Could Boris Johnson Be The Last PM Of The (Current) United Kingdom?

Scottish independence gets a fillip on the night before Brexmas.
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Tripping the light fantastic

Twas the night before Brexmas, when all through the House

Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse

The stockings were hung by the No.10 chimney with care

In hopes that St Boris soon would be there

As MPs clocked off at 5.30pm, after a not exactly action-packed day in the chamber, there was a strange calm at Westminster on Brexmas Eve. Yes, not even the mice (of which there are multitudes) could bother to stir themselves across the House of Commons. It was as if everyone, Leavers and Remainers, humans and rodents, was just taking a breather before Friday’s big party/wake/shrug (delete as appropriate).

Lots of huge Union flags were drawn up the flagpoles in Parliament Square, ready for what look like being low-key celebrations under a bongless Big Ben. A light show, rather than a fireworks display, will illuminate Downing Street and Whitehall, we’re told. It will all be deliberately modest and muted, in a bid to ‘heal’ the nation.

But as much as the PM would love us all to move on from the acrimony and delay of the last three years, the sense of unease in one key part of this disunited kingdom is palpable. With just hours to go before the moment of exit, a new YouGov poll reported the first majority for Scottish independence in years.

Now 51% Yes to 49% No is a wafer-thin margin, though as the EU referendum proved, a win is a win. Supporters of the union will argue that the independence campaign should be miles further ahead, given all the factors in its favour: the SNP has been in power for nearly a decade in Holyrood, it just won a stunning general election result and Boris Johnson is arguably the most loathed PM north of the border in a generation.

It is just one poll, of course. Yet just imagine if support for independence climbs steadily from that 51% in coming years. The real shape of Johnson’s Brexit won’t be known for a few months, and its actual impact won’t arrive until next year. That gives the independence movement what could be the perfect storm as more Scots start to believe that quitting the UK is the best route back to the EU.‌

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon welcomes Prime Minister Boris Johnson outside Bute House in Edinburgh ahead of their meeting.
Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon welcomes Prime Minister Boris Johnson outside Bute House in Edinburgh ahead of their meeting.
PA Wire/PA Images

Johnson’s refusal to allow another referendum - something that is galvanising even floating voters - will also come under huge pressure if the SNP win a fresh mandate in the Holyrood elections next year. The YouGov poll showed Scots don’t want a new referendum this year or next, but do back on in the next five years. Not for nothing is Nicola Sturgeon tomorrow set to unveil the ‘next steps’ on the road to that referendum.

And as London stages its strangely muted celebrations as the clock strikes 11pm, up in Edinburgh campaigners will be holding a candle-lit vigil for the UK’s dying membership of the EU. Some campaigners plan a ‘haunting’ light display in the ponds outside the Scottish parliament building, in honour of SNP MEP (and new MP) Alyn Smith’s Strasbourg speech that urged the EU to ‘keep a light on’ for Scotland.

It’s a reminder that while there’s been plenty of focus was on future links between London and Washington (more today, thanks to Mike Pompeo) and between London and Brussels, it’s the ‘future relationship’ between London and Edinburgh that could prove the thorniest for Boris Johnson during this parliament. Auld Lang Syne, the tune sung so forlornly by MEPs in the European parliament yesterday, is after all written in Scots.

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This week, Tom Tugendhat talks to us about Huawei, Brexit, HS2 and Johnsonism. Click HERE to listen to the podcast. For a taster click HERE.

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