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Cameron to Scotland: Don't break away and erode UK's global clout

Devil Soul

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Cameron to Scotland: Don't break away and erode UK's global clout| Reuters
(Reuters) - Prime Minister David Cameron made an emotional appeal on Friday for Scotland to remain part of the United Kingdom, warning Scots a vote for independence would undermine Britain's global clout and imperil its financial and political stability.

Speaking in London, Cameron, an Englishman whose Conservative party has only one of 59 UK-wide seats in Scotland, made his most passionate defence yet of the UK, which comprises England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

"We would be deeply diminished without Scotland," Cameron told an audience in the cavernous London velodrome used for the 2012 Olympic Games, saying he would fight with all he had to hold the country he governs together.

"Together, we get a seat at the U.N. Security Council, real clout in NATO and Europe, and the prestige to host events like the G8. Make no mistake: we matter more as a United Kingdom - politically, militarily, diplomatically and culturally too.

If we lost Scotland, if the UK changed, we would rip the rug from under our own reputation."

Scots will decide in a referendum on September 18 whether their nation, which has a population of just over 5 million and is a source of North Sea oil, should end its 307-year-old union with England and leave the UK.

Cameron said a "yes" vote would imperil Britain's stability and foreign direct investment.

"We are quite simply stronger as a bigger entity," he said. "That stability is hugely attractive for investors. Last year, we were the top destination for foreign direct investment in Europe. That is a stamp of approval on our stability - and I would not want to jeopardise that."

It would be extremely difficult to make a currency union with an independent Scotland work, he added, casting further doubt on one of the pro-independence camp's main policy ideas.

Political analysts say a "yes" vote would place the future of Britain's Scotland-based nuclear submarine fleet in doubt and could weaken London's claim to a permanent seat on the United Nations and its influence in the European Union.

People close to Cameron say he does not want to go down in history as the prime minister who lost Scotland. But he has conceded that his privileged background and centre-right politics mean he isn't the best person to win over Scots, usually more left-wing than the English.

RESULT "UP IN THE AIR"

Polls show Scots would vote to reject independence if a vote were held today, with only around a third keen to break away from the UK. However, there are still many undecided voters and Cameron said the outcome was "up in the air".

"Centuries of history hang in the balance. A question mark hangs over the future of our United Kingdom. There can be no complacency about the result," said Cameron.

Alex Salmond, the leader of the pro-independence Scottish National Party (SNP), criticised Cameron for giving such a speech in England instead of Scotland and challenged him to debate him, something Cameron has so far refused to do.

"I don't think this is a prime minister who speaks for Britain, I don't think he speaks for England, I think he speaks for a Westminster elite who are totally and utterly out of touch," Salmond told BBC TV, accusing the prime minister of politicising the Olympics of two years ago.

"The main thing is that this is a speech delivered from London, ostensibly telling people in England what to do but actually arguing against Scottish independence instead of a debate that the prime minister must do in Scotland."

Cameron evoked the spirit of the 2012 London Olympics as an example of how the UK's four nations work well together and said Scotland already has a large measure of independence when it comes to health, education and policing matters.

Tapping into an opinion poll earlier this month which showed people in England and Wales want Scotland to stay in the UK, Cameron urged the English, Welsh and Northern Irish to tell Scots: "We want you to stay".

(Additional reporting by Estelle Shirbon and William James; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge)
 
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David Cameron is Zionist Jew by blood, he is not a British patriot.
 
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Not really tho. Scotland can break away from UK. There is always EU or scotland is already part of EU :O I really dont know
 
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funny-scotland-global-warming-frankie-boyle.jpg
 
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Not really tho. Scotland can break away from UK. There is always EU or scotland is already part of EU :O I really dont know
There are many EU bodies, European union, schengen, Euro and so on....Scotland is part of 1-2 not all...

Scottish independence: Scots EU independence plan 'now untenable'

Comments by the European Council president have cast further doubt on an independent Scotland's EU membership status, it has been claimed.

Herman Van Rompuy said that, if Catalonia became independent from Spain, previously agreed EU treaties would no longer apply.

Opposition parties said the Scottish government's argument was not tenable.

SNP ministers said the comments were "clearly" about the Spanish situation, which was "very different" to Scotland.

Mr Van Rompuy, who represents the body made up of senior figures from EU member states, made his comments while reacting to the announcement of an independence referendum by the north-eastern Spanish region of Catalonia.

He said: "If a part of the territory of a member state ceases to be a part of that state because that territory becomes a new independent state, treaties will no longer apply to that territory.

"In other words, a new independent state would, by the fact of its independence, become a third country with respect to the Union and the treaties would, from the day of its independence, not apply anymore on its territory."

Reacting to the comments, Scottish Labour external affairs spokeswoman Patricia Ferguson, said: "Alex Salmond's position on an independent Scotland's membership of the European Union is no longer tenable.

"The most senior officials in the European Union are contradicting his assertions yet he just sticks his fingers in his ears and asks people to ignore the facts."

Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson, added: "An independent Scotland wouldn't call the shots in negotiating entry to the EU, nor would it get any special treatment.

"It would join the back of the same queue as every other country."

Scottish Secretary Alistair Carmichael, said: "There is no escaping the fact an independent Scotland would face a difficult journey back into the EU.

"They simply cannot say there is any certainty over where these negotiations would end up or the amount of time they would take."

On 18 September next year, voters in Scotland will be asked the yes/no question: "Should Scotland be an independent country?"

The Scottish government has argued that, in the event of a "Yes" vote, Scotland would remain part of the EU and negotiate its membership terms "from within".

A Scottish government spokesman said of Mr van Rompuy's remarks: "These comments are clearly and explicitly about the situation in Spain and Catalonia - not about Scotland, where the constitutional circumstances are very different, as enshrined in the Edinburgh Agreement.

"It is clear that Scotland can negotiate the specific terms of independent membership of the European Union from within the EU, in the 18-month period between a vote for independence and independence day itself in March 2016.

"That is a position backed by many leading international experts and endorsed by the European Commission in recent correspondence - and it is a timescale described by the UK government's own legal adviser as 'realistic'."

The Catalan government has announced plans for an independence referendum in November 2014, but the Spanish government has said the vote could not go ahead.

BBC News - Scottish independence: Scots EU independence plan 'now untenable'

 
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i forgot this issue :woot: and also will lose its global power in some extend :bounce:

After 1956 Suez Crisis, it LOST that status.

Nothing is going to happen. UK will stay like status quo.

I din't knew about it, but read wiki article on the same, looks they were very close to independence not one but 2 times!!

Scottish independence referendum, 2014 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Things din't materialized just because of TECHNICALITIES, this time, it's very very Possible.
 
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