I'm not sure from where you get that idea. Scotland has long been a lot more left-leaning than England.
Why good riddance? I thought you liked people who upset the establishment. Or is it because they're pro-EU?I don't think you grasp the power dynamics within the UK. The SNP is doing everything right to collapse in the next elections. And good riddance.
Why good riddance? I thought you liked people who upset the establishment. Or is it because they're pro-EU?
The whole way of the SNP doing politics around the independence issue (not the devolution, mind you, which was workable) is stupid. Their interest in it is a power ploy, no more.
Because they don't present any kind of plan beyond the let's be independent.
That creates several new problems, UK fishing fleets buy qoutas and access other EU Nation fishing grounds, including accessing EU ports to offload UK fish catches.
Currently the UK has 13% EEZ but has 30% fishing qoutas and will need to negosiate new qoutas again
In fact the EU suggest that UK adopt the EU Policy for allocating more of the fishing qoutas to many smaller vessals instead the UK Chooses to allocate fishing qoutas purely based on economic considerations
I have a feeling even if the Brexiters pass the law forcing the entire UK qouta to be caught by "UK Nationals" only, it wont fix the real problem, the large foreign fishing fleet already employ UK nationals, they would easily be able to comply with that new regulations no problem.
Then there's still a legal battle whether it is actually technically legal that May initiates the Brexit or whether that must be an act of parliament. From what I've heard the outcome is open, but if May cannot act on her own that would make Brexit much more difficult and likely delay it by years.
Theresa May needs a consent of the Commons to repeal the European communities act of 1972 which would turn existing EU law into British law when Britain leaves the EU. I don't know what would happen if the Commons don't ratify it, but I guess May would delay the Brexit process until they do.
So problems that can be solved regardless of EU membership require to leave the EU to be solved. I find no problems with this.Yes, selling off fishing quotas is a problem.
There is a problem here of corrupt politicians and privatisation and trading idelogy gone mad here in the UK.
If they were not selling fishing quotas to the Dutch, they'd likely sell them to the Chinese or Japanese instead.
However the UK leaving the EU is a necessary preliminary to sorting out many problems.
PM saying they have full confidence in the Chancellor they appointed only three months ago can't be a good sign.
Pro Brexit cabinet members complaining that he is acting like an accountant and giving too much credence to 'experts' in the treasury.
The Marmite must flow. He who controls the Marmite, controls the UK.
Your thoroughly biased opinions do not constitute fact, you know. You can rattle on about May's supposed mandate all you like, but you are ignoring that both Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to Remain at greater percentages than did the English.
What's more, if she uses the Royal Prerogative to usurp Parliament's right to make and decide upon British legislation, there may indeed be unpleasant consequences. For better or for worse, it is is Parliament who are the legislators, not the Prime Minister.