Dani Garavelli: what future for Women for Independence?

ON AUGUST 12, 2012 – two months before the Edinburgh Agreement was reached – a press release landed on news editors’ desks, announcing the launch of a new campaign group: Women for Independence.

ON AUGUST 12, 2012 – two months before the Edinburgh Agreement was reached – a press release landed on news editors’ desks, announcing the launch of a new campaign group: Women for Independence.

The press release was relatively low-key. The group, it said, had been born out of a recognition that women’s voices were missing from the referendum debate. But the potential impact of the organisation could be seen from a glance down the list of founding members: former Scottish Socialist Party MSPs Carolyn Leckie and Rosie Kane and SNP activists, Isobel Lindsay, Jeane Freeman, Kate Higgins, Susan Stewart and Natalie McGarry – all experienced campaigners with big personalities. Right from the get-go, they had a clear vision of what the group would stand for: it would be cross-party, it would be genuinely grassroots, it would be the kind of place where women could talk freely without having their opinions trashed, and, most importantly, it would function on trust. As the referendum campaign gathered momentum, those involved were given a lot of autonomy – they wrote leaflets, made speeches and organised events, without anyone really checking up on what they were doing.

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