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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics

Scottish independence is a question of when, not if

A Scottish independence rally in Glasgow on 11 January 2020.
A Scottish independence rally in Glasgow on 11 January 2020. Photograph: Andy Buchanan/AFP/Getty Images

Simon Jenkins correctly highlights that “unionist joy is misplaced” and that Scottish independence is very much alive and well (Sturgeonism is dead but the independence cause is not. Westminster beware, 10 April 2023). Three factors drive it: the UK economy, the Conservative party and Scottish demographic voting intentions.

The UK economy used to work for most countries and regions: that was the basis of the union. Regional GDP data shows that it now works for two regions, London and the south-east. Levelling up is correctly regarded as a vacuous slogan. Unlike the English regions, Scotland does not need to accept this built-in inequality. An independent Scotland can shape the economy to meet its needs, or fail trying.

A Conservative majority in Scotland was last seen in 1959. Most Scots do not support Conservative values and find this most recent batch of buffoons and millionaires particularly offensive. A short Labour interlude in Westminster will not change the basic fact that Scotland is socially and politically diverging from England. Brexit crystallises the difference, with a significant majority of Scots voting remain. On the demographics, polling consistently shows that 16- to 35-year-olds are overwhelmingly in favour of independence, particularly young female voters.

The SNP meltdown will help the cause of independence by creating a movement focused on the primary objective, rather than on marginal issues of limited importance to the Scottish population. SNP difficulties are a major issue for them, but just a bump in the road to Scottish independence.
Tom Tracey
Brodick, Isle of Arran

• Simon Jenkins is right: the move towards Scottish independence is not going away because of the present troubles of the SNP. It is not based on anti-English sentiment. It is born of experience that what England votes for consistently is not what Scots want – be it unregulated markets, ill-considered privatisation or Brexit.

That independence will bring economic challenges is certain, but when you look at the achievements of small European countries and consider the natural and intellectual assets of Scotland, Scots should not fear independence. The SNP is just a route to this end. In an independent Scotland it would disappear and take a distinct position in a plural political settlement based, thankfully, on proportional representation. When people like me, who have lived happily and successfully in England for 50 years, doubt that the union in its present form is worth saving, then there is a seismic change taking place.
Michael Martin
Chester

• Simon Jenkins observes that “a solid 45% of Scottish voters clearly do not like being governed from England and their case should be heard”. He then turns a cloth ear to our voice. Further devolution would only see Scotland still yoked to Westminster’s morally corrupt and elitist establishment. It’s time for real change.
Matt Ritchie
Inverness

• Much of what Simon Jenkins writes is to the point, but the comment about “once lovely landscapes” being scarred by wind turbines is so out of date. Onshore wind turbines have made Scotland’s renewable power sector a real success and, rather than blighting the landscape, they are a reminder that climate change is a real and present threat, not something that can be airbrushed away.
Polly Purvis
Edinburgh

• Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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