A Renewed Push for Scottish Independence Takes Shape

By Stratfor Worldview
December 02, 2020

The issue of Scottish independence is re-emerging ahead of the country’s May 2021 parliamentary election. The U.K. Parliament’s opposition to a new independence referendum will create debate over how to react, though the Scottish government remains unlikely to push for unilateral secession. On Nov. 30, Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said that if her Scottish National Party (SNP) wins the country’s parliamentary elections next year, it will push for an independence referendum “in the early part” of the new legislative term, though she did not provide a specific date. According to Sturgeon, the U.K. Parliament cannot veto Scotland’s “inalienable right of self-determination.” This means U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservative Party, which controls a majority of seats in the U.K. Parliament, will face pressure for another Scottish independence vote less than a decade after the 2014 referendum.

The SNP will almost certainly win Scotland’s 2021 election, giving it the political momentum to push for another independence vote. Scottish opinion polls consistently put the SNP’s voting intention well above 50 percent, and the party will campaign on the promise of another independence referendum.The SNP’s official position is that it will not do anything illegal, but some fringe factions of the pro-independence camp believe Scotland should organize an independence referendum even without the U.K. Parliament’s authorization. The SNP has also suggested that it could take the issue of the U.K. Parliament’s powers over an independence referendum to court, which could open the door to a lengthy legal dispute. 

The COVID-19 crisis may postpone any serious attempts for independence until 2022 or beyond by forcing the SNP to focus first on mitigating the immediate health and economic fallout from the pandemic. On Nov. 28, Sturgeon said that her responsibility was ensuring “the health and wellbeing of the country” and that she remained “very focused” on “trying to steer [Scotland] through a pandemic.”

A strong push for independence in Scotland could eventually force the U.K. government to consider transferring additional powers to the Scottish parliament. Such moves, however, may not be enough to appease the SNP’s push for a referendum. The issue of Scottish independence will thus likely continue to raise questions about the future of the U.K.’s territorial integrity for years to come.

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