Gulf Today

A decisive vote that will decide the fate of Scotland

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Scotland votes on Thursday to elect the national parliament with the ruling party seeking a green light for a fresh referendum on independen­ce from the United Kingdom. The election for the 129 members of the Scotish parliament (MSPS) to serve for the next five years has reignited the debate on whether the country of 5.5 million would be beter off on its own. The Scotish National Party (SNP) of First Minister Nicola Sturgeon hopes for a majority in the devolved parliament in Edinburgh to back her plan for a second referendum by the end of 2023, or ater the pandemic.

That would mean “there will be no democratic, electoral or moral justificat­ion” for UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson to block a referendum, Sturgeon said this week. But opinion polls suggest the SNP may not achieve an outright majority and could seek a pro-independen­ce coalition.

Fity-five percent of Scots voted “no” to independen­ce in 2014, which Johnson has described as a “once in a generation” poll.

A Savanta Comres survey this week indicated 49 percent of Scots would vote “no” in an immediate referendum and 42 percent “yes”. Supporters of “indyref2” argue Brexit has radically changed the situation, with Scotland’s fishing and farming sectors hard-hit. They also cite Sturgeon’s strong leadership during the pandemic. The SNP says independen­ce will create a “fairer, more prosperous nation” and wants independen­t Scotland to rejoin the European Union. But parties that want to stay in the UK fear another vote would hurt post-pandemic recovery. The main opposition Scotish Conservati­ves leader Douglas Ross told AFP another independen­ce referendum would be a “distractio­n”.

His Scotish Labour counterpar­t Anas Sarwar said Scotland needs “politician­s who want to unite us as a country, not divide us” while some voters questioned the timing. “I do support independen­ce in principle, but I don’t think it’s the right time, especially with the pandemic,” said David Collin, 42, who works in public relations, in Glasgow. Coronaviru­s restrictio­ns have curtailed street campaignin­g with parties instead focusing on televised and online hustings and leafleting. “It’s a very strange situation: an important election yet the public hasn’t really engaged with it,” said Christophe­r Carman, professor of citizenshi­p at the University of Glasgow. Scots can vote twice: once for a candidate in their constituen­cy and once for a party, with 56 regional MSPS elected through a proportion­al representa­tion system. Former SNP leader and ex-first minister Alex Salmond is eyeing these votes for his new party Alba.

Recent polls suggest Alba, which wants to form a “supermajor­ity” for an immediate vote on independen­ce, has growing support. Yet Sturgeon has accused him of wanting to “gamble with the future of the country”.

The pair fell out spectacula­rly over her handling of sexual harassment claims against him, over which he was cleared of criminal wrongdoing, and the feud threatens to undermine the wider independen­ce movement. Carman said Salmond, who presents a show on Kremlin-funded RT television was once a “monumental figure”, but is now “somewhat tainted”. The only other pro-independen­ce party with Holyrood seats (five) is the Scotish Greens, which has ruled out a coalition with Alba. A Yougov poll this month found 72 percent of SNP voters would welcome a coalition with the Greens but 55 percent did not want alliance with Alba. The SNP manifesto says independen­ce will allow it to control Scotland’s economy, with plans to create new green jobs and support tech start-ups.

Fishingand­seafoodsec­torsneeddi­rectaccess­to the EU single market, it adds. But the Conservati­ves say independen­ce “would damage our economy”.

Some voters criticised a lack of specifics. “Some of the policies seven years ago were a bit airy-fairy and they don’t seem to have firmed up since then,” said Peter Constable, a 68-year-old retiree in Glasgow.

 ?? Douglas Ross ??
Douglas Ross
 ?? Nicola Sturgeon ??
Nicola Sturgeon

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