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Salmond challenges union rivals | |
(about 23 hours later) | |
First Minister Alex Salmond has challenged his unionist opponents to test their plans for Scottish constitutional reform in a public vote. | |
The Scottish Government aims to stage a referendum in 2010 on whether Scotland should become independent. | |
Mr Salmond suggested it could include two other options - more powers for the Scottish Parliament or no change in the present set-up. | |
The Tories dismissed the plan as "the wild words of a panicking man". | |
Mr Salmond made the suggestion as he launched the latest phase of his "national conversation" on Scotland's constitutional future, published last year in a white paper which strongly favoured independence. | |
You don't have a referendum to preserve the status quo - devolution is the status quo Annabel GoldieScottish Tory leader class="" href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/nickrobinson/2008/03/bye_bye_barnett.html">Nick Robinson's blog | |
Speaking at an event in Edinburgh which aims to engage a wide variety of civic groups in the debate, he said voting in the government's referendum could be carried out on a PR system of one-two-three preferences - the system now used in council elections. | |
However, the SNP's political rivals - who have just launched their own independent review of devolution which will not consider independence - pointed out the minority Holyrood administration did not have enough parliamentary support to stage a referendum. | |
"I am happy to test support for enhanced devolution, along with support for independence for Scotland," Mr Salmond told the audience, comprising business groups, unions and education representatives. | |
"And I say to those who oppose the restoration of Scottish independence that just as I respect absolutely their right to hold that view, so in return I feel able to require of them a clear alternative which can be put onto a ballot paper and held up to public scrutiny and be available for a decision by the Scottish people." | |
'Unwilling Scotland' | |
The event came a day after the launch by Scotland's pro-Union parties of the independent constitutional commission to review devolution. | |
Mr Salmond has called on the commission to alter its remit to look at independence. | |
Scottish Conservative leader Annabel Goldie said the "absurd" suggestion of an independence referendum under the single transferable vote system showed the government was clutching at straws. | |
She said: "This is tripe - the wild words of a panicking man. You don't have a referendum to preserve the status quo - devolution is the status quo." | |
Scottish Labour leader Wendy Alexander described Mr Salmond's suggestion as a "back of an envelope" approach to considering Scotland's future. | |
"Alex Salmond must be delusional if he thinks that Scotland will be happy to accept independence by the back door," she added. | |
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Nicol Stephen, who has dismissed a multi-question referendum as a "red herring", added: "The SNP continues to attempt to drag an unwilling Scotland towards independence. | |
"For a party which chants the rhetoric of democracy at every opportunity, it is profoundly undemocratic to engage in this costly, taxpayer-funded persuasion exercise without any parliamentary mandate." |