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On 7 May, the SNP will have the opportunity to inflict lasting damage on Scottish Labour.
Books by Alan Cochrane, David Torrance, Peter Geoghegan and Iain Macwhirter on the Scottish referendum prompt reflection on what happens next.
How the party is being "Pasokified".
This crisis could have been avoided. In recent years, Madrid has run a masterclass in how not to handle breakaway nationalism.
Nicola Sturgeon is a working-class woman in a profession dominated by middle-class men. The incoming SNP leader wants to lead Scotland into a new social-democratic era
The failure to bring a greater number of affluent Scots on board raises questions about the SNP’s “de-risking” strategy.
The mainstream nationalists' arguments for independence are broadly civic and pragmatic, it is the unionists who obsess about the threat an independent Scotland presents to "Britishness".
The Yes campaign is losing the economic argument – this could be more to do with establishment unionism than seeing through the SNP's "bluff".
Hassan’s account of Scotland’s “new radicals” – the generation of activists who have emerged over the last two years, as a result of the referendum – is guilty of the very thing Hassan warns against: over-simplification.
The shadow chancellor's recent praise of competitive rates of corporation tax makes life harder for the Scottish Labour party, which opposes the SNP's plan to reduce the corporate tax rate in Scotland.