Times Colonist

Brexit move could lead to independen­t Scotland

May gets power to seek divorce from EU; Scots closer to second independen­ce vote

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — Britain lurched closer to leaving the European Union Monday when Parliament stopped resisting and gave Prime Minister Theresa May the power to file for divorce from the bloc.

But in a blow to May’s government, the prospect of Scotland’s exit from the United Kingdom suddenly appeared nearer, too. Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon called for a referendum on independen­ce within two years to stop Scotland being dragged out of the EU against its will.

In an announceme­nt that took many London politician­s by surprise, Sturgeon vowed that Scotland would not be “taken down a path that we do not want to go down without a choice.”

Sturgeon spoke in Edinburgh hours before the European Union (Notificati­on of Withdrawal) Bill passed its final hurdle in Parliament’s upper chamber, the House of Lords.

The House of Commons approved the bill weeks ago, but the 800-strong Lords fought to amend it, inserting a promise that EU citizens living in the U.K. will be allowed to remain after Britain pulls out of the bloc.

They also added a demand that Parliament get a “meaningful” vote on the final deal between Britain and the remaining 27 EU nations.

Both amendments were rejected Monday by the Commons, where May’s Conservati­ves have a majority. A handful of pro-EU Conservati­ves expressed their unhappines­s, then abstained from the vote.

The bill returned to the Lords, in a process known as parliament­ary ping pong. Faced with the decision of the elected Commons, the Lords backed down and approved it without amendments.

Labour peer Dianne Hayter, who proposed the amendment on EU citizens, said the Lords had done their best, but “our view has been rejected in the elected House of Commons, and it is clear the government is not for turning.”

Once the bill receives royal assent — a formality — May will be free to invoke Article 50 of the EU’s key treaty, triggering two years of exit negotiatio­ns, by her self-imposed deadline of March 31.

May was forced to seek Parliament’s approval for the move after a Supreme Court ruling in January torpedoed her attempt to start the process of leaving the bloc without a parliament­ary vote.

The House of Commons and House of Lords battled over the bill’s contents, with the status of EU nationals in Britain — and Britons in fellow EU member countries — drawing especially emotional debate.

Both British and EU officials have said such residents should be guaranteed the right to stay where they are, but the two sides have so far failed to provide a concrete guarantee, leaving millions of people in limbo.

Scottish National Party lawmaker Joanna Cherry told the House of Commons that one constituen­t, a Lithuanian, had told her “the uncertaint­y caused by this government and this Parliament is making her feel worse about her personal situation in Britain than she did in Lithuania under the Soviets.”

Brexit Secretary David Davis told lawmakers the government had a “moral responsibi­lity” to the three million EU citizens living in Britain and the one million Britons in other member states, and intends to guarantee their rights as soon as possible after exit talks start.

“That is why we must pass this straightfo­rward bill without further delay, so the prime minister can get to work on the negotiatio­ns and we can secure a quick deal that secures the status of both European Union citizens in the U.K. and also U.K. nationals living in the EU,” he said.

Pro-EU lawmakers accused the government and Brexit-backing lawmakers of running roughshod over the concerns of the 48 per cent of Britons who voted to stay in the EU.

May is now free to trigger Article 50 as early as today, but the government signalled the move would come much closer to the March 31 deadline.

May spokesman James Slack repeated the government’s position that it would happen by the end of March.

“I’ve said ‘end’ many times, but it would seem I didn’t put it in capital letters strongly enough,” Slack said.

The government’s satisfacti­on at victory in Parliament was tempered by the prospect of an independen­ce vote that threatens the 300-year old political union between England and Scotland.

Sturgeon said she would seek to hold a referendum between the fall of 2018 and the spring of 2019 so Scottish voters could make an “informed choice” about their future.

While Britons overall voted to leave the EU, Scottish voters backed remaining by 62 to 38 per cent, and Sturgeon said they should not be forced to follow the rest of the U.K. into a “hard Brexit” outside the EU single market.

In a 2014 referendum, Scottish voters rejected independen­ce by a margin of 55 per cent to 45 per cent. But Sturgeon said the U.K.’s decision to leave the EU had brought about a “material change of circumstan­ces.”

May — whose government would have to approve a legally binding referendum — accused Sturgeon’s Scottish National Party of political “tunnel vision” and called her announceme­nt “deeply regrettabl­e.”

 ??  ?? Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is calling for a second referendum on independen­ce within two years.
Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is calling for a second referendum on independen­ce within two years.

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