Sie sehen gerade die Germany Version der Website.
Möchten Sie zu Ihrer lokalen Seite wechseln?
35 MIN LESEZEIT

The road to independence runs through Holyrood

Scot Goes Pop

Here’s something that actually happened, but that may surprise you if you don’t remember it. In the mid-1990s, a young Nicola Sturgeon appeared on the BBC’s Question Time as an ordinary member of the audience, and challenged Donald Dewar over Labour’s apparent change of heart about the method by which Scotland could choose to become an independent country. She was furious that Tony Blair, with his customary infernal arrogance, had just undone a political consensus dating back to the 1970s by stating that it would not necessarily be sufficient for the SNP to win a majority of Scottish seats at Westminster, and that a referendum might be required to ratify the decision. She demanded that Dewar, a rare breed of unionist noted for his impeccable commitment to self-determination, should rein his errant leader in. But Dewar declined to accept the premise that anything dramatic had occurred, and looked entirely relaxed as he supported Blair’s stance on the grounds that the SNP could easily win a majority of Scottish seats on less than 50% of the vote, and that it would obviously be inappropriate for Scotland to become independent until it had been proven that a majority of the population supported the idea.

Lesen Sie den vollständigen Artikel und viele weitere in dieser Ausgabe von iScot Magazine
Kaufoptionen unten
Wenn Sie die Ausgabe besitzen, Anmelden um den vollständigen Artikel jetzt zu lesen.
Digitale Einzelausgabe November/December 2018
 
KOSTENLOS
JETZT KAUFEN
Diese Sonderausgabe ist nicht in einer neuen iScot Magazine Abonnement. Das Abonnement enthält die letzte reguläre Ausgabe und die während des Abonnements erscheinenden neuen Ausgaben.
Digitales Jahresabonnement €35,99 jährlich abgerechnet
Speichern Sie
50%
€3,00 / issue
Monatliches digitales Abonnement €4,99 monatlich abgerechnet
Speichern Sie
17%
€4,99 / issue

Dieser Artikel stammt aus...


View Issues
iScot Magazine
November/December 2018
ANSICHT IM LAGER

Andere Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


iSCOT
Voice from Europe
Alyn Smith is one of Scotland’s six Members of the European Parliament. He is a member of the European Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee.
The Dinwoodie Interview
SUSAN Aitken has come a long way in the 30 years since
As Welcome as a Fart in a Spacesuit
“As an Anglophile,” said Billy Connolly when asked
Body language
Sometimes you just know. Sometimes you can just tell.
St Andrews Fair Day Saturday
Bringing you the alternative new in Orkney
Talking Tech
This month’s featured bit of tech which gives audible
Arabian Knights
By dint of great courage in mid-1965 a young Scots
Foodbanks are not normal
Foodbanks? 10 years or so ago, how many of us had heard
MEASLES And The Risks of Rash Decisions
Measles has been described by one author as “an inevitable
As old as the hills
James Hutton, the Scottish Enlightenment and the North West Highlands Geopark
A Welcome Tae Edinburgh!
As the Festival crowded Edinburgh, on the 24th August
From Glorious Broth To Gracious Haggis
I will never forget my first trip to Scotland. It was
The thistle and the shamrock
This month we take a look at Billy Kay’s contribution
London’s big, but Biggar’s Biggar!
HOW far do you have to travel to have a proper stay
The Language of Economics
I wo uld like to start this article with an apology.
Better the Devil you Know
….and so, once again, on a Friday, we made our way
Football Round-Up Late Extra!
Back in the August issue, iScot Magazine brought you
The Unseen Horrors of Gaza
A shocking report published in the BMJ this summer
Scotland leads the way a personal view from Australia
The Scottish Government doesn’t get everything right
Wee Ginger Dug
Coming soon in early 2019 a new book about my time
A Vigil Sky
Paul Colvin was invited to craft a poem to be read out on a night vigil held on the 17th September at Culloden Moor battlefield.
As Ithers See Us: Robert the Bruce in Cinema
Scotland ‘s history has been a fixture of cinema since
The Kitchen
The winter of discontent was the catalyst for a change
Arachne
Well, ye kin imagine that it didny take long for young
ALLAN MARTIN AN ISCOT MAGAZINE STORY
It took me most of the day to get to Wenbury Junction
Inside the Raj: Crime and Politics in British India
Alex J. Craig reviews Smoke and Ashes by Abir Mukherjee
MajorBloodnok, Agony Aunt
Heed my wisdom or the backstop gets it
Letters & Pics
Got a picture with a special memory for you? It might
The Big Yin
Find the clues in the ‘black squares’. The arrows tell