Jump to content

When will indyref2 happen?


Colkitto

Indyref2  

819 members have voted

You do not have permission to vote in this poll, or see the poll results. Please sign in or register to vote in this poll.

Recommended Posts

33 minutes ago, The_Kincardine said:

What a silly wee Natter you are.

Remember when you started sharing far-right propaganda from racists and Islamophobes who were too extreme for Twitter? There are evidently worse things to be than a “Natter”. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 hours ago, git-intae-thum said:

If the court returns a judgement that the Scottish people do not have the right to hold a referendum to determine their political future, then surely any notion of "union" is over.

“The Scottish people” are a complete red herring here.

The question is not whether a people can hold a referendum. The question is whether a bit of state apparatus can hold a referendum, and who can legislate to authorise it to act in that way.

The UK Parliament could legislate to enable the Scottish people to vote on independence if it really wanted to. The issue here is can the Scottish Parliament, a constitutionally limited legislature, can do it unilaterally instead.

The very long legal argument cut very short is “the Scotland Act and case law on it suggests very probably not, but a minority of legal academics think there’s at least an argument to be made that it can”. In very crude terms we are in 90/10 territory for ultra vires/intra vires.

13 hours ago, git-intae-thum said:

What we will be left with is occupation and subjugation.

Surely any self respecting Scottish unionists would oppose this also.

This doesn’t follow. Plenty of states forbid referendums on secession or secession in their constitutional arrangements. It’s called a pre-commitment strategy.

I happen to think it is one that wouldn’t work the way intended if applied rigorously in the UK’s political culture but it’s shrill to call it occupation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 hours ago, git-intae-thum said:

Possibly.....but it would stand a much greater chance of success had the full weight of Scotgov had been behind it, employing the best legal minds.

It's almost as though they don't want independence 🤔

The Scottish Government, quite understandably, don’t want the courts involved. They want a negotiated referendum, so that a UK Government is committed to encouraging Unionists to participate rather than to boycott, and then to respect a Yes vote.

If a court case wins, the Nats lose the reassurance of the result of the referendum being respected: “we didn’t agree to this referendum we think it’s not binding the Union is reserved go away” Boris would say.

If the court case loses, the Nats lose the bargaining chip in the referendum negotiations of being able to threaten a wildcat referendum if the UK Government keeps saying naw. They become vulnerable to bad faith arguments like “it’s reserved never again” rather than the Edinburgh Agreement becoming the established precedent for “good constitutional behaviour”.

Also the Lord Advocate clearly is worried the Scottish Government would lose a case like this so wants no part of it.

They want independence. They’re just not stupid about the best route to achieve it.

Edited by Ad Lib
Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 minutes ago, Ad Lib said:

 

They want independence. They’re just not stupid about the best route to achieve it.

For the fundamentalist wing of the independence movement, unless you're screaming about occupation, waving flags on motorway bridges and threatening UDI, you're just not independencing hard enough and are clearly a yoon lackey. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, ICTJohnboy said:

 

Do we know that this "correspondent" is a supporter of "Sturgeon's Scotland"...?

"Lishties"...... That's almost as ignorant as calling Scots people Scotch!

I took a swing at fundamentalist nats above, so now, for balance, a swing at yoons (note - not all Unionists are yoons).

Yoons: Interest in Scots and Gaelic is a parochial nationalist plot.

Also yoons: if you can't pronounce Scots words properly it's the nationalists' fault.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, O'Kelly Isley III said:
2 hours ago, Carnoustie Young Guvnor said:

Bad as these figures are, apparently they would have been MUCH worse had Buckinghamshire not been included.

They've had another five years of Tory rule since then so god knows what its like now.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

36 minutes ago, Ad Lib said:

The Scottish Government, quite understandably, don’t want the courts involved. They want a negotiated referendum, so that a UK Government is committed to encouraging Unionists to participate rather than to boycott, and then to respect a Yes vote.

If a court case wins, the Nats lose the reassurance of the result of the referendum being respected: “we didn’t agree to this referendum we think it’s not binding the Union is reserved go away” Boris would say.

If the court case loses, the Nats lose the bargaining chip in the referendum negotiations of being able to threaten a wildcat referendum if the UK Government keeps saying naw. They become vulnerable to bad faith arguments like “it’s reserved never again” rather than the Edinburgh Agreement becoming the established precedent for “good constitutional behaviour”.

Also the Lord Advocate clearly is worried the Scottish Government would lose a case like this so wants no part of it.

They want independence. They’re just not stupid about the best route to achieve it.

That's all fine and well but a negotiated referendum is not going to happen. Ever.

The only people on earth who can grant one have said repeatedly and clearly there are no circumstances under which they will do so. They don't have any votes to lose in this country or any seats, and don't need our votes or seats anyway. Indeed, those that vote for them here would be pleased with them blocking a referendum and if anything they'd gain support, but as I said it doesn't matter anyway.

And its not like the media are going to hold them to account.

So the SNP need to stop either lying to us or themselves. A s30 is not going to happen, its not an option.

There is only one scenario in which it could, a UK GE returning a minority Labour government who can only govern with support from the SNP. A result which has never been returned in history, though more likely now than ever before. 

So the need to pursue other avenues is necessary and urgent, and if the SNP are maintaining the s30 route is the way to go they very much are stupid and don't know the best way to achieve their aims.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

41 minutes ago, Carnoustie Young Guvnor said:

That's all fine and well but a negotiated referendum is not going to happen. Ever.

The only people on earth who can grant one have said repeatedly and clearly there are no circumstances under which they will do so. They don't have any votes to lose in this country or any seats, and don't need our votes or seats anyway. Indeed, those that vote for them here would be pleased with them blocking a referendum and if anything they'd gain support, but as I said it doesn't matter anyway.

And its not like the media are going to hold them to account.

So the SNP need to stop either lying to us or themselves. A s30 is not going to happen, its not an option.

There is only one scenario in which it could, a UK GE returning a minority Labour government who can only govern with support from the SNP. A result which has never been returned in history, though more likely now than ever before. 

So the need to pursue other avenues is necessary and urgent, and if the SNP are maintaining the s30 route is the way to go they very much are stupid and don't know the best way to achieve their aims.

Your premise is not a good one and pre election rhetoric is wont to disappear like snow in spring.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, sophia said:

Your premise is not a good one and pre election rhetoric is wont to disappear like snow in spring.

There's no reason for it to change after the results of a HR election. No matter how we vote is has no bearing whatsoever on WM and they can happily ignore our democratic wishes as there is no mechanism to compel them to respect them.

At this point its a zero sum game, the British government have nothing to lose by denying our democracy and everything to gain.

4 minutes ago, Erih Shtrep said:

It's happened before.  

That doesn't mean it will happen again. They granted that when indy was polling at 27%. Now its double that, there's no chance they will agree to a referendum they know they'd lose.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Carnoustie Young Guvnor said:

That's all fine and well but a negotiated referendum is not going to happen. Ever.

The only people on earth who can grant one have said repeatedly and clearly there are no circumstances under which they will do so. They don't have any votes to lose in this country or any seats, and don't need our votes or seats anyway. Indeed, those that vote for them here would be pleased with them blocking a referendum and if anything they'd gain support, but as I said it doesn't matter anyway.

And its not like the media are going to hold them to account.

So the SNP need to stop either lying to us or themselves. A s30 is not going to happen, its not an option.

There is only one scenario in which it could, a UK GE returning a minority Labour government who can only govern with support from the SNP. A result which has never been returned in history, though more likely now than ever before. 

So the need to pursue other avenues is necessary and urgent, and if the SNP are maintaining the s30 route is the way to go they very much are stupid and don't know the best way to achieve their aims.

Even taking this argument at its highest, Sturgeon’s assessment is that either (a) there is a non-zero chance you’re wrong and that they would or that (b) there are enough Scots who still think (a) who she wants to keep on-side for now.

If the SNP wins an overall majority on an explicit manifesto commitment to hold a referendum, without caveats, contingencies or twistable words, that removes the “no mandate” argument that some Unionists genuinely believe applies to the “material change in circumstances” 2016 result. It leaves “once in a generation eat your dinner” up against “most voters now clearly want this”.

So even if it’s necessary to go wildcat rather than via s30, it is better to go wildcat after a referendum has been refused after the clearest possible political mandate has been obtained rather than before it.

Edited by Ad Lib
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Ad Lib said:

Even taking this argument at its highest, Sturgeon’s assessment is that either (a) there is a non-zero chance you’re wrong and that they would or that (b) there are enough Scots who still think (a) who she wants to keep on-side for now.

If the SNP wins an overall majority on an explicit manifesto commitment to hold a referendum, without caveats, contingencies or twistable words, that removes the “no mandate” argument that some Unionists genuinely believe applies to the “material change in circumstances” 2016 result.

So even if it’s necessary to go wildcat, it is better to go wildcat after a referendum has been refused with the clearest possible political mandate rather than before it.

Totally agree with paragraphs one and three. 

However, unionists will never recognise or accept there is a mandate. They've said so. They've already refused to recognise an identical mandate.  It will make no difference. I think you're maybe giving them a little much credit too, there isn't a single unionist on earth who genuinely believes we don't have a mandate right now, they just say that. 

I don't see much of a way forward. Even if we hold a consultative referendum they will boycott it, unionist councils will refuse to facilitate it and they will claim its illegitimate. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, The_Kincardine said:

This phrase is doing the rounds on various 'social media' places.

Disappointed to see it on P&B - but seeing as it's you it doesn't come as a surprise.

To edit:.  I was listening to 'open all mics' earlier and the correspondent at Palmerston today talked about 'an equaliser for The Lichties' but pronounced it as 'Lishties'..  That is how ignorant Sturgeon's Scotland has become.

Can you give us a list of phrases that disappoint you, so we can use them more often? 

With regard to the use of the word "colony", here's a definition (my emphasis)

Colonial Rule/Colonialism - The policy or practice of a wealthy or powerful nation's maintaining or extending its control over other countries, especially in establishing settlements or exploiting resources.

Obviously, England cannot really be described as a wealthy or powerful nation any more, but the rest of the definition would apply.

With regard to the pronounciation of "ch", I was watching the excellent stream from QoS TV, so I didn't hear Derek Ferguson's comment. However, I could find hundreds of other mispronounciations of the "ch" sound by the British Broadcasting Corporation, mainly relating to the word "Loch"

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Ad Lib said:

“The Scottish people” are a complete red herring here.

The question is not whether a people can hold a referendum. The question is whether a bit of state apparatus can hold a referendum, and who can legislate to authorise it to act in that way.

The UK Parliament could legislate to enable the Scottish people to vote on independence if it really wanted to. The issue here is can the Scottish Parliament, a constitutionally limited legislature, can do it unilaterally instead.

I fear the legal argument missed the boat when we left the jurisdiction of the European courts. It is unlikely the Scottish court will make a decision either way. The matter ultimately may head to the UK supreme court. I think it obvious the outcome thereafter.

If "the Scottish people" are unable to see enacted what they have repeatedly expressed through the ballot box, then where does that leave us. I think the terms occupation and subjugation quite apt tbh.

Edited by git-intae-thum
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, GordonS said:

For the fundamentalist wing of the independence movement, unless you're screaming about occupation, waving flags on motorway bridges and threatening UDI, you're just not independencing hard enough and are clearly a yoon lackey. 

This is very condescending.

People are obviously concerned with regards to what the plan is when Johnson says naw....as he will.

As it stands the now there isn't one.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Ad Lib said:

The Scottish Government, quite understandably, don’t want the courts involved. They want a negotiated referendum, so that a UK Government is committed to encouraging Unionists to participate rather than to boycott, and then to respect a Yes vote.

If a court case wins, the Nats lose the reassurance of the result of the referendum being respected: “we didn’t agree to this referendum we think it’s not binding the Union is reserved go away” Boris would say.

If the court case loses, the Nats lose the bargaining chip in the referendum negotiations of being able to threaten a wildcat referendum if the UK Government keeps saying naw. They become vulnerable to bad faith arguments like “it’s reserved never again” rather than the Edinburgh Agreement becoming the established precedent for “good constitutional behaviour”.

Also the Lord Advocate clearly is worried the Scottish Government would lose a case like this so wants no part of it.

They want independence. They’re just not stupid about the best route to achieve it.

Following this line of thought implies that we require the agreement of the UK government..... regardless of victory or defeat in this upcoming court case.

Even if that were the case.....it still does nothing to resolve the scenario of what happens when that agreement is consistently withheld, despite numerous democratic mandates.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, git-intae-thum said:

This is very condescending.

People are obviously concerned with regards to what the plan is when Johnson says naw....as he will.

As it stands the now there isn't one.

Do you think it would be wise to announce plan B to him now? If we don't initially follow the constitutional path to the letter, we won't get any support when we need to get more creative.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...