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It's all smiles, but the gloves are off in fight for Scotland

Tuesday 16 October 2012 15:56 BST
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A two-year campaign to win the hearts and minds of the Scottish people before they vote on whether to leave the United Kingdom began yesterday as the Scottish and UK Governments signed an historic agreement on an independence referendum.

David Cameron, who approved the deal in Edinburgh with Alex Salmond, the SNP First Minister, immediately dangled the prospect of further devolution if the country votes No to breaking its 305-year link with England since the 1707 Act of Union.

The Prime Minister was clearly trying to stop the SNP pushing supporters of more devolution into the Yes camp after Mr Salmond dropped his idea of having such a "devo max" option on the ballot paper.

The Coalition Government insisted on a single question. In return, Mr Salmond achieved his goals of delaying the referendum until 2014 and for 16- and 17-year-olds to be allowed to vote.

Mr Cameron said: "All those who want to see not only the status quo but further devolution from the United Kingdom to Scotland must vote to stay within the United Kingdom. Then it'll be for all the parties to decide what proposals to put forward, but I've always taken the view we have to answer this prior question first.

Denying that the UK Government had made more concessions in the negotiations than the SNP administration in Edinburgh, Mr Cameron said: "What we have is what I always wanted, which is one single question, not two questions, not devo max, a very simple single question that has to be put before the end of 2014 so we end the uncertainty, we put beyond doubt Scotland's position either within the UK, as I hope, or separating itself from the UK."

Mr Salmond insisted the Yes campaign could turn round opinion polls putting the No camp ahead by "winning the argument" over the next two years. "I believe we'll win it by setting out a positive vision for a better future for our country economically and also, crucially, socially," he said.

The First Minister said yesterday's agreement paved the way for the most important decision Scotland has made in several hundred years: "It is, in that sense, an historic day for Scotland and a major step forward in Scotland's home-rule journey."

He said the deal meant there would be "respect" for the outcome "whatever it is" and that the SNP could now address the substantive arguments involved in devolution.

The pro-independence campaign faces an uphill struggle because polls in recent months showed an average 37 per cent of Scots in favour of a breakaway after "don't knows" are excluded.

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