Stephen Daisley Stephen Daisley

Scottish voters are tired of devolution

(Getty images)

For some time now, I’ve been documenting a growing devoscepticism in Scotland, only to be assured, variously, that voters are not sceptical of devolution, that some are but their number isn’t growing, and that some are and their number is growing but it’s all just boomers and so it doesn’t matter anyway.

It ought to trouble devolutionists that one in three Scots would shutter the Scottish parliament tomorrow

Eight years ago, I wrote about a poll showing one in five Scottish voters supported the abolition of the Scottish Parliament. Last year, it was a poll recording satisfaction with devolution at just 50 per cent, with 26 per cent of voters and 49 per cent of Unionist voters expressing disillusionment. I don’t suggest that the tide has turned against this constitutional experiment, merely that the waters are choppier than its ideologues are willing to admit.

Now comes another ominous wave, in the form of a poll

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