Saturday, September 13, 2014

Scottish autonomy: Thousands in the city for weekend crusade



Remarks (2036) 

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The BBC's James Cook addresses both sides on the last weekend of crusading 

Keep perusing the principle story 

Scotland Decides 

Would costs go up after Yes? 

RBS affirms Yes vote move 

World media see on open deliberation 

Salmond addresses world media 

A great many supporters of both sides in the Scottish submission open deliberation have taken to the avenues on the last weekend before the vote. 

The star freedom Yes Scotland fight guaranteed Saturday would be the "greatest day of national crusading" Scotland has ever seen. 

The Better Together crusade guaranteed there would be "a thousand occasions the whole way across Scotland today". 

Supporters of both sides contended that the energy was with them. 

The most recent survey of surveys gathering the six latest reviews - did somewhere around 9 and 12 September and barring "don't knows" - puts the No crusade on 51% and the Yes battle on 49%. 

Also another Sunday Times survey - directed by Panelbase - puts the No battle on 50.6% and the Yes fight on 49.4%. 

That is a narrowing of the hole contrasted and the paper's survey for a weekend ago, which demonstrated a No crusade lead of 52% to 48%. 

'Force developing' 

Saturday's battling taken after intercessions in the verbal confrontation by organizations raising worries about autonomy, which "Yes" campaigners guaranteed was "arranged" by the UK government. 

Scotland's Deputy First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, said: "The "Yes" battle has been conveyed along by a thriving of self-assurance among individuals in Scotland. 

"That force is as of now developing and will soon get to be unstoppable, as individuals reject the Downing Street-arranged battle to talk Scotland down. 

"Today a huge number of Yes supporters from groups crosswise over Scotland will be running the greatest battle day of activity Scotland's ever seen." 

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On the Yes battle field 

Yes campaigners 
Yes campaigners
Yes campaigners took to the lanes in Glasgow 

By James Cook, BBC News Scotland journalist 

Scotland today is a country rushed with political action and campaigners for freedom, for so long the underdogs in this verbal confrontation, are savoring the vitality. 

Each time he ventures from an auto or a helicopter, Alex Salmond was encompassed by supporters. 

On Prestwick high road in Ayrshire toward the beginning of today, the first pastor aroused the troops before popping into the nearby Wetherspoons for a quick half. 

The decision was not unintentional. The manager of the pub chain, Tim Martin, has been a voice of backing for autonomy saying "Scotland could do exceptionally well on its own". 

Different organizations have taken an altogether different perspective with talk of monetary catastrophe if there is a "Yes" vote. 

At the same time going by helicopter from town to town, Mr Salmond appeared to be astoundingly loose about such mediations. 

He supposes he has gotten the state of mind of people in general, demanding they would prefer not to hear stories of fate and agony. 

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Better Together distributed another survey on Saturday recommending 53.5% contradicted freedom and 46.5% sponsored it, when undecided voters were avoided. 

The phone survey, authorized by Better Together from surveyors Survation, arrived at 1,044 respondents, with a successful specimen size of 927. 

Led somewhere around 10 and 12 September, it utilized an alternate technique from past Survation surveys. 

Better Together battle chief Blair Mcdougall said: "This survey recommends that "No" are ahead of the pack yet that the race is a long way from being done. 

"Nobody can manage the cost of a dissent vote. Any of us could make the choice that has the effect between the UK staying together or breaking separated." 

Work MP Jim Murphy, for Better Together, included: "I get a sense now the force has exchanged back - enormous quantities of undecided voters are coming to us, there's a thousand occasions the whole way across Scotland today." 

Reacting to the survey, a Yes Scotland representative said: "There is everything to play for, and this will goad on everyone who needs and is buckling down for a "Yes" to increase their endeavors. 

"A "Yes" vote is our one chance to attain occupation making forces, ensure our NHS from the harming effect of Westminster privatization and cuts, and guarantee that never again do we get Tory governments forced on Scotland that we have entirely dismisses." 

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On the No battle field 

Jim Murphy 
Jim Murphy
Work's Jim Murphy was battling with "No" supporters 

By Iain Watson, BBC News political journalist 

A huge number of parts of the Protestant Orange Order walked through the roads of Edinburgh with regards to the union. 
"No" supporters
Better Together, the authority No battle, stayed away - it needed to keep up backing from individuals of all religions and none. 

Over the River Forth in Fife, previous leader Gordon Brown talked at a group focus on a chamber domain in Kirkcaldy - the town where he grew up. 

He recorded what he saw as the dangers of a "Yes" vote - from higher costs to organizations moving south. 

What's more after Deutsche Bank's cautioning that autonomy could prompt another despondency, he said if a free Scotland were to neglect to pay's a decent amount of the UK national obligation, it could confront a period of hyper-expansion and financial meltdown like Weimar Germany between the wars. 
A pro-independence supporter holds Scottish flags
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Yes Scotland said through the weekend there will be more than 35,000 volunteers at 473 enlisted road stalls attempting to influence individuals to vote in favor of autonomy. 

They said that 2.6 million "Yes" handouts would be conveyed in 48 hours. 

Then, the supervisors of three retail gatherings have put their names to a letter in the Daily Record, in which they asserted their expenses would climb in a free Scotland and they would need to take "the troublesome choice" whether to pass those on to shoppers. 

The letter, marked by the heads of Marks and Spencer, B&q manager Kingfisher and Timpsons, read: "Inside

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