- Sputnik International
World
Get the latest news from around the world, live coverage, off-beat stories, features and analysis.

UK Election Result May Have Killed Idea of Scottish IndyRef2

© AFP 2023 / Andy Buchanan Pro-Scottish Independence supporters with Scottish Saltire flag masks pose for a picture at a rally in George Square in Glasgow, Scotland on July 30, 2016 to call for Scottish independence from the UK.
Pro-Scottish Independence supporters with Scottish Saltire flag masks pose for a picture at a rally in George Square in Glasgow, Scotland on July 30, 2016 to call for Scottish independence from the UK. - Sputnik International
Subscribe
Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson said the idea of a second referendum on independence was dead in the water after the setback for the SNP in the general election on Thursday (June 8). Pro-union parties won 21 seats off the Scottish Nationalists.

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon admitted she would have to "reflect" on the idea of having another referendum.

​​Two of the casualties were the former First Minister Alex Salmond and another SNP grandee, Angus Robertson.

It could have been even worse for the SNP but Stephen Gethins held off a Liberal Democrat challenge to his seat in North East Fife by just two votes.

Sturgeon ignored her own party's terrible performance and turned the attention on the Prime Minister: "This is a disaster for Theresa May. She called an election arrogantly thinking she would crush the opposition."

"I'm disappointed at the SNP losses but I'm pleased that we've won the election," Sturgeon said.

Speaking from her official residence in Edinburgh, Sturgeon added: "Undoubtedly the issue of an independence referendum was a factor in this election result, but I think there were other factors in this election result as well."

The SNP remains the biggest party in Scotland, but Labour, which was virtually wiped out in 2015, staged a recovery north of the border and both the Tories and Lib Dems also gained at the expense of the Nats.

"The big issue of this campaign up here wasn't about Brexit. It was about what Nicola Sturgeon started in March, trying to ram through a second independence referendum… We've seen so many SNP seats fall here. Honestly, I think IndyRef2 is dead," Ruth Davidson said.

A BBC interviewer asked her whether she would challenge Theresa May for leadership of the Conservative Party, but she pointed out she was a Member of the Scottish Parliament, but not an MP at Westminster.

William McDougall, a lecturer in politics at Glasgow Caledonian University, said the election campaign in Scotland was "completely different" to the battle in England, with the Tories, Labour and the Lib Dems all playing the union card at the expense of the SNP.

He said it may be too early to say that so-called "indyref2" was a non-starter now.

"But it's certainly something which the SNP — Nicola Sturgeon and her strategists — will have to consider carefully," McDougall told Sputnik.

"It may depend on Brexit because if they are able to stay in the Single Market it may give Nicola Sturgeon the reason to row back on that policy."

He said Sturgeon had clearly miscalculated when she called the second referendum and had under-estimated how it would play with the electorate.

"She also underestimated the effect of Corbyn, who was portrayed as harking back to the politics of the 1970s, being another Michael Foot, and all that and that has all been thrown in the air," he told Sputnik.

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала