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Thread: Scotland at the crossroads

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    Capped Player DannyInvincible's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Gather round View Post
    I imagine the unionist psyche would be little affected/ interested in a Scottish indepedence vote which is likely to be lost heavily. Only 20% support in the 2010 Scotish general electiion, remember.
    Support for an independent Scotland has apparently risen to over 30 per cent now. And still two years to go 'til a vote. How would the unionist psyche be affected in a Scottish independence vote with a very realistic chance of success?

    Interesting difference in the language used and approach taken by the British establishment in relation to the prospect of Scottish independence in comparison to the language used and approach taken when discussing the prospect of Irish unity: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-16503307

    The establishment clearly feels that this issue is very much their business - a Westminster/UK-wide issue and not one for the Scottish electorate alone - whereas external impediment is something that the Good Friday Agreement forbids with regard to any future referendum on Irish unity in NI. I think it tells us about the nature of the union and the perception of Scotland as being integral to its fabric, whilst NI is seen as dispensable.

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    It could also be a residual perception from the time of the Anglo-Irish Treaty to the subsequent establishment of the Boundary Commission that NI was probably only destined to be separated from the south temporarily.

    Scotland existed as a kingdom in its own right before union in 1706 (/7?), whereas the Irish kingdom was artificially created out of the Lordship of Ireland by Henry VIII, around 1541 iirc, so it might be perceived by some in the establishment as a deeper union...?
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    Seasoned Pro peadar1987's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eminence Grise View Post
    It could also be a residual perception from the time of the Anglo-Irish Treaty to the subsequent establishment of the Boundary Commission that NI was probably only destined to be separated from the south temporarily.

    Scotland existed as a kingdom in its own right before union in 1706 (/7?), whereas the Irish kingdom was artificially created out of the Lordship of Ireland by Henry VIII, around 1541 iirc, so it might be perceived by some in the establishment as a deeper union...?
    I think if the Scottish people vote for independence, no amount of posturing from south of the border will be able to stop it. They may say that the issue affects the whole of the UK, and that the whole of the UK should have a vote, but they didn't apply the same arguments when the Soviet Union was breaking up. The international community would almost certainly recognise Scotland as an independent state.

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    The precedent was already set in Montenegro in 2006, where the international observers required a Yes vote of 55% before independence would be approved, so can't see how London could over-rule a similar Scottish result. As for the actual referendum timing, 2012 or 2014 shouldn't materially affect the result, but when most Scots are definitely anti-Tory by instinct, Cameron's intervention will only bolster both the Yes campaign and Salmond's efforts to organise the vote on his own terms.
    Last edited by culloty82; 12/01/2012 at 8:37 PM.

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    Capped Player DannyInvincible's Avatar
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    Why does this look familiar?



    Bit nauseating listening Cameron getting haughty in Westminster yesterday with his cringe-worthy "never-endum" jibes. This talk of "delay" is simply falsehood. The referendum should take place when it's mandated to take place.

    Quote Originally Posted by peadar1987 View Post
    They may say that the issue affects the whole of the UK, and that the whole of the UK should have a vote, but they didn't apply the same arguments when the Soviet Union was breaking up.
    They didn't even apply the same arguments whilst erecting a framework to enable NI's future passage out of the union.

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    Quote Originally Posted by DannyInvincible View Post

    They didn't even apply the same arguments whilst erecting a framework to enable NI's future passage out of the union.
    Your forgetting that Scotland has a decent economy and is a money earner, Northern Ireland costs London more than they get back in taxes

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    Seasoned Pro peadar1987's Avatar
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    I was reading the comments left beneath one of the articles on the BBC website (don't do it, it will make you rush for the nearest balaclava and semtex!)

    Plenty of ignorant little-Englanders from the Daily Mail counties saying Scotland would soon come crawling back to the Union, because they wouldn't be able to afford things like aircraft carriers and nuclear weapons! What possible reason could Scotland have for capital warships and a nuclear deterrant?! It was shocking enough that one person would think this, but I saw it at least three times. Some people are so disconnected from reality it is scary!

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    It was interesting to contrast the reactionary, panicked pre-recorded interview this morning on Morning Ireland with Nick Clegg vs the calm, collected live interview with Salmond.

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    Scotland would break up from the UK technically, but be so politically, emotionally and culturally so connected, that in reality it would barely make any difference. They would keep the Pound, and keep many of the existing ties they have.

    On the wider UK question, I get the impression that nobody in the rest of the UK gives a damn whether they become independent or not. London doesn't want to pay for their upkeep, the British taxpayer wouldn't be that keen on it either. NI and Wales haven't the time or the will to care about the issue.
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    Blah blah

    Do you really think that Scotland are such a financial basket case?

    Learn more. Comment later.
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    Seasoned Pro peadar1987's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BonnieShels View Post
    Blah blah

    Do you really think that Scotland are such a financial basket case?

    Learn more. Comment later.
    The point has been made many times, but if Scotland was a black hole for money populated by sponging alcoholic jocks (Daily Mail et al, 2012), Westminster wouldn't be fighting so hard to keep it. They certainly wouldn't be so put out if Northern Ireland or Wales decided to go it on their own.

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    Quote Originally Posted by BonnieShels
    Blah blah

    Do you really think that Scotland are such a financial basket case?
    All of the UK is a financial basket case. Have you seen their deficit figures?
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    Quote Originally Posted by peadar1987 View Post
    The point has been made many times, but if Scotland was a black hole for money populated by sponging alcoholic jocks (Daily Mail et al, 2012), Westminster wouldn't be fighting so hard to keep it. They certainly wouldn't be so put out if Northern Ireland or Wales decided to go it on their own.
    Politically, Cameron would actually gain if Scotland left, as the Tories have only one MP north of the Border, compared to Labour's 41, but as we saw with UCUNF, the PM is a committed unionist who views every part of the UK as "being as British as Finchley". Most of the English would be happy to see them leave, as they dislike the Scottish MPs voting on questions only concerning England.

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    Quote Originally Posted by DannyInvincible View Post
    Support for an independent Scotland has apparently risen to over 30 per cent now. And still two years to go 'til a vote
    During which two years it might well fall back towards the 20% recorded in the 2010 general election. The latter tend to show higher nationalist votes than the Holyrood equivalent. Basically because at the latter SNP supporters can have it both ways, criticising the broader British government and state while remaining within it.

    How would the unionist psyche be affected in a Scottish independence vote with a very realistic chance of success?
    Hypothetically- I don't think it has a realistic chance, as above. But if that changed I imagine there'd be short-time wab-waving by NI nationalists, matched by exaggerated Unionist angst. Then abnormal politics would continue.

    The establishment clearly feels that this issue is very much their business - a Westminster/UK-wide issue and not one for the Scottish electorate alone - whereas external impediment is something that the Good Friday Agreement forbids with regard to any future referendum on Irish unity in NI. I think it tells us about the nature of the union and the perception of Scotland as being integral to its fabric, whilst NI is seen as dispensable
    There's something in that, most obviously a long-term history of paramilitary violence in NI. Which needs to be treated with kid gloves.

    But you overstate both Scotland's importance to England (9% and 3% are both insignificant compared with 83%, the relevant population shares). And also the GFA's influence. It's not like Magna Carta nor even your 1937 constitution. but rather a deal which doesn't automatically bind its successors. NI won't leave Britain unless Unionists want it to.

    Bit nauseating listening Cameron getting haughty in Westminster yesterday with his cringe-worthy "never-endum" jibes. This talk of "delay" is simply falsehood. The referendum should take place when it's mandated to take place
    I hope you don't feel nauseous every time a foreign party breaks a manifesto pledge. Because that's just what the SNP will try if they see an advantage in delaying, hurrying forward, procrastination or whatever else.

    Quote Originally Posted by Eminence Grise View Post
    It could also be a residual perception from the time of the Anglo-Irish Treaty to the subsequent establishment of the Boundary Commission that NI was probably only destined to be separated from the south temporarily
    That might have been a perception in 1932. Not in 2012.

    Quote Originally Posted by peadar1987 View Post
    I think if the Scottish people vote for independence, no amount of posturing from south of the border will be able to stop it...the international community would almost certainly recognise Scotland as an independent state
    You call it posturing, but there would be plenty to be argued about. What would be Scotland's share of the national debt, or the oil? (I'd say about 9% for both).

    If any referendum is relatively close (ie the pro-independence vote between about 45 and 55%), then opposition within Scotland would be more significant than either English posturing or wider rubber-stamp outside.

    Plenty of ignorant little-Englanders from the Daily Mail counties saying Scotland would soon come crawling back to the Union, because they wouldn't be able to afford things like aircraft carriers and nuclear weapons! What possible reason could Scotland have for capital warships and a nuclear deterrant?! It was shocking enough that one person would think this, but I saw it at least three times. Some people are so disconnected from reality it is scary!
    You do realise that, unpopular as heavy weaponry may be to most Scots, its industry provides a lot of jobs. Simply abandoning them might prove difficult. There must also be a theoretical possibility that Britain (or America, or NATO) might pay Scotland to hire bases, etc.

    Quote Originally Posted by culloty82 View Post
    when most Scots are definitely anti-Tory by instinct, Cameron's intervention will only bolster both the Yes campaign and Salmond's efforts to organise the vote on his own terms
    2010- and most previous general election results- suggest they're just as definitely anti-SNP: the party has never managed more than 23% of the Scottish vote in one.

    Cameron may look cack-handed in Scotland, largely because it isn't a priority for him. And don't rule out gaffes by the SNP- linking any vote to the Battle of Bannockburn, and extending the vote to 16 year olds, are just stunts. The first particularly is just childish.

    as we saw with UCUNF, the PM is a committed unionist who views every part of the UK as "being as British as Finchley". Most of the English would be happy to see them leave, as they dislike the Scottish MPs voting on questions only concerning England
    Cameron has to pay lip service to flag-waving unionism, but it's no more than that. His party is one of London and Suburban England (ie excluding the old heavy industry belts around Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds etc. If the Scots really wanted to go he's let them, I think.

    The Finchley (Thatch's old seat, so maybe it should be Witney now) thing is a bit silly. There's no equivalent to the SNP, Plaid or the Bon Jovies in England. Their fringe parties are nationalistic, but don't want to separate from er, England.

    Quote Originally Posted by Horton
    Your forgetting that Scotland has a decent economy and is a money earner, Northern Ireland costs London more than they get back in taxes
    Not so, Scotland- although currently the third-richest of Britain's 12 regions, after London and SE England- has a lower output per head than Britain and also in deficit to London. Also, many claims of Scottish economic strength are based on

    a) the oil remaining available and accessible for the foreseeable future- some geologists suggest otherwise, and anyway

    b) there's some dispute as to how much of it they own. The British state, economy etc. has invested in the oil indsutry and infrastructure, after all.

    And don't forget Scotland has three times the population to be subsidised (as per your theory) as NI does.
    Last edited by Gather round; 19/01/2012 at 5:21 PM.

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    I love the way this issue rocks the Unionist's view of the world.

    West Pakistan indeed

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    Capped Player DannyInvincible's Avatar
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    But you overstate both Scotland's importance to England (9% and 3% are both insignificant compared with 83%, the relevant population shares). And also the GFA's influence. It's not like Magna Carta nor even your 1937 constitution. but rather a deal which doesn't automatically bind its successors. NI won't leave Britain unless Unionists want it to.
    What was the point in including in the GFA a provision for a referendum allowing for NI to leave the union with a simple democratic majority if the whole thing is as meaningless as you suggest? Who's going to back-track on that deal?

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    GR won't be worrying unduly about McGuinness's NI referendum - it'd take at least 30 years before there would be a majority, and that's only on the big assumption that all Catholics would vote Yes.

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    Quote Originally Posted by culloty82 View Post
    GR won't be worrying unduly about McGuinness's NI referendum - it'd take at least 30 years before there would be a majority, and that's only on the big assumption that all Catholics would vote Yes.
    Currently talking about this on Last Word.
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    Piece here about how many English people wouldn't be sorry to see the Scots break away: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...h-independence
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    (Double post)
    Last edited by Gather round; 01/02/2012 at 6:52 PM.

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