Nicola Sturgeon to announce second Scottish
independence vote, defying Westminster
Scottish first minister on collision course with Boris
Johnson over plans for second referendum next year.
BY ANDREW
MCDONALD
June 28,
2022 1:01 am
EDINBURGH —
Britain is headed for a fresh constitutional crisis as Scotland’s First
Minister Nicola Sturgeon prepares to outline plans for a second vote on
Scottish independence — with or without Boris Johnson’s agreement.
In a
20-minute speech to lawmakers in the Scottish parliament (Holyrood) on Tuesday,
Sturgeon will set out her long-awaited route to some form of a second
referendum, vowing to press ahead even if — as expected — Johnson’s U.K.
government continues to withhold consent.
The first
poll in 2014, in which the pro-Union side triumphed by 55 percent to 45 percent,
followed then-Prime Minister David Cameron’s decision to temporarily hand
Holyrood the power to hold a referendum. This time, no such consent from
Westminster will be forthcoming.
After
pro-independence parties gained a majority of seats in last year’s Holyrood
elections, Sturgeon argued her government now had a mandate to hold a fresh
vote. In response, Johnson and U.K. ministers have pointed to nationalist
statements from 2014 that the first referendum would be a “once in a
generation” event, and say Sturgeon’s current focus should be on helping Scots
with the cost-of-living-crisis.
Sturgeon
will say Tuesday that her preferred option remains a repeat of the 2014
transfer of powers, stating in pre-released remarks: “Westminster rule over
Scotland cannot be based on anything other than a consented, voluntary
partnership.
“It is time
to give people the democratic choice they have voted for.”
Nationalists
and unionists alike expect this plea to fall on deaf ears. An official from the
U.K. government said its position in opposition to another referendum would not
change.
The most
hotly anticipated portion of Sturgeon’s speech will therefore concern how her
government plans to hold a referendum if Westminster does not grant consent.
In a press
conference earlier this month, Sturgeon stressed that any efforts to hold a
referendum must be done “in a lawful manner” — a reference to the widely-held
view that either the U.K. government or an activist private citizen would take
the Scottish government to court if it tried to hold a referendum against the
will of Westminster.
One way to
get around the legal difficulties could be to hold a purely advisory poll,
according to a former senior civil servant involved in the negotiations for the
2014 referendum.
“Perhaps
instead of a ‘referendum on independence,’ the bill is instead about something
like asking the people of Scotland for a mandate to open independence
negotiations with the U.K,” Ciaran Martin wrote in the Sunday Times. He added
that such a measure “might stand a better chance in court.”
Some
unionists have made clear they would boycott any consultative poll, regardless
of its legality. But with October 2023 penciled in as Sturgeon’s ideal date for
a fresh referendum, and legislation to enact a vote expected in Holyrood later
this year, a court battle looks increasingly inevitable.
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