Traitorfish
The Tighnahulish Kid
Really is impossible to say. Pro-independence is still a minority position, but so is pro-union. The deciding factor is going to be, and always were going to be, working class Labour voters who have no inherent commitment to either side, but neither campaign has made a convincing appeal to that demographic. (Frankly, I think they're deliberately avoiding it, because neither of them really have much to say.)I'm watching the Scottish National Party conference on C-Span which has me wondering (again):
How likely is Scottish independence now? Has the independence movement gained any traction since the last time I asked?
It's basically going to come down to which bloc can mount the best defence of the welfare state. For the nats, that means making a coherent argument for economic stability, for the unionists, that means pretending that the welfare state is somehow compatible with the continued rule of the centre-right; neither have yet achieved this.
If "devomax", i.e. Home Rule is on the ballot, though, it's pretty much a certainty. My suspicion is that the SNP isn't too confident in independence, but is ideologically committed to pretending they are, so they're betting on Home Rule allowing them to better consolidate their position for a serious grab at independence.
It's not likely that an independent Scotland needs much of a military. The Irish have made do with a pretty lightweight army even when dealing with the fallout from the Troubles. The general sentiment among nats is "leave imperialism to the empires".I very much doubt the Scots feel like paying for a military on their own. So isn't the question more along the lines of what shape and scope is Scottish self determination likely to take?