Soldato
- Joined
- 25 Aug 2010
- Posts
- 3,030
You can have exactly the same points around brexit too, it's hardly a landslide in either referendum so you can't tar nations as one entity so why should we be taken through a hard brexit and sever ties with the EU when not everyone wants it?I think you're selling Scottish voter short - they very well knew there was a reasonable chance for Brexit, assessed the options and voted taking that, along with other factors into account.
The Nationalist trick is to try to paint a united Scotland against the evil Union with Scotland being forced to do things no one agrees with. The majority of Scots who voted voted to remain in the Union on the basis it was a once in a generation decision, and made their decision based on that. The SNP is also trying to paint Scotland as united against Brexit where even then 38% of voters agreed with Brexit in a post "Remain in the Union" world.
It's not a unanimous Scotland versus everyone else the Nats try to paint and for the average working Scot it must be incredibly frustrating to get all this divisive crap dragged up again with the Scottish Parliament choosing to ignore them because they didn't vote the way the SNP required.
In 2011 when people were voting to elect the Scottish government, brexit wasn't on the table so it's not selling anyone short to say that wasn't considered in electing the SNP
The other point that kind of weakens your argument from my point of view is that there is no denying that Scotland does not want a tory government, so therefore having to accept their brexit strategy without any parliamentary scrutiny on a matter like this makes the system hard to swallow.