Scottish Referendum - Part Deux

mr_goo
mr_goo Posts: 3,770
edited April 2017 in The cake stop
As the inevitable Sturgeon Scottish Nationalism Movement moves out of first gear. Should all of the United Kingdom's citizens be entitled to vote on the union?
Always be yourself, unless you can be Aaron Rodgers....Then always be Aaron Rodgers.
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Comments

  • kingstongraham
    kingstongraham Posts: 26,132
    Is the SNP justification that they are worried about leaving a union that is really important economically without knowing what will be in place afterwards?
  • Alain Quay
    Alain Quay Posts: 534
    The SNP has to call for a referendum now or the option won't exist in the near future.

    They don't have a strong case for independence, but they would be more persuasive if they actually used their time in government to prove they can effect change. The just don't seem to do anything other than fret about the next referendum.
  • bompington
    bompington Posts: 7,674
    Sturgeon has to play the game: of course she wants independence (well, some day anyway) and must be seen to be pursuing it - but the chief motivation here is to keep the wheels of the grievance industry turning, because that's what keeps the Nats going despite their pretty poor record in government.
    So you have to see everything that Sturgeon does through the "does this stoke The Grievance?" filter.
  • surrey_commuter
    surrey_commuter Posts: 18,866
    i think she would have more chance of success if the UK voted but only seems fair that they have the same rules as for Brexit
  • ugo.santalucia
    ugo.santalucia Posts: 28,172
    One for the English on here: you don't like Scottish, don't like Americans, don't like Welsh, don't like Europeans in general, don't like Russians, don't particularly like Australians either... hate Argentinians...

    Maybe Brazilians are OK, provided they are female, stay in Rio and show a bit of flesh in Copacabana?
    left the forum March 2023
  • blim
    blim Posts: 333
    edited March 2017
    Mr Goo wrote:
    As the inevitable Sturgeon Scottish Nationalism Movement moves out of first gear

    Scottish Independence Movement. But in answer to your question, I suspect most people in other parts of Britain would fall into one of 3 camps:

    1. those who wish us well and hope we attain independence
    2. those who can't wait to see the back of us
    3. those who don't care either way

    I'd be surprised if there were huge numbers of people in England (especially) who feel that "Britain" gains anything from including Scotland (or to put it another way, if Britain is really anything other than England).
    kop van de wedstrijd
  • surrey_commuter
    surrey_commuter Posts: 18,866
    One for the English on here: you don't like Scottish, don't like Americans, don't like Welsh, don't like Europeans in general, don't like Russians, don't particularly like Australians either... hate Argentinians...

    Maybe Brazilians are OK, provided they are female, stay in Rio and show a bit of flesh in Copacabana?

    you need two lists. One for people we don't like and another for people we don't like in our country. You may want to cross tab this with religion and skin tone.
  • kingstongraham
    kingstongraham Posts: 26,132
    One for the English on here: you don't like Scottish, don't like Americans, don't like Welsh, don't like Europeans in general, don't like Russians, don't particularly like Australians either... hate Argentinians...

    Maybe Brazilians are OK, provided they are female, stay in Rio and show a bit of flesh in Copacabana?

    What you're saying is that we just don't have the focus that the Scots have. Too easily distracted.
  • apreading
    apreading Posts: 4,535
    What I want to know is this:

    According to Nicola Sturgeon, the UK as a whole voted to leave the EU but Scotland as a whole voted to remain - so Scotland should be allowed to break off from the UK to remain in the EU.

    So, applying the same logic to a Scottish Independance referendum - even if Scotland as a whole votes to leave the UK, any consituency that votes to remain should be allowed to break off from Scotland to remain in the UK.

    So if the borders and Edinburgh voted to remain, she would give them up and form a smaller, independant Scotland without them?

    I bet not - but that is the rule she is preaching...!
  • chris_bass
    chris_bass Posts: 4,913
    One for the English on here: you don't like Scottish, don't like Americans, don't like Welsh, don't like Europeans in general, don't like Russians, don't particularly like Australians either... hate Argentinians...

    Maybe Brazilians are OK, provided they are female, stay in Rio and show a bit of flesh in Copacabana?

    you need two lists. One for people we don't like and another for people we don't like in our country. You may want to cross tab this with religion and skin tone.

    What about the ones we don't like in our country except for when we need a cheap extension built or some cheap labour
    www.conjunctivitis.com - a site for sore eyes
  • TheBigBean
    TheBigBean Posts: 20,511
    apreading wrote:
    What I want to know is this:

    According to Nicola Sturgeon, the UK as a whole voted to leave the EU but Scotland as a whole voted to remain - so Scotland should be allowed to break off from the UK to remain in the EU.

    So, applying the same logic to a Scottish Independance referendum - even if Scotland as a whole votes to leave the UK, any consituency that votes to remain should be allowed to break off from Scotland to remain in the UK.

    So if the borders and Edinburgh voted to remain, she would give them up and form a smaller, independant Scotland without them?

    I bet not - but that is the rule she is preaching...!

    Shetland Islands would be a good example although it is questionable whether the residents are keen on staying in the UK anyway.
  • tangled_metal
    tangled_metal Posts: 4,021
    Was it the Labour leader in Scotland who tore into the SNP about it on question time? Last week i believe if you want to watch it on iPlayer. From Newcastle i think. Funny.

    Personally I don't want Scotland to leave the union unless they want to. I believe it should be a significant margin too unlike the EU referendum.

    One point i would make, any significant referendum should have a margin of error too cover all who are eligible to vote but didn't. So if only 49% voted then it isn't able to be successful. If 51% of eligible voters voted and 1% of eligible voters voted to remain then that isn't enough to change the status quo. Just my opinion.
  • blim
    blim Posts: 333
    One point i would make, any significant referendum should have a margin of error too cover all who are eligible to vote but didn't. So if only 49% voted then it isn't able to be successful. If 51% of eligible voters voted and 1% of eligible voters voted to remain then that isn't enough to change the status quo. Just my opinion.

    For something as big as this, there should probably be a winning post of (say) 60%, rather than just gaining a majority. I voted Yes in the last Scottish independence referendum and will do so again, and so I'd be overjoyed if we got 51% but at the same time, having been on the losing side of the EU referendum, it could in no way be called decisive and I wouldn't be claiming it as "the will of the people".
    kop van de wedstrijd
  • rolf_f
    rolf_f Posts: 16,015
    apreading wrote:
    What I want to know is this:

    According to Nicola Sturgeon, the UK as a whole voted to leave the EU but Scotland as a whole voted to remain - so Scotland should be allowed to break off from the UK to remain in the EU.

    So, applying the same logic to a Scottish Independance referendum - even if Scotland as a whole votes to leave the UK, any consituency that votes to remain should be allowed to break off from Scotland to remain in the UK.

    So if the borders and Edinburgh voted to remain, she would give them up and form a smaller, independant Scotland without them?

    I bet not - but that is the rule she is preaching...!

    I've been making this point for a while but I think the size distribution is way off what you suggest. If the leave vote increased enough to give it a majority, but it was otherwise as per last time, then effectively I think it would be Glasgow, Edinburgh and Dundee going their own way and the rest of Scotland remaining in the Union. In terms of numbers, clearly there would be a majority in favour of Scottish independence but in terms of land area, it would be a miniscule minority; hardly really 'Scotland' at all. But, in terms of consistency, Nicola would have to support a split from the rest of Scotland or be shown to be a hypocrite. But of course, you can just alternative truth your way out of that sort of hole these days.
    Faster than a tent.......
  • sungod
    sungod Posts: 16,435
    One for the English on here: you don't like Scottish, don't like Americans, don't like Welsh, don't like Europeans in general, don't like Russians, don't particularly like Australians either... hate Argentinians...

    Maybe Brazilians are OK, provided they are female, stay in Rio and show a bit of flesh in Copacabana?

    oi! i'm english and don't dislike, let alone hate, anyone on basis of nationality
    my bike - faster than god's and twice as shiny
  • First.Aspect
    First.Aspect Posts: 14,498
    blim wrote:
    One point i would make, any significant referendum should have a margin of error too cover all who are eligible to vote but didn't. So if only 49% voted then it isn't able to be successful. If 51% of eligible voters voted and 1% of eligible voters voted to remain then that isn't enough to change the status quo. Just my opinion.

    For something as big as this, there should probably be a winning post of (say) 60%, rather than just gaining a majority. I voted Yes in the last Scottish independence referendum and will do so again, and so I'd be overjoyed if we got 51% but at the same time, having been on the losing side of the EU referendum, it could in no way be called decisive and I wouldn't be claiming it as "the will of the people".
    If you either (a) pay takes or (b) receive benefits, and you voted Yes you are an idiot but you got away with it.

    This is an utterly catastrophic direction of travel. Scotland's budget deficit it on a par with Greece (>9% last time I looked). Even if it walks away from its share of the UK national debt, it will have have it back in 10 years. Unless it hikes taxes at the same time as slashing services, all whilst spending loads on putting the organs of government it needs into place, facing down a stalled economy and an exodus of jobs, so as to get somewhat close to the EU requirements for entry, it will remain an insignificant peripheral country outside of both the UK and the EU.

    The disastrous effects of leaving both the UK and the EU will postpone any potential up-side to well beyond it mattering to anyone who votes now. And, just like Brexit, those who will suffer most are those who will be most supportive, sucked in by lies.

    This misguided, hostile, aggressive and frankly racist independence movement will end in tears.

    I only wish I could move away now.
  • rolf_f
    rolf_f Posts: 16,015
    This is an utterly catastrophic direction of travel. Scotland's budget deficit it on a par with Greece (>9% last time I looked). Even if it walks away from its share of the UK national debt, it will have have it back in 10 years. Unless it hikes taxes at the same time as slashing services, all whilst spending loads on putting the organs of government it needs into place, facing down a stalled economy and an exodus of jobs, so as to get somewhat close to the EU requirements for entry, it will remain an insignificant peripheral country outside of both the UK and the EU.

    Yeah, but Nicola's got a bus on order and it will say otherwise on the side so that's that.
    Faster than a tent.......
  • rick_chasey
    rick_chasey Posts: 72,244
    "Price of independence" innit.

    S'what Brexiters say.
  • apreading
    apreading Posts: 4,535
    blim wrote:
    For something as big as this, there should probably be a winning post of (say) 60%, rather than just gaining a majority.

    Trouble is that this would be even worse. What you suggest would mean that if 59% vote to leave, the 'democratic' course of action would be to go with the option that even less people voter for (only 41% in that case) because the margin wasnt big enough. There is no logic in that and it simply couldnt be done that way.
  • apreading wrote:
    blim wrote:
    For something as big as this, there should probably be a winning post of (say) 60%, rather than just gaining a majority.

    Trouble is that this would be even worse. What you suggest would mean that if 59% vote to leave, the 'democratic' course of action would be to go with the option that even less people voter for (only 41% in that case) because the margin wasnt big enough. There is no logic in that and it simply couldnt be done that way.

    I'm pretty sure that's the way referendums work in many countries...
  • rolf_f
    rolf_f Posts: 16,015
    apreading wrote:
    blim wrote:
    For something as big as this, there should probably be a winning post of (say) 60%, rather than just gaining a majority.

    Trouble is that this would be even worse. What you suggest would mean that if 59% vote to leave, the 'democratic' course of action would be to go with the option that even less people voter for (only 41% in that case) because the margin wasnt big enough. There is no logic in that and it simply couldnt be done that way.

    Yes, you can. The logic is that you need a high degree of agreement to change the status quo. 50% is only fine if you are voting between two things that represent change (eg changing the colour of the background from blue to green or blue to orange). Otherwise you get what happened - a decision that has enormous consequences achieved by lies and misinformation. The expectation should be that you need to make a bloody good case for such a revolutionary change if you are going to delegate it to the un-expert populace who don't understand a fraction of what it is all about.

    Hinaultsetc is right - I think referenda are usually not 50:50.
    Faster than a tent.......
  • apreading
    apreading Posts: 4,535
    From what I see there is provision for thresholds based on turnout but not based on minimum % of the vote:

    The following table sets out threshold requirements for referendums held in established Western democracies:
    Majority Provisions in established Western Democracies57
    Australia
    Geographical requirement: majority of votes and majority of states
    Austria
    Simple majority
    Belgium
    No provisions for referendums
    Canada
    Under debate
    Denmark
    Registered voter requirement: 30% of voters, 40% of voters on constitutional changes
    France
    Simple majority
    Finland
    Simple majority
    Germany
    No provisions for referendums
    Iceland
    Simple majority
    Ireland
    Simple majority
    Italy
    Turnout requirement: 50% of the registered voters
    Luxembourg
    Simple majority
    Malta
    Simple majority
    Netherlands
    Simple majority
    Switzerland
    Geographical requirement: simple majority and majority of cantons 56 For total revision, and for partial revision covering certain basic matters. Other matters can be put to referendums if demanded by one-tenth of the members of either house
    United Kingdom
    Simple majority (40% of registered voters in 1979)
    USA
    No provisions for nationwide referendums

    http://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j& ... 7726,d.cGw

    And the other point is that there is no such thing as status quo in these cases. In the case of Brexit, the EU is constantly changing and likely to change in the future, in the case of IndyRef, the consitution of the UK is due to change massively. So there is no status quo to vote for really - you are voting for option a) or option b) and this can only be done based on majority.
  • pblakeney
    pblakeney Posts: 25,597
    apreading wrote:
    ...So there is no status quo to vote for really - you are voting for option a) or option b) ...
    You could be on a loser there. I tried to make that point during the Indyref1 and Brexit debates, only to be told I was wrong. I ignored that opinion.
    The above may be fact, or fiction, I may be serious, I may be jesting.
    I am not sure. You have no chance.
    Veronese68 wrote:
    PB is the most sensible person on here.
  • Pretty sure France has different requirements for a constitutional change than those you have listed. Wouldn't be surprised if others did too.
  • Stevo_666
    Stevo_666 Posts: 58,167
    How tedious. As if there weren't enough people in the Brexit thread who can't accept democratic decisions :)

    scotland-robbed-bbc-news-13-01-headlines-nicola-sturgeon-calls-for-6475114.png
    "I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]
  • ballysmate
    ballysmate Posts: 15,921
    I think this quote sums up Sturgeon's position.

    It's a referendum sturgeon can't afford to lose and can't afford to win.

    Wish I could take credit.
  • shortfall
    shortfall Posts: 3,288
    One for the English on here: you don't like Scottish, don't like Americans, don't like Welsh, don't like Europeans in general, don't like Russians, don't particularly like Australians either... hate Argentinians...

    Maybe Brazilians are OK, provided they are female, stay in Rio and show a bit of flesh in Copacabana?

    Pretty sweeping generalisation of "the English" that mate. Hopefully you're being ironic? +1 to the Brazilian females though :D
  • slowmart
    slowmart Posts: 4,474
    So the oi price has tanked since the last referendum and when Brexit happens there won't be any trade agreements in place for Scotland. Not exactly a rosey picture nor is the SNP's ability to balance their own spending.

    More powers are being divest to the Scottish Parliament to raise taxes but responsibilities are also attached to balance their budget.

    Personally I'm for Scottish independence as I see its an inevitable outcome from all the idiotic rhetoric from the nutjibs who think the film Bravehaert is historical fact.

    If independence happens do you think the English will have to bail Scotland out again in another Act of the Union? Could be a source of cheap labour for the Mike Ashley's using zero hour contracts.....
    “Give a man a fish and feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and feed him for a lifetime. Teach a man to cycle and he will realize fishing is stupid and boring”

    Desmond Tutu
  • FatTed
    FatTed Posts: 1,205
    Larry the Cat "Nicola Sturgeon 2013: Referendum is a once in a lifetime opportunity for Scotland". Nicola Sturgeon 2017 : I meant the lifetime of a guinea pig
  • bompington
    bompington Posts: 7,674
    I would say that there's an awful lot of cognitive dissonance going on in anyone who is either
    a) for brexit and against Scottish independence or
    b) against brexit and for scottish independence.

    Which is, of course, quite a lot of people.

    And where there is cognitive dissonance, expect weird (il)logic, absurd emotionalism and general chaos and nastiness.

    That's right, just like the previous referenda. Already my FB feed is turning blue with the dribblings of all the yessers now that wee Nicola has, er, released their tension for them. About my only hope is that they simply won't be able to keep this up for as long as the referendum takes to happen: maybe gravity will eventually reassert itself over fantasy politics and they'll all collapse into a black hole of wishful thinking.

    But how can any brexiter reasonably campaign against Scottish independence? I suspect that an awful lot of them don't even want to, after all it's the Little Englanders who dominate them numerically and nurture them spiritually. And how can any Nat campaign to remain in the EU? There's supposed to be this idea that Scottish Nationalism is so very different from the English version - so liberal, international, open-minded and open-bordered - but it's not. The only reason the Nats love the EU so much is that it can be made out to be a polar opposite to England.

    So we're already winding up with a diminished UK - I'm very sure that is the inevitable consequence of brexit - and both the Little Englanders and the Little Scotlanders want to be diminished further. Meanwhile in Scotland education, health, business, everything, all suffer from second rate government that is skilled at blaming everything on Westminster but not a lot else.

    Happy days. :?