Perhaps. Again, it's not up to Nicola Sturgeon or Alex Salmond or you or me to determine any of this. It's the Scottish people who get to decide. They can stop voting SNP anytime they choose to.
And they keep saying "no".
Perhaps. Again, it's not up to Nicola Sturgeon or Alex Salmond or you or me to determine any of this. It's the Scottish people who get to decide. They can stop voting SNP anytime they choose to.
No. My country is not the UK. ...snip...
No its about a country declaring independence. Analogies can be useful but dont mistake the map for the territory. Especially if you have to force one interpretation of the analogy to make it work.
The union was not a business merger.
Every single principle of self determination outlines that ultimately a people decide their own fate and nobody can hold them against their will.
I presume you are now talking about an ISIS style declaration of an independent state of Scotland as opposed to an independent Scotland recognised by the rest of the world. The latter will only be achieved though legal means and without the UK parliament changing the law, that will not happen irrespective of the wishes of the majority of the people of Scotland.
This is the romanticism with the idea that you can map the modern UK onto the world of 300 years ago. Any country that would arise from "Scottish independence" is for all practical means a new country - it is not a continuation of the Scotland of 300+ years ago.
I am still not seeing that in my version. Do you have a link whereIt's implied in the explanatory note. That note is basically saying that the UK parliament will effectively hand back control of Scottish independence to the Scottish regional parliament pending the referendum, provided the conditions set out in the amendment are met. And this is therefore implicitly saying that the UK parliament will assent to the will of the Scottish regional parliament in respect of Scottish independence.
No, its just a new sovereign nation, Scotland has always been a country.
What should happen and should have happened decades ago is for us to sort out the constitution of the UK to incorporate actual legal means by which areas of the UK could leave the UK and how referendums bind the government.
The past Scottish only referendums were a terrible democratic deficit. It is wrong that I have no say in the future of my country. We should have a constitution that allows referendums in very limited cases and only when it is something that has major effects to the entire country (so things like the EU leave or stay or the last Scottish referendums) but everyone who will be affected should be able to participate in the decision.
Referendums should not be used by politicians for short term political advantage - as Cameron used them.
Last time I checked the Republic of Ireland wasn't part of the UK... They can do whatever they like.Would that include a border poll in Northern Ireland? Because that would effect everyone in the UK, and everyone in the Republic of Ireland, so following your logic, the two countries would have to vote in it.
Last time I checked the Republic of Ireland wasn't part of the UK... They can do whatever they like.
Scotland has always been a country.
You don’t get a referendum for free, you have to earn it. So if the Greens and the SNP – and the SSP or any of the other parties who’ve declared an interest in independence – get over the line and can make a coalition, make a majority, get the votes in the Parliament, then they’ll vote through a referendum, and that’s what democracy’s all about… it’s perfectly simple
"Always"?
Scotland was established in 843 AD. Then disestablished in 1707 AD.
No, its just a new sovereign nation, Scotland has always been a country.
Yes, but do you think the entire UK should vote on a united Ireland? And if so, why not invite the Republic to join in, since they would be effected too?
Wasn't that part of what caused the rebellion in the first place?![]()
Yes, but do you think the entire UK should vote on a united Ireland? And if so, why not invite the Republic to join in, since they would be effected too?
Sorry I just can't follow your logic - my comments are about the UK and the UK constitution?