The Free Press Journal

Scotland lodges request for independen­ce vote

- AGENCIES

The leader of the Scottish government on Friday sent a letter to the British Prime Minister formally requesting permission to stage a second independen­ce referendum.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon sent the notice to Theresa May just days after she received the backing of Scotland's devolved Parliament, Holyrood, to ask Westminste­r for permission to once again put the nation's UK membership to a vote, reported Efe news.

"As you are aware, the Scottish Parliament has now determined by a clear majority that there should be an independen­ce referendum," read the letter signed by Sturgeon.

"The purpose of such a referendum is to give people in Scotland the choice of following the UK out of the EU and single market on the terms you negotiate, or becoming an independen­t country," it continued.

May confirmed that Britain will leave the EU single market as part of the process of untangling over 40 years of cohesion with the continenta­l bloc.

But while voters in England and Wales narrowly supported Brexit during the June 2016 referendum, the Scottish electorate overwhelmi­ngly voted to remain a member of the European Union, with only 38 per cent opting to sever ties with Brussels.

With a fresh mandate, Sturgeon's Scottish National Party (SNP) has reignited an independen­ce campaign that had sat dormant since the 2014 referendum after 55 per cent voters opted to remain a devolved nation within Britain. The Conservati­ve Party government, however, with its eyes firmly set on the Brexit negotiatio­ns with the EU, has come out against proposals for a second Scottish independen­ce vote. The PM publicly went on record to argue that "now is not the time".

Nonetheles­s, Sturgeon announced that the Scottish government would seek to hold an independen­ce ballot between autumn of 2018 and spring of 2019, before Britain had finalised its EU withdrawal, according to the report.

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