Francesca R
Girl
You should no doubt thank Farage for helping too!
You should no doubt thank Farage for helping too!
Follow the UK not the English.Although I am ideologically in favour of an independent Scotland I do worry about the practicalities of it especially in current circumstances. I only think its sad in some ways that if independence did come about that it would be driven not by some great positive push from the Scottish people but from a reluctant concession that we can't follow England down the same dark path it seems determined to explore.
I do sympathise with people who feel stuck between two options they don't want. The majority of Scotland seems to want to stay in the EU as part of the UK but that's not on the table. Sad situation in many ways.
Not from what Davis has been saying.May's preferred outcome is evidently:
--"Best deal" for UK which has Scotland moderately onside
Meh, I just don't think May has the skill to stop it.--No IndyRef 2
Sturgeon is far more popular in Scotland than May is in the UK and has more coherent support.This puts the ball in Sturgeon's court for (i) trying to push the idea of Scotland having closer EU relationship while still "Brexiting", or (ii) pushing for IndyRef2 whether officially authorised or not.
Again, I don't see May as having anything to offer.Unless the two of them sort things out of course. May has sent several signals from minute one that her view is (i) UK stays a union (ii) the May Tories would like to be more relevant to Scots. There would need to be carrots associated with (ii) I am sure, revising the Barnett Formula isn't one apparently.
I don't understand what Scots want.
I can't speak for the internal consistency of this
Rather early days to call that one I think. I am rather optimistic about May's competence. We'll see (and will have to wait post "honeymoon" if there even is one)Meh, I just don't think May has the skill to stop it.
Again early days. Sturgeon doesn't have a parliamentary majority in Scotland (though of course has a more than 95% majority of Scottish Westminster seats), May does have one (just) in the UKSturgeon is far more popular in Scotland than May is in the UK and has more coherent support.
Rather early days to call that one I think. I am rather optimistic about May's competence. We'll see (and will have to wait post "honeymoon" if there even is one)
Again early days. Sturgeon doesn't have a parliamentary majority in Scotland (though of course has a more than 95% majority of Scottish Westminster seats), May does have one (just) in the UK
Well I'm happy to try to add any clarity I can but 'what Scots want' is just as diverse a range of thing as 'what English people want' so it's not easy to pin down a single definition.
Looking at the votes and as I said earlier it seems that the majority want to stay in the UK as a member of the EU.
That seems to be what is currently being explored by Nicola Sturgeon (along with Gibraltar and probably Northern Ireland too). Whether it's possible or not that seems to be the desire. I reckon it's probably a 5% chance. Maybe less. It's a long-shot anyway.
Failing that, and remembering that despite all the spin the Indyref result wasn't all that more convincing that the Leave vote at 45/55, then there is a sense that at least some people who voted No would rather be independent and remain within the EU than stay part of the UK and leave.
As such circumstances have changed. If the only way Scotland can stay within the EU is to declare independence then I think that question needs to be put to the nation again. The timing of any referendum would be tricky. I don't think it could be left until we know what kind of deal the EU and UK have agreed sadly.
Ideally we'd also have a clear picture from May on exactly what she is and isn't prepared to offer Scotland in terms of further powers. A clear picture of the decision would be great. I don't think, yet again, that we will have that luxury.
Add to that the undoubted fact that Scots have been conditioned into a feeling of inferiority for generations, producing what is termed the "Scottish cringe", and you had a toxic mess. There is no English cringe, and that made a lot of difference.
I think 'compel' is the wrong word. The idea was that England would want to be part of a Union as it would benefit both. Nobody from the SNP said they would compel anything. Of course, when Little Englanders started sniping it was pointed out to them that like every other asset the pound wasn't theirs to share and then they got upset. Because when it comes down to it they can't accept that the UK is not England and England is not the UK and the idea that Scotland has any claim on anything British is too much for their tiny minds to cope with.
Not sure what you mean.
Formal, no.
But true. Scotland isn't an official entity that the EU can have official discussions with.
Of course no voters were warned that their vote was tying Scotland to an increasingly right wing and insular England and that an EU exit was imminent. It was dismissed as anti-English bigotry by some. And now it has happened.
But does it want it at a cost of losing access to the UK common market?Certainly there are 4 things that Scotland wants given its demographics and its cultural heritage. It wants to access to the common market,
But will they like it when they get it? England did not. Although England equally needed it.it wants EU migration, not only does it want it but it's demographic make up requires it,
But does it want this at the risk of losing access to English science and research?it wants access to science, research, regional development and University funding
Actually I think this is council of Europe not EUand it wants to keep current eu legislation liike the Bill of rights.
The Treaty of Lambeth between England and France predates the 'Auld Alliance'. The treaty of York between England and Scotland predates the 'Auld Alliance'. Nice mythology but not true. It is worth remembering the oldest extant treaty in the world is that between England and Portugal 1373.There are many more things but these are some of the things that it wants. I think the rest of the U.K. have to remember that since the 1200s Scotland has had treaties with European countries (namely the auld alliance) long before it had treaties with England. This is part of its cultural and political heritage.
Follow the UK not the English.
I think that as part of the Union treaty, Scotland adopted the English pound because the Scottish currency was on a downer (on a 10:1 exchange rate). Historically I think the pound is English, is issued by the bank of England. Scotland can go back to the pre union state and issue 10 Scots pounds for each English pound. It may be more sensible to switch to the Euro once independent. It makes as much sense as continuing to use the pound sterling. Rather more if Scotland is to be part of the EU.
This is one position. Of course that position would also logically entail that the debt is not Scotland's either. Which was something that FrancescaR seemed to get quite upset about.
A more reasonable position might be that the assets and liabilities are shared between all parts of the UK and that a negotiation is needed to agree any future split in the event of the UK separating.