What happened to the Rishi Sunak I knew at school?
The work-in and Reid’s famous speech have assumed almost mythic status, representing all that was best about the Scottish, and specifically the west of Scotland’s, industrial tradition. Much of it has gone now, of course, and in some respects the UCS dispute was the zenith of this Scotland’s image of itself: hard-working, dignified and proud. The famous lines, complete with their presbyterian caution against succumbing to human frailty, are still powerful:
“We are not going to strike. We are not even going to have a sit-in strike. Nobody and nothing will come in and nothing will go out without our permission. And there will be no hooliganism, there will be no vandalism, there will be no bevvying because the world is watching us.”
Reid’s life – and his journey from the Communist party to the SNP via Labour – is also a reminder that what you believe is only part of the matter.
How you believe and how you conduct yourself in the arena can be just as vital. The means can be as important as the ends and the manner in which Reid and his colleagues defended their interests and the jobs of the 8,000 men employed at UCS was, in its way, magnificent.
So you don’t have to be from Jimmy Reid’s Scotland to appreciate his record and recognise that he’s part of your own Scotland too. As MacDiarmid always reminds us: Scotland small? Our multiform, our infinite Scotland small?/ Only as a patch of hillside may be a cliche corner/To a fool who cries “Nothing but heather!”
*The contrast between Reid and a charlatan like Arthur Scargill or a pygmy like Bob Crow is total and entirely in Reid’s favour. If nothing else, one wonders how the National Union of Mineworkers might have fared had they been led by men such as Reid and Airlie rather than a demagogue like Scargill.
UPDATE: John McTernan’s piece in the Telegraph is excellent.
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