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UK Local Elections 2026
6MAY

Holyrood demands a vote it cannot force

4 min read
17:39UTC

The Scottish Parliament voted 72 to 55 on 26 May to demand a second independence referendum; Downing Street rejected it the same day as a lobby line.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Holyrood voted 72-55 for a referendum, but only Westminster can grant the Section 30 order, and it has said no.

The Scottish Parliament voted 72 to 55 on Tuesday 26 May, its first sitting day, to demand Westminster grant a Section 30 order for a second independence referendum 1. The motion, tabled by First Minister John Swinney, rested its case on "the largest pro-independence majority ever elected to the Scottish Parliament", the combined SNP (Scottish National Party) and Green bloc. It does not rest on the SNP's own result, which at 58 seats fell seven short of the 65-seat trigger Swinney himself had named .

Downing Street rejected it the same day. Not by letter to the Scottish Government, nor by a written statement to the Commons, but as a spokesperson's lobby line: the UK Government "does not support independence or another referendum" and its focus is "delivery, not division" 2. Westminster is answering a constitutional demand as a press matter, declining to open the formal inter-governmental correspondence a Section 30 negotiation would require, the same pattern as the contradictory readouts after Swinney and Starmer last spoke .

A Section 30 order can only be made by the UK Government. Holyrood can vote the mandate, but the Scotland Act 1998 gives it no route to compel one. The 2014 referendum happened only because David Cameron's government agreed an order; the 2022 Supreme Court reference confirmed Holyrood cannot legislate for a referendum alone. Swinney has conceded he has no "secret plan" if Westminster refuses 3. The vote is real and the rejection is real; what is absent is any mechanism connecting them.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In Scotland, people vote for a separate parliament called Holyrood. Holyrood makes laws about many things, but it does not control Scotland's relationship with the rest of the UK. That is decided by Westminster in London. To hold a legal vote on Scottish independence, the Scottish Parliament needs Westminster's permission through a document called a Section 30 order. On 26 May, Holyrood voted 72 to 55 to ask for that permission. Westminster said no the same day. First Minister John Swinney has admitted he has no way to force Westminster to say yes. Without that permission, Holyrood's 72-to-55 vote cannot authorise an actual ballot.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Scotland Act 1998 classifies constitutional matters, including the existence and powers of the Union, as reserved to the UK Parliament. This means the Scottish Parliament has no inherent competence to legislate for a binding independence referendum. The 2022 Supreme Court reference, brought by the Lord Advocate under Lord Advocate's Reference 2022, confirmed this expressly: Holyrood cannot unilaterally authorise a referendum even with a mandate from its own electorate.

A secondary structural cause is that no inter-governmental mechanism exists to compel Westminster to consider a Section 30 request. The UK Governance framework, revised in 2022, requires good-faith engagement on policy disputes between the governments, but has no enforcement mechanism for constitutional matters, which are explicitly outside the framework's scope. Westminster can decline to engage and face no legal consequence beyond political pressure.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Westminster's informal lobby-line rejection, rather than formal written engagement, is likely to become an SNP grievance narrative framing London as refusing even to acknowledge the constitutional process.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Without a formal legal mechanism, the 72-55 vote functions as a political statement only; SNP support may erode if further votes produce no closer to an actual referendum after repeated rejections.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    The 2022 Supreme Court ruling and this 2026 sequence together establish a clear pattern: Holyrood cannot hold a binding referendum without Westminster consent, and Westminster can withhold it indefinitely without legal challenge.

    Long term · Assessed
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