Home Forums Chat Forum England declares UDI and dissolves the Act of Union

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  • England declares UDI and dissolves the Act of Union
  • aracer
    Free Member

    OK, so some region in which votes were collected, which the BBC and the Scottish parliament describe as “Scottish Borders” (all available info suggests they were collected for the council area) voted no to Scottish independence by a significant margin, and most likely will vote no to Scottish independence by a significant margin if (when?) the majority of people in Scotland vote yes – at which point it will have independence imposed on it. You are presumably happy with that sort of democracy.

    Exactly what point are you trying to make here by quibbling about council boundaries?

    wanmankylung
    Free Member

    Exactly what point are you trying to make here by quibbling about council boundaries?

    None whatsoever.

    and most likely will vote no to Scottish independence by a significant margin if (when?) the majority of people in Scotland vote yes – at which point it will have independence imposed on it. You are presumably happy with that sort of democracy.

    I dont think they’ll vote that way. But if they do and they want to leave I’d have no problem with that. You’d need to stop riding the off piste trails all round the Borders though.

    aracer
    Free Member

    <sigh> So you’re not actually capable of making a rational argument? I won’t bother asking you to explain your latest then.

    gordimhor
    Full Member

    As I wrote earlier, you’ll presumably be happy with the sort of democracy which puts the borders in an independent Scotland, despite the majority of the people there voting against it?

    Which is exactly the kind of democracy we have now

    aracer
    Free Member

    It is, and it’s the same sort of democracy which some people seem to be complaining about.

    wanmankylung
    Free Member

    So you’re not actually capable of making a rational argumen

    I am, but you seem so set on accepting that council boundaries are identical to acutal regional boundaries that there’s no point arguing with you. They are often different – that’s the point I was making. So saying that the Scottish Borders voted against independence is not something that you can claim with 100% conviction as there was no poll of the acutal Scottish Borders region….

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    You are presumably happy with that sort of democracy.

    #I think we all realise that in a democracy not every region or area or constituency or voter can get their will.

    I think what we are discussing is if its democratic for the elected representatives of one country to impose its will on another country
    You thing this is fair and some think its unfair
    I dont think anyone thinks that some people wont get what they voted for.

    athgray
    Free Member

    I am, but you seem so set on accepting that council boundaries are identical to acutal regional boundaries that there’s no point arguing with you. They are often different – that’s the point I was making. So saying that the Scottish Borders voted against independence is not something that you can claim with 100% conviction as there was no poll of the acutal Scottish Borders region….

    Does this also mean Glasgow and Dundee cannot lay the claim of being FREEDOM!!! cities as people say?

    bencooper
    Free Member

    I think the argument really comes down to whether Scotland (or England) is a country or not. It’s an odd inbetween state, so it’s not a question that can be answered definitively. If Scotland isn’t a country, then it’s absolutely reasonable that a smaller part of the UK has to do what the UK majority wants. But Scotland has lots of things a country has – a parliament, a national sports teams, a distinct identity, separate legal, health and education systems.

    Some people are even conflicted in their own heads – thinking that Scotland is politically a region of the UK, but happy to support the Scottish rugby team, for instance.

    athgray
    Free Member

    Some people are even conflicted in their own heads – thinking that Scotland is politically a region of the UK, but happy to support the Scottish rugby team, for instance.

    What BS. Conflict? It is nothing of the sort. Typical one dimensional nationalist view.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    Oh, I think we’re all conflicted to one extent or another – there’s so much shared culture it’s impossible not to be. I was more replying to Junkyard, re one country imposing its will on another. Even as someone who thinks Scottish independence is a good idea, I don’t agree with that viewpoint.

    You have to admit, it’s strange for one country to have several different national sports teams.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Scotland has lots of things a country has – a parliament, a national sports teams, a distinct identity, separate legal, health and education systems.

    The bailiwicks of the Channel islands and Isle of Man have the same, but we wouldn’t suggest they amounted to countries rather than politically and legally quasi-autonomous crown dependencies.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    Exactly my point – we’re all in an odd situation, and it’s only because we live here that it doesn’t seem that odd, but take a step back. We’re not in a normal country, we’re in a weird hybrid.

    The argument about Scottish independence is an argument about where you think Scotland is (or should be) on the sliding scale of nationhood.

    wanmankylung
    Free Member

    You have to admit, it’s strange for one country to have several different national sports teams.

    It’s even stranger for one country to supply 25% of the teams in a 16 team competition.

    aracer
    Free Member

    So what exactly is the Scottish Borders region if it’s not the council area? Not that I really care, and not that it makes the slightest difference.

    Thanks for helping to explain my point – the thing is that those “country” things are irrelevant in the context of decisions being made for the UK as a whole. Because in that context Scotland has surrendered any sovereignty it might have to be part of that whole – in that context it is not an independent country. In that context it is simply another region which is no more having things imposed on it than Rutland is. Anything else would be totally impractical and unworkable.

    I can understand why some people think that is unsatisfactory, but a majority of people in Scotland appeared to be happy with that arrangement when they were last asked. Given that Scotland is not independent, then it is an argument which is totally irrelevant to EVEL, which is related to devolution as it currently stands (which returns some of that sovereignty).

    edit: all written whilst the last few posts were made – I get the feeling we’re largely in agreement on the technicalities, Ben, if not on what the correct direction for Scotland to go is.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    I agree, its a weird and complex hybrid – but you could say the same about Texas as part of the US as well (or indeed Hawaii or Alaska)

    Arguably, its that hybrid that has been our biggest strength as a nation, allowing us to cope with huge change, from the loss of Normandy through to the rise and fall of Empire.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    Because in that context Scotland has surrendered any sovereignty it might have to be part of that whole – in that context it is not an independent country.

    This is where I agree with you, and where I disagree with Junkyard’s suggestion that the problem is one country imposing itself on another.

    But, in that spirit of looking at Scotland as a region of the UK, it would make sense to make Scotland one of a number of equally autonomous regions. All 50 US states have equal status, it’d make sense to have a similar system in the UK.

    I’m not sure how that can be accomplished when England outnumbers the next largest “nation” 10-1 – but the US manages to have states as large as California and as small as Rhode Island, so it must be possible.

    EVEL isn’t the answer, though – it’s a bodge for short-term political gain.

    (cross post with ninfan – similar points, that other countries manage to have states under a federal system)

    gordimhor
    Full Member

    @Athgray I know several folk who voted no and do wonder about the logic of supporting a Scotland team,and also quite a few on the Yes side who have doubts about ever singing flower of Scotland again particularly at Rugby games.

    aracer
    Free Member

    I also agree with you (and a lot of other people on this thread) about that – I’m struggling to think of a worse solution to the WL question. It’s just that some people appear to object to any solution to the WL question.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    I know several folk who voted no and do wonder about the logic of supporting a Scotland team

    The answer to that I suppose is who else would they support? It’s lot like there was also a UK team in the rugby alongside Scotland.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    It’s just that some people appear to object to any solution to the WL question.

    I think the only long term solution is a federal system of government with PR voting. Unfortunately I can’t see how that can be achieved.

    aracer
    Free Member

    The trouble is, there aren’t any easy solutions to the WL question, which is why I presume it got ignored for so long (that and because in practical terms it rarely makes any real difference – the SNP did have to go and engineer a situation where it became a real issue 🙄 )

    wanmankylung
    Free Member

    I also agree with you (and a lot of other people on this thread) about that – I’m struggling to think of a worse solution to the WL question.

    It’s a bloody terrible solution.

    It’s just that some people appear to object to any solution to the WL question.

    I just disagree with bloody terrible solutions. A good solution would be regional parliaments within England and a federal system in the UK.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    A good solution would be regional parliaments within England and a federal system in the UK.

    That’s the one solution that would kill Scottish independence. Pity it’s never going to happen.

    aracer
    Free Member

    But not largely for the reasons you appear to object to it.

    gordimhor
    Full Member

    @bencooper I suggested to them that supporting Scotland had nothing to do with logic 😀 if it did we’d all have stopped long ago 😀

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Ben – Yes, US is a federal system, but that doesn’t necessarily create equality – house of reps is on a population basis, so you could easily lay many of the same arguments that are put at the door of UK parliament, alongside which history has shown us what happens when a majority of states in that federal system decide to ignore and press the clear constitutional sovereignty of the other states 🙂

    wanmankylung
    Free Member

    I object to it because it’s a waste of time given that it doesnt remove the input of Scottish MPs from legislation that only effects England. It’s a half baked poorly thought out pile of jobbie.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    aracer – Member

    The trouble is, there aren’t any easy solutions to the WL question

    Yes there is- it’s just that the English have never seemed to want to implement it. Perhaps because a lot of people, like David Cameron, view Westminster as the English parliament? Whatever the reason, it’s always been a choice the English have made, to debate provincial matters in the national parliament.

    aracer
    Free Member

    Fair enough – that wasn’t what your objections appeared to be – I’m surprised to find you agree with me. It’s not poorly thought out at all though – there’s quite a clear reason behind it when you think through the implications.

    @NW – a separate English parliament isn’t an easy solution at all. It might be the correct/best solution, but it’s far from easy, I chose my words carefully.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Hmm, there was always an alternative – that rather than create an additional layer of representatives in the form of MSP’s/ Welsh Executive etc. the Scottish westminster MP’s sat alone on Scottish issues (either at Westminster or Edinburgh) English MP’s sat alone on English ones, etc. – with the whole house coming together to discuss national issues. That would certainly have maintained the importance of a single local representative for the constituent.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    aracer – Member

    @NW – a separate English parliament isn’t an easy solution at all

    Somehow we managed it.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    – a separate English parliament isn’t an easy solution at all. It might be the correct/best solution, but it’s far from easy

    You may be choosing them carefully*- is that to misrepresent?- but its clearly achievable and best so the real question is why are we not

    IMHO the Tories have masterminded a constitutional fudge/mess , that does not serve the long term interest of the union, to save some money.

    * it would depend on what we mean by easy – a heart transplant is not easy but we can clearly do them and we dont decline to perform one because its not easy – I assume this was the way you were using it. It a near sophist point

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Or they might have done the minimum practically needed at this point, recognising that there’s life in the old EVEL dog yet, that would be far better wrung out in the run up to the next election, when it would be far better to beal Labour and the SNP around the head with.

    aracer
    Free Member

    We come back to the reasonable arguments against then. Where do you locate it? How keen are English people on spending lots of money on another lot of corrupt politicians? Where do you make decisions on things which affect England and Wales but not Scotland? (I know EVEL doesn’t fix that one*, but if you’re going to do it properly it’s an issue which needs fixing so long as Wales is less devolved than Scotland – at the moment it still shares the whole legal system)

    Those aren’t insurmountable issues, but they’re part of what doesn’t make it easy. As pointed out numerous times, the population of England is an order of magnitude different to Scotland or Wales, so the English Parliament would be on a vastly different scale to their Parliament and Assembly. I’m certainly not suggesting any of those are reasons not to do it, but it’s disingenuous to suggest it would be anywhere near as straightforward to set up as the Scottish Parliament.

    Yes, to some extent I am just arguing for the sake of arguing – but nothing we write here will make any difference to the UK constitution. Does anybody really expect to see an English Parliament and/or a Federal UK in their lifetime? The funny thing is, what a large majority of us here (of all shades of political persuasion) would like are things which UK politicians of all flavours aren’t keen on.

    * well it doesn’t really fix anything

    piemonster
    Free Member

    Tories have masterminded a constitutional fudge/mess , that does not serve the long term interest of the union, to save

    I’m not actually 100% convinced the Tories want to save the Union, there’s a part of me that suspects they want to disengage from it in their terms.

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    aracer – Member
    …Does anybody really expect to see an English Parliament and/or a Federal UK in their lifetime?

    I do.

    Knowing how the UK has always reacted after the event, I expect to see this happen just after Scottish independence.

    It will be a belated attempt to prevent the Cornish, Yorkshire and Welsh independence movements achieving the same result as Scotland. 🙂

    I would be perfectly happy to see a genuine federal system that included Scotland BTW, so long as there were no unelected representatives.

    aracer
    Free Member

    You lot who voted Yes, but are keen on a proper Federal system – you do realise that it would still be the Federal Government deciding whether or not to have nukes? 😈

    I’m genuinely curious what real practical difference it would make for Scotland having a proper Federal system rather than what we have now? Is it just a case of more stuff being devolved? Or is your objection to the current system just the HoL – you’re in good company!

    wanmankylung
    Free Member

    It’s not poorly thought out at all though – there’s quite a clear reason behind it when you think through the implications.

    It’s the cheapest way of winning lots of Tory votes back from UKIP. “They” would look like even bigger idiots if they tried to introduce an English parliament (with all its related costs). It is probably also partly aimed at increasing support for independence in Scotland – ready for when Osborne takes over and turns into the guy who destroyed the Union.

    wanmankylung
    Free Member

    You lot who voted Yes, but are keen on a proper Federal system – you do realise that it would still be the Federal Government deciding whether or not to have nukes?

    One of the main objections to remaining in the UK is that everything is dictate by SE England. Move to a proper federal system, and that steam rollering effect that the SE currently has would be greatly diminished.

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