Scottish Referendum / Independence - Vol 6
Discussion
Strocky said:
McWigglebum4th said:
Nope don't remember that either
I remember being told that if i voted YES i would see huge spending increases and tax cuts meaning i would be vastly better off
Hence i voted NO as i didn't belive a bit of we would all be richer line
When i said that independence would cost me A couple of grand a year out of my wage packet i was called a scaremongering english tory
But now we have a nationalist saying that independence would of cost me A couple of grand a year out of my wage packet
Sorry
Bit late to be honest
As the YES side lost
Again that's not what I said, but thanks for playing I remember being told that if i voted YES i would see huge spending increases and tax cuts meaning i would be vastly better off
Hence i voted NO as i didn't belive a bit of we would all be richer line
When i said that independence would cost me A couple of grand a year out of my wage packet i was called a scaremongering english tory
But now we have a nationalist saying that independence would of cost me A couple of grand a year out of my wage packet
Sorry
Bit late to be honest
As the YES side lost
Are you saying independence would not of cost me A couple of grand a year out of my wage packet
Strocky said:
McWigglebum4th said:
less then 38% voted YES
How is that a majority?
The SNP hold a majority at Holyrood (despite Labour trying to rig that never happening at the outset)How is that a majority?
However I was answering BlinkyTheFish's "magic bullet" question when I replied to the bit you quoted
you know the election where 50.1% of electorate actually voted
so roughly 22% of the electorate
Yeah
That is a vast majority of scotland
McWigglebum4th said:
Strocky said:
So to the Unionists on here, who are you voting for in the UK GE and then the Scottish GE and why?
More then likely toryfor one reason
They are the mostly likely party in my local area to keep the SNP out
But I don't count myself as a Unionist, just someone who didn't see the case for voting Yes in the referendum. The SNP rhetoric needs taming, I just hope there's enough other voters in Scotland that feel the same way...
Strocky said:
The powers the SNP want are/where quite clear, full independence so that they control ALL the economic levers of the country to help shape a country who the majority seem to want a different way of governance from the way the UK is currently run at the moment
If the SNP wanted to control ALL the economic levers of the country why was their favoured plan to enter into a currency union with the rest of the UK? Even after they were advised that this was a non-starter.Majority, noun, "The greater part or number; the number larger than half the total"
simoid said:
22% of Scotland was enough to get them a Holyrood majority in 2011, and I'm fairly sure the referendum and associated ramblings/rhetoric has increased their support.
The SNP lost the referndum but have gained the most.
Don't forgetThe SNP lost the referndum but have gained the most.
the higher the YES vote = the lower the voter turnout
Strocky said:
So to the Unionists on here, who are you voting for in the UK GE and then the Scottish GE and why?
Conservative in both. Tactical voting to keep SNP out, although I'd likely vote Conservative anyway.There is tactical vote by area image doing the rounds on Twitter etc. The next 2 elections in Scotland (GE and HR) will likely be largely based on tactical voting, caused purely by the SNP post referendum crap. Good work.
5STM5 said:
Strocky said:
So to the Unionists on here, who are you voting for in the UK GE and then the Scottish GE and why?
Conservative in both. Tactical voting to keep SNP out, although I'd likely vote Conservative anyway.There is tactical vote by area image doing the rounds on Twitter etc. The next 2 elections in Scotland (GE and HR) will likely be largely based on tactical voting, caused purely by the SNP post referendum crap. Good work.
This cant be that case as nobody in Scotland votes Tory; after-all that would mean some Scots got the government they voted for.
barryrs said:
5STM5 said:
Strocky said:
So to the Unionists on here, who are you voting for in the UK GE and then the Scottish GE and why?
Conservative in both. Tactical voting to keep SNP out, although I'd likely vote Conservative anyway.There is tactical vote by area image doing the rounds on Twitter etc. The next 2 elections in Scotland (GE and HR) will likely be largely based on tactical voting, caused purely by the SNP post referendum crap. Good work.
This cant be that case as nobody in Scotland votes Tory; after-all that would mean some Scots got the government they voted for.
The SNP polled 19.9%
Interestingly the Conservative vote was up by almost 1% compared to the previous election.
neelyp said:
Strocky said:
So to the Unionists on here, who are you voting for in the UK GE and then the Scottish GE and why?
Anybody who will get the SNP to fk.Hopefully forever.
Strocky said:
So to the Unionists on here, who are you voting for in the UK GE and then the Scottish GE and why?
Normally vote tory, voted SNP once but voting labour this time purely as I think they have the best chance of beating the SNP. Its a hard choice as I believe my local area is very well served by SNP councillors/MSP, they work hard, listen to local opinion but I feel so strongly about remaining part of the Union I won't vote for any party holding separatist views bodhi said:
NEEP said:
andymadmak said:
Interestingly the Conservative vote was up by almost 1% compared to the previous election.
Yes, it went from 100 to 101, I was staggeredHere is a word to help you out
facetious
adjective
treating serious issues with deliberately inappropriate humour; flippant.
synonyms:flippant, flip, glib, frivolous, tongue-in-cheek, waggish, whimsical, joking, jokey, jesting, jocular, playful, roguish, impish, teasing, arch, mischievous, puckish
"a facetious remark"
HTH
McWigglebum4th said:
So what are you saying?
Are you saying independence would not of cost me A couple of grand a year out of my wage packet
Again it was in regards to the hypothetical question posedAre you saying independence would not of cost me A couple of grand a year out of my wage packet
IF Scotland had gained independence AND the Oil Price had dropped below the rate that the SNP budget was set on in the White Paper, the choices would be to either cut services or raise taxes to cover the shortfall
I was only stating personally that I would be happy to pay more in tax (to a level that didn't affect my standard of living) if it meant the progressive public policies where kept rather than cut or abandoned
I was only speaking for myself
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