* For a* start an act of parliament is needed from Westminster to get another referendum and they are hardly going to do that.
I disagree - with a heavy heart, I have to say. Scotland has a devolved parliament. If the majority of MSPs want another referendum and that is backed up by polls showing public opinion want it too, then it will be very difficult for Westminster to deny it. Most of the opposition parties have now said they will allow their MSPs a free vote.
Secondly if Nicola Sturgeon thinks she can call a referendum on the strength of the fact that she wants Scotland in the EU then she had better make really sure that the EU definitely want us!
That's going to be more difficult for them, I agree. But I think as far as voting to be Independent us concerned, all the SNP need to do us persuade voters it will be possible in the future to join the EU.
Longer term, you have to ask yourself whether the SNP care too much about wether it actually happens. Will they forfeit independence if the EU reject us. I do not believe they will. They are Bationalists above all else. For example, Jim Sillars (former SNP leader) is campaigning for the UK to leave the EU, but still wants Scotland to be Independent.
They have already said no last year
Did they? My impression was that they said Scotland could apply to join, as could any European country. What they didn't say was we could keep all the opt-outs that the UK had secured.
and I hardly think we would get a very good deal. We have very little bargaining power. We are not net contributors. We cost more than give so they would probably put up the costs to us to make it prohibitive.
So then we would have our biggest trading partners out of the EU - the rest of the UK - and us in it ! how does that work? Last figures I saw showed we 'exported' £47.6Billion to the rest of the UK and £11.6 Billion to the EU. and that doesn't include us selling half of our oil and gas to the rest of the UK.
She is talking complete rubbish. It really doesn't stand up to scrutiny.
All of that is totally true. And you haven't mentioned the deficit, nor currency.
But it's not about logic, and it never has been just as Brexit isn't either. It's about 'heart' and persuading the Scottish population it will all eventually be alright. We'll be told to hold our nerve and believe in Scotland. It's about playing the long game.
They couldn't swing that argument when the UK was a part of EU, but it's harder for union supporters to argue that the UK is this stable strong powerful ally outside the EU when everything is destabilised post-Brexit. Similarly, if rUK votes to leave and Scotland doesn't, and we're dragged out as well, it's harder for pro-unionists to argue the relationship is two-way and that the UK has Scottish interests at heart. I think a lot of people will feel they haven't much left to lose.
I was a No voter, but I have to say that I am struck during this debate how rUK people really don't seem to care about the potential devastation this potentially has for Scotland.