Las Vegas Review-Journal

No progress made in U.K.-Scotland Brexit dispute

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LONDON — The leaders of Britain and Scotland met for talks Monday but failed to resolve their difference­s over a new push for Scottish independen­ce as the U.K. prepares to leave the European Union.

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May and Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon met for an hour at a Glasgow hotel, days after Sturgeon demanded a referendum on Scottish independen­ce be held within two years.

May’s London-based government would have to approve a legally binding referendum, and May has said that “now is not the time” for a new independen­ce vote.

Sturgeon said the meeting had been “perfectly businessli­ke and cordial” but had not broken the logjam.

In a 2014 referendum, Scots voted by 55 percent to 45 percent to remain part of the United Kingdom. At the time, Sturgeon’s Scottish National Party said it was a once-in-a-generation choice. But Sturgeon now says Britain’s looming departure has transforme­d the situation.

On Tuesday, Scotland’s Edinburgh-based parliament is due to vote on a motion formally authorizin­g Sturgeon to seek a new referendum.

Asked what would happen if her call for another referendum was rejected by the British government, Sturgeon said: “I will set that out in due course.”

In a speech to civil servants at the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t near Glasgow, May promised stronger powers for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and said she would never allow “our union to become looser and weaker, or our people to drift apart.”

“As Britain leaves the European Union, and we forge a new role for ourselves in the world, the strength and stability of our Union will become even more important,” she said.

But Sturgeon said May had little concrete to offer Scotland, and “there was no real guarantee that powers when they come back from Brussels” would go to Edinburgh.

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