Rincewind wrote:That will NEVER happen. If it did then both the Basques & the Catalans would be the next in line to break away, citing the example of Scotland & Northern Ireland & both France & Spain would never stand for it.
They do not want to be opening that can of worms.
Also, speaking of Brussels there could be a revival of the movement for the two regions of Belgium, the Flemish North & the French speaking Walloonians to separate.
My understanding of the constitutional situation is that Spain and France both most strongly oppose the proposed federalisation approach whereby Scotland remains in both the EU and the UK. They offer less opposition to an independent Scotland joining the EU, as long as that independence is achieved
legally in accordance with the UK's constitution(or what passes for one).
In other words, that recognition depends on Westminister granting consent for a second referendum and accepting a result for secession as binding.
The reason for that stance is, Spain's constitution permits secession only if
all of Spain votes on it. France's doesn't permit secession except for overseas territory, but that provisio was added after the practice which set a precedent allowing French secession with the national government's consent.
Rincewind wrote:Not many. Many commentators seem to think of this purely in economic terms & it was NOT just about economics. And yes, the economic situation has worsened for now. That was only to be expected in the aftermath of the result. But eventually the situation will stabilise one way or the other.
What this referendum was really about was regaining control from a bunch of corrupt, unelected bureaucrats & their ex-politician cronies.
Agreed. It wasn't about the economics.
Unfortunately, there are at least as many(if not more) corrupt and unelected cronies in the UK. They now have a mandate to gather up more power for themselves. We'll have 50 fewer MPs overall after 2020 if there isn't an early election(constituency border redrawings - aka gerrymandering). Thanks to the referendum fallout, the Labour chicken coup and the Chilcot report, most people have forgotten that the Tories are being investigated for electoral fraud during last year's general election in about twice as many seats as the margin of their majority in Parliament.