The devolution offer – what’s it worth?
We are again dealing with the consequences of the no camp coming late to the alternative offer they thought they could put off until after the referendum.
We are again dealing with the consequences of the no camp coming late to the alternative offer they thought they could put off until after the referendum.
On his way up and down Ben Nevis, Alex Thomson encounters a range of views on Scottish independence from a Spanish woman, a Frenchman, a Belgian and a group of Canadians.
The Scottish government says it’s protected Scotland’s NHS from Tory cuts. FactCheck gives the yes campaign’s claims a check-up.
Maybe you can’t have a strident British nationalism. Maybe that’s the subtextual mistake all those lectern-banging politicians have been making.
On UK independence, it’s clear where Washington sits. It’s all about ensuring that the country with which it enjoys a “special relationship” stays as strong and reliable as possible.
Jon Snow spends the day in Shettleston, in Glasgow’s working class east end, to speak to a community split over the Scottish independence referendum decision.
A spoof passport control post is erected at Carter Bar on the A68 where the road crosses from England to Scotland. It was set up by photographer Jon Parker Lee.
From the Statue of Liberty to lobster catchers – Political Editor Michael Crick heads to the east coast of Scotland to hear how people are planning to vote in Scotland’s independence referendum.
If it’s a no vote on Thursday, Gordon Brown will feel he played a central role in helping to save the union. Quite a few others will agree.
David Cameron’s future is very shaky if there’s a yes vote on Thursday. But he could survive a no vote – and it might even enhance his position.
A simple majority in this referendum will decide whether Britain breaks up or not – and our legislature will have had no say whatever in what could be a major constitutional change.
The author Martin Amis joins fellow writer Irvine Welsh to discuss whether Scotland should go it alone.
Alex Salmond and David Cameron lock horns just days before Scotland’s independence referendum, with the prime minister warning that a yes vote would “break up our family of nations”.
Alex Salmond accuses newspapers of trying to drag the Queen into the Scottish independence debate, and, as a betting man, gives his odds on his campaign winning.
All the best bits from the campaign trail today, remixed. We’re clearly at a Crossroads.