council elections it consistently pulls in low single-figure percentages, as it did in the few seats it contested in the last Westminster election.

Alba’s significance lay in that it was founded by Alex Salmond, former First Minister of Scotland and former Leader of the SNP, and the man who almost brought about Scottish Independence in the 2014 referendum.

After Alex resigned the leadership following that referendum, his successor and protege, Nicola Sturgeon, immediately set about destroying Salmond’s reputation while moving the focus of the SNP decisively away from Independence and into identity politics.

A conspiracy orchestrated by Sturgeon, through her Chief of Staff Liz Lloyd, brought in a number of Sturgeon’s close allies and confidantes to make sexual assault allegations against Salmond – of all of which he was acquitted, following a trial before a majority female jury.

Salmond was into the third year of building up his new Alba Party from scratch when he recently died suddenly, aged 69.

Despite losing Alex, there should be a real political opportunity for Alba. A radical Scottish Independence Party with the positions listed above, accords with the views of a very substantial proportion of the Scottish electorate.

Alba’s problem is that, ironically due to the pioneering achievements of Alex Salmond, voting SNP has become a reflex expression of Scottish national identity, and many voters have simply not noticed the party’s absorption into the British state narrative.

Now, for a small and new party, Alba has also faced a quite extraordinary amount of internal conflict, which may also have been in part stirred up by covert influences.

It is worth here stating that it is plain that Scottish Independence is the biggest practical threat to the UK state. Naturally the UK’s disproportionately large and well-funded security services are targeted on it. They would not be doing their job otherwise.

Let me introduce this subject anecdotally. Towards the end of 2023 I was standing for election to Alba’s national executive. The election was postponed in circumstances which were obscure. Then it was re-run.

I was in Geneva and about to enter a meeting at the UN, when Alex phoned me and told me I had been elected to the National Executive, but he wished me to stand down and not accept the seat, as there was somebody else he needed on the exec.

This obviously was unwelcome, principally because it felt like a betrayal of those who had been kind enough to nominate me and to vote for me. Who stands for election and wins, then does not take it up? It seems very irresponsible, and would justifiably damage my reputation.

But the truth is, I felt enormous personal loyalty towards Alex and a trust that, whatever he was up to, it was a strategy with the long term goal of Scottish Independence in mind. So I agreed and declined to take up my seat.

I subsequently discovered there was a large amount of controversy surrounding the results of that election, with people claiming cheating, and I believe I am correct in saying that the results were never published, with some threadbare excuse about publishing the results of an online election being a breach of the Data Protection Act.

A number of founder members of the party, people I had pounded the streets alongside in the 2014 referendum, were resigning. I phoned Alex to express concern and say the results should be published.

He told me that some people were unhappy that many new members had been signed up and voted in the election, but this was within the constitution. A faction had been out-organised, and that was their own fault.

Alex had made plain to me that his request that I stand down was confidential, and I maintained that confidence while he lived. I view that confidence as a personal commitment from which I am now released. But things continued to be very strange in the Alba Party.

The excellent Denise Findlay, who had been a major part of Alba’s organisation and drive, was forced into resignation. I learnt just in the last few days, after I told my own story on Twitter/X, that Denise had gone through precisely the same experience.

More recently, James Kelly, the valuable Scot Goes Pop blogger, was expelled from the party, apparently for criticising it. Then extraordinarily, the General Secretary, Chris McEleny, attempted to expel the Acting Leader Kenny MacAskill from the party, but ended up himself demoted.

I don’t think pretending none of this happened is a sensible option, which is why I told my own story. It remains the case that I trust both Alex’s good faith and that he had a vision for taking the party forward, on which he was working.

But I think it is fair to say that if the brilliant Salmond had an Achilles heel, it was in his judgment of people closest to him. He did not see Sturgeon coming, and indeed refused to accept her part in the plot against him until long after the evidence was undeniable.

In Alba likewise I believe some of the trouble was the extraordinarily possessive attitude towards the party of some of those with whom Alex surrounded himself. This interacted very badly with some activists who wished to see the party move forward with less deference to the leader, or even a different leader (a view I disagreed with, but to which they were perfectly entitled).

Unfortunately some of those espousing that viewpoint undermined themselves by indulging in some unpleasant character assassination and gossip mongering (not towards Alex, but his circle).

The result was a toxic mess. A small party attempting to gain a foothold cannot afford to execute many of its own best soldiers, and neither is incipient insurrection a practical working environment.

Alba will elect a new leadership shortly. I shall be supporting Kenny MacAskill and Neale Hanvey for Leader and Depute, but that implies no disrespect to anybody else.

My plea to the new leadership and the membership is to adopt an amnesty and bring everyone back in to the party. We need eventually to unite the Independence movement. How can we do that, if we cannot unite ourselves?

The party has a rule which bans from rejoining those who went public on their resignation or expulsion, and my attempts to persuade the party “establishment” we need to accept people back, has been met with turgid reference to that rule.

This is just an excuse for maintaining feud. I have also spoken to other factions who, by and large, remain embittered and alienated.

So I plead, with all, that it is time to bury the hatchet, forgive and forget, and work united towards the 2026 Scottish parliament elections.

I am happy to see that Tommy Sheridan, a giant of the Scottish left whose career was interrupted by standard sex allegations (cf. Julian Assange, Scott Ritter, Alex Salmond etc.) orchestrated by the security services and Murdoch press, is standing for the Alba executive. This is the kind of unity we need.

Scotland has the d’Hondt party list system where each voter has two votes, one for a candidate for the constituency list and one a party for the regional list, whereby an element of proportionality is introduced to the benefit of parties who failed to win constituencies despite substantive support.

It is a horrible system because it gives the party machines, rather than the electorate, the power to rank candidates (as opposed to the much more democratic Single Transferable Vote).

The position of Alba appears to be to stand as a “list only” party – to support the SNP in constituencies and ask SNP voters to support Alba on the list.

I am opposed to this approach and believe Alba should fight constituencies and the list. I do not accept the SNP is in any significant sense a pro-Independence party now. It is just a branch of the neoliberal uniparty, and a very dangerous one designed to hoover up Scottish nationalist votes.

We have a duty to oppose any party that supports British imperialist foreign policy, as the SNP does.

We also have a duty to offer the voters the chance to vote for actual Scottish self-determination and reject a London veto.

The only point in joining and supporting such a small party as Alba is to attempt to represent unrepresented positions and to affect fundamental change. That is what Alba must do. I look forward to the journey.

———————————

My reporting and advocacy work has no source of finance at all other than your contributions to keep us going. We get nothing from any state nor any billionaire.

Anybody is welcome to republish and reuse, including in translation.

Because some people wish an alternative to PayPal, I have set up new methods of payment including a Patreon account and a Substack account if you wish to subscribe that way. The content will be the same as you get on this blog. Substack has the advantage of overcoming social media suppression by emailing you direct every time I post. You can if you wish subscribe free to Substack and use the email notifications as a trigger to come for this blog and read the articles for free. I am determined to maintain free access for those who cannot afford a subscription.




Click HERE TO DONATE if you do not see the Donate button above

Subscriptions to keep this blog going are gratefully received.

Choose subscription amount from dropdown box:

Recurring Donations



 PayPal address for one-off donations: [email protected]

Alternatively by bank transfer or standing order:

Account name
MURRAY CJ
Account number 3 2 1 5 0 9 6 2
Sort code 6 0 – 4 0 – 0 5
IBAN GB98NWBK60400532150962
BIC NWBKGB2L
Bank address NatWest, PO Box 414, 38 Strand, London, WC2H 5JB

Bitcoin: bc1q3sdm60rshynxtvfnkhhqjn83vk3e3nyw78cjx9
Ethereum/ERC-20: 0x764a6054783e86C321Cb8208442477d24834861a


Allowed HTML - you can use: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

11 thoughts on “Alba Activism

  • Madison

    Mr. Murray, I sincerely wish you good luck.
    Even though currently, even in Scotland probably, most people seem to have other priorities than Scottish independence. But then obviously, such an issue needs many decades to come to a positive outcome, and so better keep fighting.
    The streets of Edinburgh may not be under constant clone surveillance as those of Beirut, but even so please beware of other potential threats…

  • Pete

    Sounds like a lot of toxic behaviour going on. Which is actually very typical of small parties, as any Trotskyite or Fascist could tell you. During my five years in the Labour Party I was struck by how different in personality the average party activist was to the average person. Certain traits enable certain people to tolerate and even enjoy activities which most folk would find tedious and irritating, such as being a treasurer or membership secretary for instance. Infiltrating a party for the benefit of some other party, or the government, would also be great fun for a certain type of person.
    You should certainly assume that your party has been infiltrated from an early stage, but you can easily detect such persons by their actions, which will tend towards divisiveness, squandering of resources, and involving members in activities for which they could be vilified and/or prosecuted. However not everyone who behaves in this manner is an infiltrator. Some people just enjoy conflict for its own sake, because they feel bored or even non-existent without constant excitement. The story of the frog and the scorpion is always relevant.
    Alex Salmond sounds a lot like Jeremy Corbyn in his “poor judgement of people closest to him.” Every leader needs wise counsellors who can supply qualities lacking in the leader rather than competing to show the same qualities as he or she has.
    “A rule which bans from rejoining those who went public on their resignation or expulsion” sounds insane, expecting mindlessly unquestioning obedience to the leadership, and eternal shame on anyone who thinks for themselves. It implies an assumption that the “correct” policies of the party can never change, therefore any dissenter is forever outcast. But in reality there is no life without change. The mentality behind this rule is not a recipe for competent government.

  • Jules Orr

    The SNP get worse with every passing year. Angus Robertson embracing Israel at the height of the Gaza genocide last summer. Stewart McDonald like a mad dog towards Russia, as bad as anyone south of the border. Back when Nicola was gushing about John McCain, Hillary Clinton, Kissinger etc, I thought this is the nadir. Turned out it was only the beginning. How much longer will folk play along with this brazen UK establishment psyop?

  • 100%Yes

    How corrupt! For god’s sake man, you were elected and you should have told Salmon “NO”. It’s because of these sided politics Scotland in a very bad place today.

    It didn’t take a genius to realize when Sturgeon ruined Salmon’s career, he was the person who was ruining the Alba chances of progress in Scottish politics. The Alba party is dead and buried; it’s never going to go anywhere, and I’m surprised that you didn’t tell Salmond he needed to stand down, because he was the noose around Alba’s neck preventing them from winning anything.

    If I was going to put my backing towards any party, it’s ISP. Shut Alba down and let’s all focus on supporting ISP. For Scotland and Scottish politics the passing of Salmond isn’t sad news; its probably for the best. His EGO, and the referendum being rigged under the stupid franchise Salmond set up so he could have a photo-op with Cameron; for god’s sake, it’s Scotland that’s lost.

  • Sue Harley

    Alba has a chance if these elections are fair, and seen to be fair.
    I have been asking questions about the buying of votes, which was claimed by James Kelly on his blog. He hasn’t answered my questions about this. This needs clearing up and the voting system has to be fair, and be seen to be fair, otherwise there will never be any meaningful reset.
    There must be no favours to certain people.

  • Tatyana

    Mr. Murray went to prison because of Mr. Salmond’s case.
    Did Mr Salmond say anything publicly to support Mr Murray? What was his position, his help?

  • Republicofscotland

    Salmond’s heart was in the right place- he’s sorely missed – one mistake I think he made though, was giving everyone a constitutional vote in 2014 – with Scots actually voting for indy in 2014 – the incomer vote swung it for no.

    The same thing happened in Wales with Brexit in mind – the Welsh didn’t vote to leave the EU – anyway there’s also the good ISP party – we can vote for them as well.

  • pasha

    Clearly, Alba is just as toxic as all the other parties. I’d go further and opine that politics itself is irredeemably broken: when creatures like Trump and Starmer, Macron and Merz are “running” things, there’s no hope of any change for the better, unless you love war and death and ethnic cleansing and you want your hard-earned tax money spent on arms and armies.
    After long thought, I’ve concluded that sortition is the only answer. What happens after that is anybody’s guess but it can’t possibly be worse than what prevails as of now.

  • Pears Morgaine

    In the Referendum Scotland voted Remain by 62%. Not sure how well an anti-Eu policy is going to be received.