Scotland
Decides: Historic independence vote underway
Scottish
voters go to the polls on Thursday to choose whether or not to break
away from the UK and form an independent state. The ‘Yes’ and
‘No’ campaigns have been neck-and-neck in the pre-ballot polls.
Scottish
independence: Final opinion polls show undecided voters could swing
result either way
18
September, 2014
After
a referendum campaign of claim and counter-claim which has lasted for
more than two years and has led to allegations of bullying,
intimidation, scaremongering and outright lies, Scottish voters will
finally decide whether their country should embrace independence or
remain as part of the United Kingdom from the privacy of the polling
booth.
The
final opinion polls
before the vote suggested that the campaign against independence
retained a very slight lead. But with significant numbers of people
still undecided, the result will remain impossible to predict until
the early hours of Friday morning.
David
Cameron admitted he was “nervous” that the UK may be on the verge
of breaking up. In the event of a Yes vote, he will face intense
pressure from Conservative backbenchers to resign as Prime Minister,
having presided over the separation of England’s 307-year-old union
with Scotland.
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MORE: SCOTTISH
INDEPENDENCE LIVE
Mr
Cameron insisted that he would not stand down if Scotland voted for
independence. “My name is not on the ballot paper. What’s on the
ballot paper is, does Scotland want to stay in the United Kingdom or
does Scotland want to separate itself from the United Kingdom,” he
said.
“That’s
the only question that will be decided on Thursday night. The
question about my future will come at the British general election
coming soon.”
The
leaders of the campaigns for and against independence spent today
making their final cases on the airwaves and in front of the
television cameras, while their armies of tens of thousands of
volunteers mounted a final push on Scotland’s streets and
doorsteps.
In
Perth, Alex Salmond gave a rousing speech to Yes campaigners, telling
them to prepare for “a day which Scotland will never forget” and
hitting out again at the main Westminster political parties, which he
described as “out of touch and out of time”.
The
First Minister added: “To our friends in the rest of the United
Kingdom, I say this: we don’t seek division, but rather equality. A
new, better and harmonious relationship founded on our enduring bonds
of family and culture.”
In
Glasgow, Gordon Brown delivered what some commentators described as
the best speech of his political career, telling an audience in
Maryhill: “It is not less patriotic to vote No – Scotland does
not belong to the SNP”.
Alex
Salmond gave a rousing speech to Yes campaigners (Getty Images)
Declaring
that “the silent majority will be silent no more”, the former
Labour prime minister added: “This vote isn’t about a Scottish
parliament – we have that. It isn’t about a shared currency –
we have that already. The nationalists' aim is to break every
constitutional link with the UK – and we will not have that. We are
a nation, yesterday, today and tomorrow.”
An
Ipsos-MORI poll tonight suggested that Scotland would reject
independence by the smallest of margins, with 51 per cent of people
intending to vote No and 49 per cent Yes, excluding undecided voters.
A
separate Panelbase survey had very similar findings, with 52 per cent
saying they favoured keeping the union and 48 per cent keen to go it
alone. Both polls suggested that about five per cent of voters – or
one in 20 – remain undecided and could swing the result.
In
a YouGov poll for The Times, as little as four per cent didn't know
which way they would vote – around 170,000 of those who have
registered.
Blair
Jenkins, the chief executive of Yes Scotland, said the polls
demonstrated that the campaign for independence was within “touching
distance” of victory, adding that he believed the expected record
voter turnout would favour his side.
The
aggressive tactics of some Yes supporters came in for further
criticism, with a succession of politicians suggesting that the tone
of the debate had not reflected well on Scotland. Nick Clegg, the
Deputy Prime Minister, said the campaign had seen some “pretty
nasty incidents”, while Ukip leader Nigel Farage accused Mr Salmond
of fuelling “vitriol” on the streets.
Blair
Jenkins, the chief executive of Yes Scotland campaigns for people to
vote for an independent Scotland (EPA)
“We
are now seeing intimidation and a growing anti-English sentiment,”
he wrote on Twitter. “We are also seeing the sort of abhorrent
behaviour that could lead to rioting. It's a sorry situation when
politics plunges to these depths.”
Lord
McConnell, the country’s former First Minister, said police should
be blamed for a “shocking” lack of effort at preventing
intimidation on the campaign trail. “The level of shouting-down at
public meetings, people’s cars and houses being threatened and
aggression in town centres and public places was preventable,” he
said.
“I’m
shocked that there hasn’t been more of a conscious effort by Police
Scotland. More presence at the weekends, at public meets and one or
two symbolic arrests of people would have set the right tone early
on.”
But
in response the Scottish Police Federation said the extent of the
aggression faced on the streets by politicians had be exaggerated.
“The referendum debate has been robust but overwhelmingly good
natured,” said Brian Docherty, its chairman. “Any neutral
observer could be led to believe Scotland is on the verge of societal
disintegration, yet nothing could be further from the truth.”
Meanwhile,
Mr Salmond’s claims that an independent Scotland would be rapidly
admitted to the European Union were flatly contradicted by the
Spanish Prime Minister.
Mariano
Rajoy claimed it could take up to eight years for Scotland to go
through the process of applying for membership of the EU, claiming
that breaking away from the rest of the UK would represent a “torpedo
in the waterline of the European Union”.
Mr
Salmond has previously insisted that an independent Scotland would be
welcomed into the bloc, an assertion he repeated today, saying it
held a “huge amount of attractiveness” due to its oil reserves
and other natural resources.
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