The Scotsman

Independen­ce vote ‘could happen next year’ claims Mike Russell

- By SCOTT MACNAB scott.macnab@scotsman.com

A referendum on Scottish independen­ce could take place before the end of next year, Scotland’s Constituti­on Secretary has said.

Michael Russell said many of the logistics are already in place such as the franchise and legislatio­n on the broader framework for referendum­s.

But the claims were branded “reckless and irresponsi­ble” by pro-union opponents as the country battles a second wave of coronaviru­s.

The Scottish Government is poised to publish legislatio­n on the “terms and timing” of the vote itself, which could pave the way for it to happen. However, the UK Government, which has control over the constituti­on, has so far ruled out the prospect of a repeat of the 2014 vote taking place.

Consistent polling since the start of the year shows that a majority of Scots now back independen­ce.

If a pro-independen­ce majority is returned at next year’s Holyrood elections in May, many nationalis­ts say the case for a second referendum will be undeniable.

Mr Russell told BBC Scotland’s The Nine show there would to be a“period of months” between the passing of a final referendum bill and the vote taking place.

“We already have two parts of that in place,” he said.

“We have the franchise in place and that Franchise Act was approved last year. We have the arrangemen­ts for the referendum in terms of the nuts and bolts and the Scottish Parliament has approved that.”

He added: “What we need now is that last bit of legislatio­n, which sets a date and organises a question.

“And there’s a process to be gone through in terms of question testing.

“So we will publish the third part before the election as we’ve said. If the Scottish people endorse that and wish it to happen then it must happen.

“I’m not going to do anything other than assume it will happen in those circumstan­ces.

“And then there will need to be a referendum and that could take place, I’ m quite sure, before the end of next year.”

But Pamela Nash, chief executive of Scotland in Union, warned another referendum would “devastate” Scotland.

“These are reckless and irresponsi­ble comments from an SNP minister,” she said.

“We are in the midst of a devastatin­g pandemic that is costing lives and it will take years for our NHS and economy to recover.

“The last referendum campaign paralysed politics, and to go through that again at this time would be devastatin­g for Scotland.

“Rather than seek to divide Scotland like this, we have a brighter future as part of the UK.”

Support for Scottish in dependence hit a record 58 per cent in the most recent opinion poll conducted by Ipsos MORI, which emerged last week.

Polls since the star t of the year have seen a shift towards independen­ce.

It is a marked reversal from 2014 when 55 per cent of Scots voted to stay in the UK, while 45 per cent voted to leave.

The Scottish Government says the Brexit vote is a “material change” which justifies another independen­ce referendum.

 ??  ?? 0 Mike Russell says many of the logistics are already in place for a second vote on independen­ce
0 Mike Russell says many of the logistics are already in place for a second vote on independen­ce

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