East Bay Times

Scotland’s bid for nationalis­t government shy of majority

- By Pan Pylas

Scotland’s governing Scottish National Party was poised Saturday to win its fourth straight parliament­ary election, but the party’s anticipate­d inability to secure a majority could complicate its ambition to stage another referendum on the country’s independen­ce from the U.K.

With 68 constituen­cies counted, the SNP had won 57 of the 129 seats in the Edinburgh-based Scottish Parliament and was on clear course to extend its dominance of Scottish politics.

However, because Scotland allocates some seats by a form of proportion­al representa­tion, the party looks set to fall just short of the 65 seats it would need to have a majority. Based on the latest results, the BBC forecast that the SNP would end up with 63 seats.

The party’s leader, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, conceded as much late Saturday afternoon, saying it wasn’t a big surprise given the electoral system in place in Scotland.

“I’ve always said a majority is a long shot,” Sturgeon said.

Sturgeon said the immediate priority on her return to power would be steering Scotland through the coronaviru­s pandemic but that the legitimacy of an independen­ce referendum remains, SNP majority or not. The Scottish Greens, who also back a referendum, were set to pick up parliament seats.

“It looks as if it is beyond any doubt that there will be a pro-independen­ce majority in that Scottish Parliament, and by any normal standard of democracy that majority should have the commitment­s it made to the people of Scotland honored,” Sturgeon said.

In a September 2014 referendum,

55% of Scottish voters favored remaining part of the United Kingdom.

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, the leader of the Conservati­ve Party, would have the ultimate authority whether or not to permit another referendum on Scotland gaining independen­ce. So far, Johnson has refused to countenanc­e another vote, setting up the possibilit­y of renewed tensions between his government and Sturgeon’s devolved administra­tion.

The prime minister wrote in the Daily Telegraph newspaper published Saturday that another referendum would be “irresponsi­ble and reckless” in the “current context” as Britain emerges from the pandemic.

Sturgeon said it would be wrong for Johnson to stand in the way of a referendum and that the timing is a matter for the Scottish Parliament.

“I would say two things:

Firstly, you’re not picking a fight with the SNP, you’re picking a fight with the democratic wishes of the Scottish people,” she said. “And secondly, you will not succeed.”

There has been growing talk that the whole issue may end up going to court, but Sturgeon said the “outrageous nature” of any attempt by the British government to thwart the democratic will of Scotland would only fuel the desire for independen­ce.

“I couldn’t think of a more powerful argument for independen­ce than that one,” she said.

The Scotland results have been the main focus since an array of local and regional elections took place Thursday across Britain, where around 50 million voters were eligible to vote.

In Wales, the concluded vote count showed the Labour Party doing better than expected in the parliament­ary election as

it extended its 22 years in control of the Welsh government. The party retaining its grip on power after winning half of the seats, just one short of a majority.

Mark Drakeford, who will remain as first minister, said the party will be “radical” and “ambitious” in government.

Ballots continue to be counted from local elections in England, which already have been particular­ly good for Johnson’s Conservati­ve Party, notably its victory in a special election in the post-industrial town of Hartlepool for a parliament­ary seat that the main opposition Labour Party had held since 1974.

The win extended the party’s grip on parts of England that had been Labour stronghold­s for decades, if not a century. Many seats that have flipped from red to blue voted heavily in 2016 for Britain’s departure from the European Union.

 ?? JANE BARLOW — PA MEDIA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? First Minister and SNP party leader Nicola Sturgeon celebrates after retaining her seat for Glasgow Southside at the count for the Scottish Parliament­ary Elections in Glasgow, Scotland, on Friday.
JANE BARLOW — PA MEDIA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS First Minister and SNP party leader Nicola Sturgeon celebrates after retaining her seat for Glasgow Southside at the count for the Scottish Parliament­ary Elections in Glasgow, Scotland, on Friday.

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