Cheezy the Wiz
Socialist In A Hurry
My plan assumes that London is sucked into a vortex at some point in the next twelve to eighteenth months.

Spoiler :

My plan assumes that London is sucked into a vortex at some point in the next twelve to eighteenth months.
If Labour was willing or capable of appealing to non-voters, who are overwhelmingly in their socioeconomic catchment, they could make good the losses easily enough. But they'd prefer to chase a right-wing middle class, and as long as the current electoral system prevails, there's no real way of punishing them for that.
I'm not sure that it's necessarily hypocritical, to be honest. Most British right-wingers identify political sovereignty as lying with the Crown, and more generally in a political tradition inherited from the past, rather than in "the people", as liberals and socialist would. (They'll adopt such language, but that reflects the nature of political discourse, rather than necessarily being an accurate representation of their principles.) The Union is three centuries old, and its component crowns older still, marking it out as an historically-privileged authority, while the EU is new and untested, bringing its authority into question, above all its authority over so ancient an institution as the British throne.The hypocrisy of a lot of the UKs right, many of whom want to leave the EU to get away from Brussels, yet want to have Scotland stay in a similar arrangmeent with Westminister annoys me greatly too.
The British working class being entirely comprised of native-born whites, of course.
It's also a mistake to assume that the non-white and non-native-born parts of the working class are immune to conservative social views or even anti-immigration sentiments.
Well, immigrants of Muslim backgrounds tend to be very socially conservative. I wager that anti-immigrant sentiments among ethnic minorities are usually found within ethnic minorities that long had their wave of settlement and have had citizenship for several generations. It is not unheard of to find ethnic Turks who oppose Eastern European immigration to the Netherlands, for instance.
Would the important things being done at national level not be an argument for independence? (making the decision in Edinburgh rather than London)Most of the important things - economic policies are still done at national level, especially since Britain keeps the pound. And then there is the size of your bargaining power.
I wager that anti-immigrant sentiments among ethnic minorities are usually found within ethnic minorities that long had their wave of settlement and have had citizenship for several generations.
I imagine the effect probably would be more pronounced in those groups, but the links in my spoiler show that nearly 50% of immigrants into Britain think there is too much immigration into Britain. This doesn't mean they are right about that (though my reasons for thinking them mistaken are even further off-topic here), but it does suggest that the 'criticism of immigration levels = racism and xenophobia' line held by certain political elements is misleading at best.
Breaking up after peacefully coexisting for 300 years for no clearly discernible reason ... uh, I really do support peoples' right to self-determination*, but this seems just silly from outside. So, no.
I imagine the effect probably would be more pronounced in those groups, but the links in my spoiler show that nearly 50% of immigrants into Britain think there is too much immigration into Britain. This doesn't mean they are right about that (though my reasons for thinking them mistaken are even further off-topic here), but it does suggest that the 'criticism of immigration levels = racism and xenophobia' line held by certain political elements is misleading at best.
This isn't untrue. But so much of the mainstream discourse around the working class is so heavily constructed in terms of these flattened, inhuman clichés of competing racialised "communities", defined in terms of selfishness, anxiety and hostility to outsiders. Incapable of any overarching solidarities except nationalism, and that only through the mediation of the creaking, half-feudal British state, so what remains is the right on a platform of "national unity" and the "left" on a platform of communal patronage. And that just isn't a productive framework, but I think it's a framework that you're at least close to reproducing here.It's by no means entirely comprised of people with conservative social views either, but neither point diminishes the argument that Labour can't win without those people's votes, except by courting sections of the middle class.
It's also a mistake to assume that the non-white and non-native-born parts of the working class are immune to conservative social views or even anti-immigration sentiments.
Spoiler :If you find the latter hard to believe (as I did, when first it was suggested to me), check out these studies, showing half of foreign-born respondents saying that immigration should be reduced. Or these ones, showing that a quarter of 1st or 2nd generation migrants believe immigration is bad for the economy and is undermining 'British cultural life'.
(I'm a little bitter about this whole business, in case you couldn't tell.)
It's going to keep competing for the right-wing middle class vote, and it's going to keep failing, because middle class right-wingers are going to vote for the more plainly middle class, more plainly right-wing party.
Would the important things being done at national level not be an argument for independence? (making the decision in Edinburgh rather than London)
Bargaining power is a point but if it isn't being used in your own best interest it could be working against you.