20 September 2014

Scotland the not-so-brave


Slate has an article by Boer Deng about the recent Scottish referendum:
After a “no” result in Scotland’s independence referendum, the leader of the pro-independence Scottish National Party, Alex Salmond (photo), has announced that he will resign. During his decades-long career, Salmond turned the SNP from a messy political organ into the most popular party in Scotland by membership. He will also be resigning his position as First Minister, the head of Scotland’s "devolved" parliament in Edinburgh, a post he has held since May of 2007. From the BBC:
Salmond said: "For me as leader my time is nearly over but, for Scotland, the campaign continues and the dream shall never die." Speaking from Bute House in Edinburgh, the first minister's official residence, he told journalists: "I am immensely proud of the campaign that Yes Scotland fought and particularly of the 1.6 million voters who rallied to that cause."
Salmond, 59, who has led his party for a total of twenty years, also said there were a "number of eminently qualified and very suitable candidates for leader", although the current deputy first minister Nicola Sturgeon, also deputy SNP leader, would be seen as a clear frontrunner. Salmond’s brand of Scottish nationalism galvanized the Yes campaign, but ultimately came up short, following a late surge in efforts from the unionist side, including recent, passionate appeals from Gordon Brown, the former Labour prime minister of the UK and a Scot. More than 1.6 million Scots voted for independence in the referendum.
Rico says they wouldn't have liked independence, and the Brits would've missed them...

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