The Oklahoman

Scottish head seeks freedom from UK rule

- Jill Lawless

LONDON – The leader of the Scottish government said Sunday she will push on with her campaign to take Scotland out of the United Kingdom, even if she loses a Supreme Court case seeking authorizat­ion to call a new independen­ce referendum.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon wants to hold a referendum in October 2023, but the Conservati­ve U.K. government in London has said no.

Britain’s top court is due to hear arguments starting Tuesday on whether Scotland’s semi-autonomous administra­tion can organize an independen­ce vote without the London government’s consent.

Sturgeon, who leads the Scottish National Party, said that if her Edinburghb­ased government loses the court case, she will make the next U.K. national election a de facto plebiscite on ending Scotland’s three-century-old union with England.

Sturgeon did not give details of how that would work.

A vote held without the approval of the U.K. government would not be legally binding. Sturgeon said that if the courts blocked a referendum, “we put our case to people in an election or we give up on Scottish democracy.”

“It should be a last resort,” she said. “I don’t want to be in that position. I want to have a lawful referendum.”

Scotland and England have been politicall­y united since 1707. Scotland has had its own parliament and government since 1999 and makes its own policies on public health, education and other matters. The U.K.-wide government in London controls matters such as defense and fiscal policy.

Scottish voters rejected independen­ce by a margin of 55% to 45% in a 2014 referendum that was billed as a oncein-a-generation choice. Sturgeon’s government argues that Britain’s departure from the European Union and the coronaviru­s pandemic have upended politics and the economy and that it’s time to revisit the case for independen­ce.

British voters narrowly approved Brexit in a 2016 referendum, but those in Scotland voted strongly to stay in the EU.

Sturgeon’s party leads a pro-independen­ce majority in the Scottish parliament, together with the Scottish Green Party, and she maintains that support has created an “indisputab­le democratic mandate” for a new independen­ce vote.

Sturgeon promised to produce documents in the coming weeks outlining the economic basis for independen­ce and answering questions such as what currency the country would use after a split.

She said her goal of holding a referendum in a year’s time was realistic.

“There’s little point speculatin­g on the outcome of a court hearing, but should that be yes, we have the plans ready to go to legislate,” she said.

Polls suggest Scotland is about evenly split on independen­ce. Labour Party politician Alistair Darling, a former U.K. Treasury chief, said polls also show a majority of Scots do not want a referendum anytime soon.

“This country is tearing itself apart. And that uncertaint­y is damaging to our growth prospects and to our wellbeing,” Darling said.

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