1 / 74

Independence: Trends, Hopes and Fears

Independence: Trends, Hopes and Fears. John Curtice Scottish Centre for Social Research (ScotCen). Three Questions. Has support for independence increased? How consistent are people’s views? What are people’s key hopes and fears about independence?. A Much Asked Question.

kelton
Download Presentation

Independence: Trends, Hopes and Fears

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Independence: Trends, Hopes and Fears John Curtice Scottish Centre for Social Research (ScotCen)

  2. Three Questions • Has support for independence increased? • How consistent are people’s views? • What are people’s key hopes and fears about independence?

  3. A Much Asked Question • Which of these statements comes closest to your view? • Scotland should become independent, separate from the UK and the European Union • Scotland should become independent, separate from the UK but part of the European Union • Scotland should remain part of the UK, with its own elected parliament which has some taxation powers • Scotland should remain part of the UK, with its own elected parliament which has no taxation powers • Scotland should remain part of the UK without an elected parliament

  4. How Scotland Divides

  5. Constitutional Preferences 1997-2010

  6. A New Approach • Which of the statements on this card comes closest to your view about who should make government decisions for Scotland? • The Scottish Parliament should make all the decisions for Scotland • The UK government should make decisions about defence and foreign affairs; the Scottish Parliament should decide everything else • The UK government should make decisions about taxes, benefits and defence and foreign affairs; the Scottish Parliament should decide the rest • The UK government should make all decisions for Scotland

  7. The Response

  8. The Heart of the Matter? • Thinking about the institutions on this card, which do you think ought to make most of the important decisions for Scotland about defence and foreign affairs? • The Scottish Parliament • The UK government at Westminster • Local councils in Scotland • The European Union

  9. Westminster’s Role

  10. Three Questions, One Answer?

  11. Consistently So? - 1

  12. Consistently So? - 2

  13. A better tomorrow?

  14. A calamity?

  15. What matters most?

  16. As you can see

  17. A question of class and identity too

  18. Emotional Reactions • Ifin the future Scotland were to become independent and leave the UK, would you be sorry, pleased, or neither pleased nor sorry? IF SORRY/PLEASED: Is that very or quite sorry/pleased? • If Scotland were to become independent, would you feel confident about Scotland's future, worried, or neither confident nor worried? IF CONFIDENT/WORRIED: Is that very or quite confident/worried?

  19. Emotional Reactions - 2

  20. Emotional Reactions - 3

  21. A little changed reaction?

  22. The power of emotion? - 1

  23. The power of emotion? - 2

  24. The Power of Emotion? - 3

  25. Middle Class Fears

  26. Conclusion • No sign that three years of SNP government has been accompanied by increased support for independence • The practical consequences of independence are not widely feared – but fear itself appears to be widespread.

  27. Ready to take another leap? Attitudes towards Scotland’s constitutional future John Curtice & Rachel Ormston December 2010

  28. Independence: a pocket book issue?

  29. Trading economic blows “There is no point in being a pocket money parliament when the pocket money stops” (Salmond, October 2010) • "Everyone knows we would have tipped over the edge on which Ireland teeters today.” • (Iain Gray, September 2010)

  30. The Nationalist case for • Only independence can: • Provide necessary levers to grow the economy • Make best use of natural resources • Protect from spending cuts

  31. The Unionist case against • Scotland’s level of public spending impossible to sustain post-independence without big tax hikes • Union provides stability and prosperity • Scotland couldn’t have bailed out banks

  32. Who is winning the argument? • Perceptions of the Union • Expectations of independence

  33. Whose economy benefits from Union?

  34. Whose economy benefits from Union?

  35. Scotland hard done by on spending?

  36. Expectations of independence

  37. Tax - a critical issue?

  38. Expectations of tax matter a bit

  39. But less than other things

  40. Less than other things 2

  41. Higher taxes needed to fill gap post-independence?

  42. A more specific proposition • Say that it was clear that if Scotland became an independent country, separate from the rest of the UK, taxes would be the same as now. • In those circumstances, would you be in favour or against Scotland becoming an independent country?

  43. A more specific proposition • Variations (order randomised) – people would pay an: • extra £500 a year in tax on average? • £500 less a year in tax on average?

  44. Instrumental reactions?

  45. Taxes up £500

  46. Taxes down £500

  47. By current views

  48. Principled supporters

  49. And potential targets

  50. And the rest

More Related