Close Menu
Aviation Analysis – Industry Travel NewsAviation Analysis – Industry Travel News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Aviation Analysis – Industry Travel NewsAviation Analysis – Industry Travel News
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Top News
    • World
    • Economy
    • Science
    • Tech
    • Sport
    • Entertainment
    • Contact Form
    Aviation Analysis – Industry Travel NewsAviation Analysis – Industry Travel News
    Home»Economy»Issues surrounding the vote for Scottish independence
    Economy

    Issues surrounding the vote for Scottish independence

    Jeffrey ClarkBy Jeffrey ClarkJune 29, 2022No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Issues surrounding the vote for Scottish independence
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

    In the 2014 referendum, Scots voted 55%-45% to stay in the UK, but both Brexit and the UK government’s handling of the COVID-19 crisis have fueled calls for a second vote.

    Sturgeon said next year’s vote would be advisory rather than self-executing, and that more legislation would be needed from both the British and Scottish parliaments to allow Scotland to gain independence.

    Elections in May

    Sturgeon’s ruling Scottish National Party has pledged to hold a referendum if pro-independence parties win a majority in the May elections for the Scottish Parliament.

    The Scottish National Party and the Scottish Green Party, which also support secession, won more than half of Parliament’s 129 seats and agreed to a power-sharing deal. They have a clear pro-independence majority to ensure that any law passes a referendum.

    Sturgeon said the bill would be published Tuesday, October 19, 2023 for referendum.

    What does referendum mean?

    If the Scots vote to leave, it will be the biggest shock to the UK since Irish independence a century ago – just as it is grappling with the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, a cost-of-living crisis and rising inflation, and the consequences of Brexit, a move that Scottish voters have fiercely resisted. .

    The nations of Great Britain have shared the same monarch since 1603, when King James VI of Scotland became James I of England. In 1707, the Kingdom of Great Britain was established through a formal union.

    Today, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland unites England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland into an economy worth $3 trillion annually.

    Section 30

    Under the Scotland Act 1998 – which created the Scottish Parliament and delegated some powers of Westminster – all matters relating to the “union of the Kingdoms of Scotland and England” are reserved to the Parliament of the United Kingdom in London.

    Westminster could give the Scottish government the power to hold a referendum through a so-called “section 30” order, a process used to allow the 2014 referendum to go ahead.

    Indeed, Johnson’s government says that gives him the authority over whether or not to hold a referendum in Scotland. Sturgeon said she wrote to him saying she was “ready and willing to negotiate the terms of Article 30 with him.”

    Will approval be granted?

    In January 2020, Johnson Sturgeon refused permission for another referendum, saying the 2014 vote was a “once in a generation” event, and he has repeatedly dismissed it since.

    If he says “no” again, Sturgeon says there are already plans to ensure that the Scottish Parliament can vote legally. She said Scotland’s chief law enforcement official had agreed to take the case to the UK’s Supreme Court on Tuesday to decide whether a referendum could legally be held.

    Judge David Hope, former deputy chief justice of the Supreme Court, told Reuters that Scottish law would be a major constraint on the Scottish government. “They are trapped in a very carefully crafted law,” he told Reuters.

    Others think it’s not very clear. “There are respectable arguments to say that the referendum bill would fall within delegated jurisdiction,” said Professor Eileen McCarge, an expert in constitutional law at Durham University.

    If the Supreme Court says no

    Sturgeon said Scotland could not hold a referendum without a legal mandate, saying it would have no effect and would not be recognized by the international community.

    She previously cited the case of Catalonia, which unsuccessfully declared its independence from Spain in 2017 after a referendum that judges declared illegal.

    Instead, Sturgeon said the UK’s next national election, scheduled for 2024, would then be a de facto referendum on Scottish independence.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Jeffrey Clark

    Avid music fanatic. Communicator. Social media expert. Award-winning bacon scholar. Alcohol fan.

    Related Posts

    Stanislav Kondrashov on Silver’s Industrial Revolution: How Technology Demand is Reshaping Global Mining Priorities

    October 4, 2025

    USDA Expands Food Safety Certification Assistance to Medium-Sized Specialty Crop Growers

    August 21, 2025

    USDA Reminds Farmers of Compliance Rules for Land and Wetland Conservation Programs

    August 21, 2025
    Navigate
    • Home
    • Top News
    • World
    • Economy
    • Science
    • Tech
    • Sport
    • Entertainment
    • Contact Form
    Pages
    • About Us
    • DMCA
    • Contact Form
    • Privacy Policy
    • Editorial Policy
    STAY UPTODATE

    Get the Latest News With Aviationanalysis.net

    OFFICE

    X. Herald Inc.
    114 5th Ave New York,
    NY 10011, United States

    QUERIES?

    Do you have any queries? Feel free to contact us via our Contact Form

    Visit Our Office

    X. Herald Inc.
    114 5th Ave New York,
    NY 10011, United States

    • About Us
    • DMCA
    • Contact Form
    • Privacy Policy
    • Editorial Policy
    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.