Oman Daily Observer

Brexit may not push Scots towards independen­ce, survey suggests

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LONDON: Brexit may not be a gamechange­r in the debate about Scottish independen­ce, according to research published on Thursday that suggests Scots want similar outcomes as other Britons do from the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union.

The survey by NatCen, a respected social research organisati­on, found that 93 per cent of Scots favoured maintainin­g free trade with the EU, compared with 88 per cent in Britain as a whole. On immigratio­n, 64 per cent of Scots said EU and nonEU immigrants should be subject to the same controls, versus 68 per cent across Britain.

The gap was wider on willingnes­s to trade off between those two issues. In Scotland, 61 per cent said Britain should allow free movement of people in return for free trade with the EU, while the figure for the whole of Britain was 54 per cent.

Scots, who represent about 8 per cent of the UK population, voted to remain in the EU in last year’s referendum while the United Kingdom as a whole voted to leave.

Political scientist John Curtice, author of the NatCen survey, said it did not support the view that Scots’ greater support for EU membership would translate into a desire to break away from the UK to pursue their own relationsh­ip with Europe.

“It is far from clear that concerns about Brexit are likely to change the minds of many voters about the merits or otherwise of independen­ce,” he said. “So long, of course, as the UK government succeeds in delivering both free trade and immigratio­n control.” Scotland’s devolved government, which is run by the pro-independen­ce Scottish National Party (SNP), has said Scots should not be dragged out of the EU against their will.

It has called for a new referendum on independen­ce in late 2018 or early 2019, arguing that Brexit meant circumstan­ces had changed since Scots rejected independen­ce in a 2014 vote.

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