Yes *Jane10 but at the GE following the referendum all but 3 Scottish Constituencies returned an SNP MP and although the Press made out that the Scottish Parliament election was somehow or other a victory for the Tories the SNP actually polled more votes than they had ever done before- only the vagaries of the PR system ensured that the Tories had a sizeable contingent of MSPs. This is what the system was designed to do, to ensure that votes for minority parties were not wasted and ensure that these parties were proportionally represented in the Parliament.
If you count all the votes both Constituency and list then the SNP polled 2,013,485 almost double the Tories 1,026,066. That the system works pretty well as regards its PR aim is shown by the eventual total of 63 seats for the SNP and 31 for the Tories.
If a week is a long time in politics then the 2.5 years since the Scottish Referendum is an eternity, during which support for the SNP and their Independence supporting allies the SGP has grown substantially. The forthcoming GE, being a FPTP election may throw up some surprises e.g. Tory wins in the borders and leafy suburbs but I don't think I am dreaming in thinking that the SNP will win a majority of Scottish seats.
Thank you for your suggestion of getting out and about to hear different opinions but in my heyday I travelled all over Scotland to help in various bi-elections and am well aware of regional differences in opinion/voting intention. I'm fairly restricted to the local area nowadays but could show you huge differences between neighbouring villages and even certain streets. Also, I am in regular contact with fellow Nationalists all over Scotland on-line, who are all cautiously reporting a continuing steady swing in our favour (and another surge of people joining the SNP since the GE was called).
Jalima said If Scotland were to become independent there may not be so much money per head of population to spend on essential services.
Equally, with Independence, there would be no expenditure on Trident, Infrastructure projects in the SE of the UK, etc and with all the Tax revenues from Whisky and Oil coming direct to the Scottish Treasury, an overabundance of water, cheap power coming from renewables and the small things such as removal of VAT liability from Police Scotland, there may be more money to
spend on essential services.