With only 24 hours to go in the increasingly rancorous campaign, the No side has a four-point lead – on 52 per cent compared with 48 per cent for Yes
As Scotland
goes to the polls today for an historic vote on whether to back
independence Wimbledon champion and Olympic gold medalist Andy Murray
appears to have finally taken a side.
After
years of refusing to be drawn on whether he
supports Scottish independence or not the tennis star, 27, today tweeted
at 1.08am: 'Huge day for Scotland today! no campaign negativity last
few days totally swayed my view on it. excited to see the outcome. lets
do this!'
With
the bold statement to his 2.7million followers on the day voting
starts, Murray appears to have dropped the carefully guarded neutrality
he has maintained when he's been asked his views on the referendum in
the past.
It comes as a final series of opinion polls last night suggested the future of the UK hangs in the balance.
A giant Yes sign, created by campaign group The Hills Have Ayes, appeared on the Salisbury Crags in Edinburgh
A giant Yes sign, created by campaign group The Hills Have Ayes, appeared on the Salisbury Crags in Edinburgh
What happens if you were born in Scotland and moved elsewhere? Or what about if you are a migrant living in Scotland? The Scottish government has provided the anwers in a handy chart
SCOTLAND SAYS NO!
Scots spurn independence, vote to stay in the United Kingdom
Scots were asked to answer "Yes" or "No" to the question: "Should Scotland be an independent country?".Voters lined up at polling stations across Scotland to vote with 4.28 million voters, or 97 percent of the electorate, registered to vote. Turnout hit a record high.
All but two opinion polls - in August 2013 and August 2014 - showed unionists in the lead but a dramatic surge in nationalist support from mid-August prompted Britain to promise more powers to Scotland.
The prospect of breaking up the world's sixth-largest economy and a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, has stoked concern in the United States and Europe.
USA has made clear it wants the United Kingdom, it main ally in Europe, to remain together.
More than
4.2million registered to take part in in the extraordinary vote, turnout
is expected to be exceptionally high, and could top 85 per cent.
Some areas reported more than half of people had cast their ballot before lunchtime.
Each
council area is announcing the total number of votes cast for Yes and
No, which are being collated at the national count HQ at Royal Highland
Centre near Edinburgh Airport.
The referendum campaign has produced one of the most astonishing campaigns in British political history.
Among Scots living in Scotland, the split
has been 50:50, while a majority of people born elsewhere but living in
Scotland wanted to stay in the UK.
Turnout in many parts of
Scotland has been very high, with some traditionally Tory areas thought
to have hit as much as 97 per cent. With 29 of the 32 council areas in Scotland now declared, No leads on 55% with Yes on 45%
The count in Glasgow's Emirates Arena, the largest of the 32 counting centres in the country
Final results showed the No camp won
2,001,926 votes (55.3 per cent) against 1,617,989 for Yes (44.7 per
cent) on a record 84.4 per cent turnout;
- Alex Salmond resigned as his dream of separation was crushed, insisting: ‘My time is nearly over... the dream shall never die’;
- President Barack Obama hailed the referendum result, saying the US had ‘no closer ally’ than a strong and united Britain;
- The FTSE hit a 14-year high and sterling soared as confidence flowed back into the City after the rejection of Yes;
- Boris Johnson put himself at the head of a Tory revolt over financial ‘bribes’ offered to the Scots to persuade them to vote No.
A
visibly relieved David Cameron, who had been braced for calls to quit in
the event of a Yes vote, hailed a ‘clear result’ after staying up to see
the returns come in.
The 10.6
percentage-point margin of victory for the No camp – despite Labour
haemorrhaging almost 40 per cent of its voters to Yes – was wider than
pollsters had predicted. ‘There can be no disputes, no reruns – we have
heard the settled will of the Scottish people,’ David Cameron said.
A despondent Alex Salmond struck a different tone, accepting only that Scotland had ‘at this stage’ rejected independence.
The
First Minister claimed Westminster was already reneging on commitments
about the timetable for the devolution of more powers to Holyrood. But
Mr Salmond announced his resignation, leaving the way open for his
deputy Nicola Sturgeon.
Ed Miliband
promised yesterday to examine the case for 'a Senate of the Nations and
Regions', an apparent echo of Labour's failed 'regional assemblies' from
when they were last in power.
He vowed
to 'reverse a century of centralisation' adding: 'We need further
devolution of power within England, we need reform at Westminster, and
we need to look seriously at codifying the constitution.
Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon refused to admit defeat while there were still outstanding results to come, but her face at the count in Glasgow showed how the evening had gone from moment of celebration to bitter acceptance of the voters' rejection
Constituency | Yes | No | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. Orkney | 4.9k | 10.0k | 33 | 67 |
2. Shetland | 5.7k | 10.0k | 36 | 64 |
3. Western Isles | 9.2k | 10.5k | 47 | 53 |
4. Highland | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
5. Moray | 27.2k | 36.9k | 42 | 58 |
6. Aberdeenshire | 71.3k | 108.6k | 40 | 60 |
7. City of Aberdeen | 59.4k | 84.1k | 41 | 59 |
8. Angus | 35.0k | 45.2k | 44 | 56 |
9. City of Dundee | 52.6k | 39.9k | 57 | 43 |
10. Perth & Kinross | 41.5k | 62.7k | 40 | 60 |
11. Argyle & Bute | 26.3k | 37.1k | 41 | 59 |
12. Airdrie | 25.0k | 37.2k | 40 | 60 |
13. Clackmannanshire | 16.4k | 19.0k | 46 | 54 |
14. Fife | 114.1k | 139.8k | 45 | 55 |
15. Falkirk | 50.5k | 58.0k | 47 | 53 |
16. East Dunbartonshire | 30.6k | 48.3k | 39 | 61 |
17. West Dunbartonshire | 33.7k | 28.8k | 54 | 46 |
18. Inverclyde | 27.2k | 27.3k | 50 | 50 |
19. Renfrewshire | 55.5k | 62.1k | 47 | 53 |
20. City of Glasgow | 194.8k | 169.3k | 53 | 47 |
21. North Lanarkshire | 115.8k | 110.9k | 51 | 49 |
22. West Lothian | 53.3k | 65.7k | 45 | 55 |
23. City of Edinburgh | 123.9k | 194.6k | 39 | 61 |
24. East Lothian | 27.5k | 44.3k | 38 | 62 |
25. Midlothian | 26.4k | 34.0k | 44 | 56 |
26. Borders | 27.9k | 55.6k | 33 | 67 |
27. South Lanarkshire | 101.0k | 121.8k | 45 | 55 |
28. East Renfrewshire | 24.3k | 41.7k | 37 | 63 |
29. North Ayrshire | 47.1k | 49.0k | 49 | 51 |
30. East Ayrshire | 39.8k | 44.4k | 47 | 53 |
31. South Ayrshire | 34.4k | 47.2k | 42 | 58 |
32. Dumfries & Galloway | 36.6k | 70.0k | 34 | 66 |
Total: | 1538.9k | 1914.2k | 45 | 55 |
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