Weekend Herald

May: Not the time for a referendum

British PM clashes with Scotland’s First Minister over vote on independen­ce

- Jill Lawless

British Prime Minister Theresa May has rejected a call for a referendum on Scottish independen­ce before Britain leaves the European Union — a move condemned as a “democratic outrage” by Scotland’s nationalis­t leader.

May and Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon both dug in their heels in a showdown that could complicate Britain’s path out of the EU and threaten the future of the United Kingdom.

May said “now is not the time” to reopen Scotland’s independen­ce debate, though she did not rule out a referendum in the future. Britain is to begin the two- year exit process from the 28- nation EU by the end of this month.

The UK i s made up of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The UK as a whole decided in a June 23 referendum to leave the EU, but Scots in that ballot voted 62 to 38 per cent to remain.

Sturgeon announced earlier this week that she would seek a referendum on Scottish independen­ce to be held some time from 2018 to early 2019, so Scottish voters could decide whether to leave the EU with the rest of the UK or go it alone.

The Conservati­ve- led British Government, however, must agree to a legally binding referendum, and May said “now is not the time”.

“All our energies should be focused on our negotiatio­ns with the European Union,” May said, adding that holding a Scotland referendum while EU exit talks were still under way would “make it more difficult for us to get the right deal for Scotland and the right deal for the UK”.

The British Government’s Scotland Minister, David Mundell, said May’s Administra­tion “will not be entering into discussion­s or negotiatio­ns” about a new referendum on Scottish independen­ce.

But Sturgeon, undeterred, plans to ask the Scottish Parliament next week to start the process of seeking a new referendum.

She said it would be a “democratic outrage” for the British Government to stop the people of Scotland “having a choice over their future”.

“It is for the Scottish Parliament — not Downing Street — to determine the timing of a referendum, and the decision of the Scottish Parliament must be respected,” she said.

She said “having sunk the ship with Brexit”, the British Government was “trying to puncture Scotland’s lifeboats as well”.

Sturgeon’s Scottish National Party does not hold an outright majority in the Scottish legislatur­e, and her plan will face opposition.

Scottish Conservati­ve leader Ruth Davidson, whose party has the second- largest bloc of seats, said the Tories would “reject conclusive­ly the timetable for a referendum set out by the Scottish Government”.

Davidson said voting on independen­ce without knowing how Britain was faring outside the EU would mean that “on the most important decision we can make, we would be voting blind”.

Scottish voters rejected independen­ce by a margin of 55 per cent to 45 per cent in a 2014 referendum that was billed as a once- in- a- generation vote. But Sturgeon says the UK’s decision to leave the EU has changed everything.

 ??  ?? Theresa May
Theresa May
 ??  ?? Nicola Sturgeon
Nicola Sturgeon

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