The Scotsman

Downing Street trying to ‘rig’ referendum, Sturgeon claims

- By CONOR MARLBOROUG­H conor.marlboroug­h@jpimedia.co.uk

Nicola Sturgeon has claimed Downing Street is attempting to “rig” the result of a second referendum on Scottish independen­ce.

A report yesterday suggested UK ministers are pushing to allow Scots living in the rest of the UK a say in any future votes on Scotland’s place in the Union.

Some 800,000 people who were born in Scotland now live in England, with a further 50,000 resident in Wales.

The majority of Scots living outside Scotland are thought to support the Union.

Polling expert Professor Sir John Curtice has suggested their inclusion in a second referendum could help the No vote while opinions on independen­ce inside Scotland remains almost evenly split.

Reacting to the report yesterday, the First Minister told followers on Twitter: “I see the anti independen­ce campaign

is trying to rig the rules of #indyref2 again (tho in doing so they also concede that it’s going to happen).

“Maybe they should just argue their case on its merits and allow everyone who lives in Scotland to decide.”

Senior Conservati­ves pushing for the rule change compare the proposal to the decision to allow expatriate Britons to vote in the 2016 EU referendum.

But a similar proposal to allow Scots living in other parts of the UK to vote was debated in the negotiatio­ns ahead of the first independen­ce referendum in 2014 and was rejected outright by the SNP.

Any attempts to introduce the rule change for a future vote on the Union would likely be resisted again.

The news comes as the Prime Minister Boris Johnson faces mounting pressure to counter the SNP after their historic victory in the Holyrood elections last month.

No. 10’s so-called “Union unit” has lost two appointed leaders in a matter of weeks, and was described earlier this year as a focal-point of “Whitehall psychodram­a”.

Mr Johnson has also been urged to appoint former Scottish Conservati­ves leader Ruth Davidson to a newly-created role of constituti­onal secretary. The position would make Ms Davidson, who stepped down as leader of the Scottish Conservati­ves in 2019, the defacto chief of any future prounion campaign.

 ??  ?? 0 Professor Sir John Curtice
0 Professor Sir John Curtice

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