JimHacker wrote:Personally I always supported decentralisation, with a federal view of the UK both down (scotland, england, wales, NI) and up (as part of a truly federal EU). The latter is looking further and further away, but the former is looking inevietable - if the UK remains united but under the terms of 'devo-max' the West Lothian question (the fact that english MPs have no say over purely Scottish matters but Scot MPs still have a vote over purely English matters) will be brought to the fore.
I quite agree, federalism is the only solution if UK has any chance of remaining one country. Full devolution for all four nations is looking increasingly like the ultimate solution, ending the anomaly that the West Lothian Question represents.
Brown proposing to keep the Barnett Formula can only be viewed through the prism of the Labour vote in Scotland. Any mention of discontinuing it would lead to a further lurch toward the Yes campaign, something the Labour leadership is trying to stem. This is where the balefull effect of the "Red Clydeside" mentality in Scottish (i.e. Glasgow) Labour plays it's part. Labour may be too left wing for the south of England, but it's not left wing enough for areas of Glasgow! This is where my own intense dislike of the baleful political influence of that most heavily populated area of Scotland comes to the fore!
The stress the referendum has created in the relationship between England and Scotland will vent in a very ugly way if not released in some manner, preferably with constitutional change. Looking at the general tone of comments on pretty much every web page I've seen, England's patience has just about worn out. Although I consider myself British as much as Scottish, I feel now that if I went south of the border I wouldn't feel very safe. I'd be viewed as "other", not a fellow citizen of the same country.
Thank you, Mr Salmond!
Mike.