The Scottish Referendum David Monteyne and Brandon Scott

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The Scottish Referendum David Monteyne and Brandon Scott http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/special-features/2014/09/140912-scotland-united-kingdom- independence-referendum-culture/

Transcript of The Scottish Referendum David Monteyne and Brandon Scott

Page 1: The Scottish Referendum David Monteyne and Brandon Scott

The Scottish ReferendumDavid Monteyne and Brandon Scott

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/special-features/2014/09/140912-scotland-united-kingdom-independence-referendum-culture/

Page 2: The Scottish Referendum David Monteyne and Brandon Scott

What was the Scottish Referendum?

The Referendum of 2014 was put in place by the Scottish Independence Referendum BillA total of 3,623,344 people voted, 84.59% of Scotland’s electorateA total of 1,617,989 people voted yes (44.7%)A total of 2,001,926 voted no (55.3%)A referendum is a general vote by the electorate on a single political question that has been referred to them for a direct decision.The Scottish referendum was a vote of all of Scotland to make the decision to become a independent country and remove them selfs from English controlIt needed a vote of over 50% saying yes and the electorate had to be 40% or more of the total population of Scotland.

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Why did Scotland want Independence?

Scotland’s Parliament joined England on January 16, 1707, forming the Kingdom of Great Britain

The Scottish believed that independence meant wealth, freedom, liberation

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=569gz28dijs

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_independence_referendum,_2014

http://www.halsburyslawexchange.co.uk/scottish-referendum-not-a-matter-of-law/

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When?A Labour Party was committed to home rule for Scotland in the1920s

Scottish National Party formed in 1934

Did not achieve significant electoral success until the 1960s.

A document calling for home rule, the Scottish Covenant, received2 million signatures for the home rule

The idea of Scottish independence became known as devolution,but was not translated into a referendum until 1979 but neverpassed

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Who? One of the Referendum’s major

players was Alex Salmond, leader of the Scottish National Party

Yes Scotland was the organization campaigning for an independent Scotland, Better Together working against independence

All Scottish citizens over the age of 16 were eligible to vote, as well as a number of foreign citizens resident in Scotland

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yes_Scotland

http://yesscotland.net/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Better_Together_(campaign)

Alex Salmond

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/davidblair/100185986/alex-salmond-is-talking-nonsense-on-stilts/

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Where?Throughout Scotland, the distribution of votes was fairly even, rarely falling below 40% in either direction.Areas surrounding large urban centers like Glasgow and Edinburgh tended to drift toward a yes vote.

http://election-data.blogspot.ca/ http://www.mapsofworld.com/scotland/location-map.html

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…Resulted in a dramatic change in people’s lives

http://atp.uclan.ac.uk/buddypress/diffusion/?p=1220http://globalresearch.ca/scotlands-independence-from-the-united-kingdom-what-happens-to-england/5389169

•the UK: Scotland contributes billions of dollars to the GDP of the United Kingdom, and contains 8.4% of the UK’s total population•If Scotland separated, they would no longer be allowed to use the Pound as their form of currency•For Scotland: their financial state would be weakened, as many of the main•Scottish banks are owned by English-owned •Traditions would change as well.•Scotland would forfeit its current status in the European Union and would have to reapply for Membership•Many Citizens would have to change their passports and possibly citizenship choosing where they would have to live due to them becoming there own independent country•Populations could possibly migrate towards England because they would want to be in there own country not in a newly created one with a poor finical state and many new changes coming under way. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4C

ZjyXH3FTc

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…Had a widespread impact, within national borders and across the world

The Referendum has led to the rise of a number of other independence movements around the world

It also caused some to reconsider whether independence is really in their best interest

“If [independence] had happened in Scotland, I think it would have been a political landslide on the scale of the

breakup of the Soviet Union.” – Karel De Gucht (26 September 2014).

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http://worldobserveronline.com/2013/12/13/spain-wont-enough-tanks-catalonia-vote-independence-defy-madrid/

http://www.debatingeurope.eu/2012/10/15/should-flanders-be-independent/#.VCsk7fldXkg

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