Cape Times

Small majority of Scots back independen­ce on eve of Brexit

-

A SLIM majority of Scots now support independen­ce, bolstered by the support of those who previously rejected a split from the UK but who now back it because of their opposition to Brexit, according to a poll published yesterday.

The survey found that 51% supported independen­ce, YouGov said, the first time the pollster had found majority backing for a “Yes” to secession since 2015.

Scotland’s nationalis­t First Minister Nicola Sturgeon wants to hold another referendum, but British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has refused permission, and no vote can take place without the consent of the government in Westminste­r.

In 2014, Scots voted to remain in the United Kingdom by 55% to 45%. However, members of Scotland’s parliament on Wednesday voted in favour of a new poll, arguing that Britain’s impending departure from the EU, which a majority of Scots opposed, had changed the circumstan­ces.

The poll found that more than one in five of those who voted “No” in 2014 but backed staying in the EU would now back an independen­t Scotland.

However, a majority of Scots opposed holding a second vote on the issue this year and the survey found that many voters were still worried about the economic impact, with 42% thinking an independen­t Scotland would be worse off, against 35% believing it would be better off.

“These are concerning times for unionists both north and south of the border, with ‘Yes’ gaining considerab­le ground on ‘No’ since 2014,” said Chris Curtis, political research manager at YouGov.

“Yet the fundamenta­l problem that flummoxed the ‘Yes’ movement in 2014, that independen­ce would damage the economy, still exists and could still set them back in indyref2.”

Since the 2014 vote, most polls have suggested that Scots would narrowly reject independen­ce again.

However Sturgeon’s Scottish National Party, which strongly opposed Brexit, won 48 of Scotland’s 59 seats in Britain’s national election in December, taking 45% of votes cast, an 8 percentage-point increase from 2017.

 ?? | EPA ?? SCOTLAND’S nationalis­t First Minister Nicola Sturgeon wants to hold another referendum, but British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has refused permission.
| EPA SCOTLAND’S nationalis­t First Minister Nicola Sturgeon wants to hold another referendum, but British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has refused permission.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa