EU REAX | Pro-EU Scots, Northern Irish eye UK escape after Brexit vote
EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP) — The United Kingdom's stunning vote to depart the European Union could end in the breakup of the U.K. itself.
While majorities of voters in England and Wales backed the campaign to leave the 28-nation bloc, the U.K.'s two other regions of Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to stay.
Hot on the heels of today's results, nationalist leaders in both countries vowed to leave the U.K. if that is required price to keep their homelands fully connected to Europe.
Scotland, where nationalists already in power narrowly lost a 2014 independence referendum, appears poised to be first out the U.K. door if its English neighbors don't manage a negotiated U-turn to remain inside the EU. Most analysts dismiss that prospect.
"Scotland faces the prospect of being taken out of the EU against our will. I regard that as democratically unacceptable," said Scotland's leader, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon. More than 60 percent of Scots voted to remain in the EU, compared with 48 percent of voters in the U.K. overall, reflecting Scots' belief that EU membership provides a moderating influence on political life in a U.K. traditionally dominated by the vastly more numerous English.