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You want more powers guaranteed? Vote Yes, it *is* that simple.


Casual Bystander

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I think the title says it all.

If Westminster genuinely cared about giving more powers to the Scottish people in this campaign they would have done so at the start, when the positions were laid out. At the time there was a wishy-washy attempt to suggest a possible improvement of some limited powers with no party agreeing and it wasn't until just over a month ago that the parties even fleshed out what these possible limited powers would be. Were they guaranteed? Of course not. Were they to be added to the manifesto of each party going into the next general election? Of course not.

Only now, after many people have already voted, and with their support on the run have the separate parties been forced to try and work together to hurriedly gather a rag tag collection of suggestions of jam tomorrow, not today.

There is only one way you can guarantee powers being transferred into Scottish hands, only one and let there be no discussion on this, and that is to vote Yes on the 18th.

When Westminster tries to soft shoe shuffle the Scots, after spending the last 2 years insulting, scaring, fearmongering and bullying just remember this..

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Casual Bystander, on 07 Sept 2014 - 15:28, said:

Because we need one to discuss the "new powers" that will be "offered" to the Scots in the "coming days".

No we don't. It's already being covered in the other threads.

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Osborne: Scotland will get more autonomy if they reject independence.

Actually, we'll get more autonomy (i.e. full autonomy) by voting Yes. Plus we don't have to rely on a politician in another country being honest.

Sounds like a lot less hassle.

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Didn't some idiot recently say something along the lines of "Scotland can forget getting additional powers if they vote Yes"?

I'm sure some bamstick from BTUKOK said that.

All of them

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Clegg lied about tuition fees, Cameron lied about not cutting cold winter payments and Miliband lied about the 10p tax rate.

These are three fairly main policies for each of the parties that their leaders have claimed a stance upon, either to the press or in parliament, and then done the complete opposite a few months (or in the case of Clegg, just mere weeks) later.

Why, just why, when these men are willing to lie so brazenly about key policies do you think they would be credible about a policy that has been knocked up in a matter of hours as a knee-jerk reaction to one opinion poll?

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It seems that Osborne is not offering anything new, just a different timetable to what they had offered before.

Whether this turns out to be the case we'll need to wait and see. After all, revealing possibly the biggest policy change in a campaign that has been running for 2 years is always best done just days before people go to the polls and after people have sent in their postal votes.

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