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Is Boris's trip essential?

(168 Posts)
Sarnia Thu 28-Jan-21 10:01:00

Boris is planning to go to Scotland to meet Nicola Sturgeon to discuss how coronavirus is being handled and I expect he will slip in the little matter of Scottish independence while he is there. Nicola Sturgeon has asked him not to go as it is not essential travel. It seems ironic that he is travelling all that way to talk about the virus, breaking his own rules on travel in the process.

Petera Thu 28-Jan-21 13:18:23

Firecracker123

11:51BlueBelle

Sturgeon is a good, clear, no nonsense politician who makes Johnson look like the twit he is Of course it’s not essential travel he’s a total nincampoop
Nasty post firecracker

Sturgeon is a one trip pony.

Why don't you answer the questions how are you going to support yourselves without Westminster handouts. Believe me I'd be happy if the Barnet Formula was stopped.

So I take it you're in favour of independence?

Alegrias1 Thu 28-Jan-21 13:18:30

"And what do you call that?"

"We call it a yellow bucket Prime Minister"

MaizieD Thu 28-Jan-21 13:28:16

Alegrias1

"And what do you call that?"

"We call it a yellow bucket Prime Minister"

Well, I laughed grin

paddyanne Thu 28-Jan-21 13:31:36

Firecracker the Independence movement isn't dependent on Nicola Sturgeon or any other leader,its grass roots .Who do you think voted for the SNP whose core policy is Independence ?
Its not Nicola who marches the streets ,its tens or hundreds of thousands of SCOTS of many nationalities who call Scotland home ,its people who want Independence.Is our vote to be discarded...is democracy to be denied us because Bojo wants to treat us like a colony and not the partner in Union we were supposed to be.
The Empire is long dead ,the last vestiges of it are on the verge of going
·
Westminster fighting fires
Wales growing Indy curious
British Virgin Islands talking about Independence
Irish Unity a growing concern for Westminster
Gibraltar joining the Schengen zone. In negotiations with Spain
Caribbean countries talking about removing the Queen as head of state
Scotland demanding its rightful Independence
how desperate is Tory Westminster.?
Scotland can certainly do better than this.
Leave Westminster far behind ???????
The people of Scotland are sovereign not Parliament or PM or Queen ,its up to US to make the decision and its not in Bojo's power to deny it.Scotland is their biggest concern because its Scotland that FUNDS England ....WM has been feeding lies to the population for centuries ,Just as they did with India . !!Did YOu know that Scotland is the only country in the UK that has exported more than it has imported since records began? Are you even interested? Probably not ...thats imperialism thats been inbred .

paddyanne Thu 28-Jan-21 13:33:41

and just to add to FACTS ,Barnet is just a % of the money we send TO WM.Scotland sends 580 million POUNDS A week

varian Thu 28-Jan-21 13:38:51

Perhaps it's a cunning plan by the SNP, a double bluff. By telling Boris Johnson to stay away from Scotland that makes him more likely to come, and every time he goes to Scotland the SNP gains support. He is second only to Margaret Thatcher in having this effect.

25Avalon Thu 28-Jan-21 13:46:47

Elegran once England and Scotland had the same Scottish King - King James 1 of England and King James V1 of Scotland, the Stuart dynasty. The Stuarts however were subsequently deposed with The Glorious or Bloodless Revolution and William and Mary of Orange became the ruling monarch. This lead to the Jacobite Rebellion when the Scots sought to reinstate Bonnie Prince Charlie.

Alegrias1 Thu 28-Jan-21 13:57:05

Oh I love a good history argument.

It was the Jacobite rebellion certainly that tried to reinstate Charlie as king but that was the third such attempt to return the crown to a catholic Stuart. Previous attempts had been made in 1709 and 1715.

The person you refer to as "Mary of Orange" was no such thing, she was the daughter of James II, who was the second son of Charles I. So she was a Stuart, as was her sister Queen Anne who succeeded William and Mary and in whose reign the Union of the Parliaments was enacted. Following Anne's death the crown passed to a Protestant German heir, George I.

So the Stuarts weren't deposed and it was the Catholic Stuart followers of James, Charlie's father, who led the Jacobite Rebellions. Not the Scots.

25Avalon Thu 28-Jan-21 14:03:44

I see the SNP have reported Boris to the police for non-essential travel.

Urmstongran Thu 28-Jan-21 14:10:42

Well I think it’s right that Boris visits Scotland. He ought to be going more regularly! And over I Wales and N.I. He knows he is the public face of the government of the UK.
??????? + ??????? + ??????? = ??

We are still a Union.
I hope Scotland doesn’t leave it.

I’m also glad that Scotland has it’s vaccines for roll out and is not relying on a shipment from the E.U.

25Avalon Thu 28-Jan-21 14:11:46

Alegrias1 tried to put it in a nutshell. Thanks for elaborating. The Old Pretender and Young Pretender were disposed but had Bonnie Prince Charlie not turned back at Derby we could have seen a Catholic male hereditary king. I always thought their supporters were Scots but obviously not every Scot. I wonder if there are any descendants left to claim the throne?

Alegrias1 Thu 28-Jan-21 14:18:27

Sorry for jumping on your post 25Avalon flowers

I think there's somebody in Germany who is claimed to be in the direct line of descent.

Bodach Thu 28-Jan-21 14:32:28

Thank you, Alegrias1, for setting out the facts about the quite separate unions of the crowns (1603) and of the parliaments (1707) - and the various Jacobite rebellions (inc 1719 vs 1709?). I am always irritated by the superficial, but widely-held, impression that the Jacobite rebellions were simple "Scots vs English" affairs. My clan (from about as deep into Scotland as you can go) were solidly anti-Jacobite, and fought on the Government side throughout.

Petera Thu 28-Jan-21 14:33:13

Alegrias1

Sorry for jumping on your post 25Avalon flowers

I think there's somebody in Germany who is claimed to be in the direct line of descent.

Franz, Duke of Bavaria

Elegran Thu 28-Jan-21 14:49:12

Not all Jacobites were Scots. There was a strong swell in England towards reinstating the House of Stuart - and in Queen Mary (wife of William Of Orange, and co-monarch with him of the united kingdoms of England and Scotland) and her sister Queen Anne, that was accomplished.

That the Jacobite army marched as far as Derby unopposed could not have happened if it had been composed entirely of "rebellious Scots".

Anyhow, returner a nos moutons, what has this to do with Johnson visiting Scotland in the middle of a highly infectious pandemic?

Elegran Thu 28-Jan-21 14:51:44

^ . . . in the middle of a highly infectious pandemic?"^ and in the middle of a travel lockdown on Scots? Hasn't he done his homework?

Lucca Thu 28-Jan-21 14:59:00

Urmstongran

Well I think it’s right that Boris visits Scotland. He ought to be going more regularly! And over I Wales and N.I. He knows he is the public face of the government of the UK.
??????? + ??????? + ??????? = ??

We are still a Union.
I hope Scotland doesn’t leave it.

I’m also glad that Scotland has it’s vaccines for roll out and is not relying on a shipment from the E.U.

But in the middle of a pandemic ? The security required ? More people taking risks? That’s the point, not Scottish independence

varian Thu 28-Jan-21 18:17:20

The point is that Boris is not very bright and has just given a boost to the SNP

Urmstongran Thu 28-Jan-21 18:32:45

But maybe he has given a boost o those who don’t vote SNP?

Lucca Thu 28-Jan-21 18:36:48

Urmstongran

But maybe he has given a boost o those who don’t vote SNP?

In the middle of a pandemic should he be travelling, that’s the point ???

Urmstongran Thu 28-Jan-21 18:45:47

Yes. As did the Duke & Duchess of Cambridge when they visited Edinburgh a few months ago. It lends support, shows solidarity and avoids criticism of everything being London-centric. I’m sure very stringent precautions were in place and to be honest I think Boris should go up to Scotland on a regular basis.

Lucca Thu 28-Jan-21 18:48:08

I am Assuming that if nicola sturgeon travelled down to london to visit Boris you would support that as well ?

Lucca Thu 28-Jan-21 18:49:56

Have you thought how many staff etc will also have to travel up there ?

Is he just going up to try and offer her some sort of bribe/incentive to abandon a second referendum ?

I am sure he could do that on zoom.

LauraNorder Thu 28-Jan-21 18:50:36

Lucca Nicola Sturgeon does not have an official roll at Westminster

Alegrias1 Thu 28-Jan-21 18:52:37

Did anyone see the residents of Castlemilk on the news having their say about Johnson travelling to Scotland? Probably safe to say that they didn't feel supported, or feel any solidarity with the PM.

As the reporter said, next time he comes to Scotland, he probably won't go to Castlemilk.