The Scotsman

Next indyref

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AS ONE SNP amendment after another to the Scotland Bill is defeated in the House of Commons, Nicola Sturgeon has much to consider during the summer recess and in the run-up to next year’s Holyrood election, in particular, whether she is willing to provoke a constituti­onal crisis.

Less canny politician­s like her predecesso­r, Alex Salmond, or the SNP’S Westminste­r leader, Angus Robertson, periodical­ly threaten a second independen­ce referendum. But Ms Sturgeon is altogether a more astute operator.

The stakes are high. Losing two referenda in short succession would render the SNP an internatio­nal laughing stock and would certainly be career-limiting for Ms Sturgeon.

If the First Minister, swayed by recent opinion polls, calls a second independen­ce vote and ignores the will of the people as expressed in last year’s referendum, there is no doubt David Cameron will remind her again of Mr Salmond’s and her own much-repeated “once in a generation or even a lifetime” promises.

Much more significan­tly, the Prime Minister will also seek to enforce the 2012 Edinburgh Agreement by which she agreed to respect the outcome of the referendum.

If Ms Sturgeon includes a referendum, without qualificat­ion, in her 2016 Holyrood manifesto, and subsequent­ly demands it, she risks Westminste­r’s refusal. How does she then proceed?

The result would inevitably be Yes since No voters would abstain but, without unconditio­nal Westminste­r support, separating Scotland from the rest of the UK would be impossible.

The more likely course is that Ms Sturgeon will seek to reserve the right to call a referendum should events so dictate, such as the UK’S exit from the EU.

This may appease her more extreme supporters while minimising the risk of an irrevocabl­e confrontat­ion with the Westminste­r government. We shall see… MARTIN REDFERN Royal Circus

Edinburgh

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