Question Author
But the UK’s membership of the EU is not Mr Salmond’s concern, jake. It is a matter for the UK Parliament of which Mr Salmond is not a member. The fact that he is attempting to secure Scotland’s withdrawal from the UK makes it no more a matter for him than it is for the mayor of Wigan.
Of course voters in Scottish elections (and in any possible referendum) are interested in his view of Scotland’s membership of the EU should it become an independent nation state, but that is an entirely unrelated matter. Presumably Scotland will have to apply to become a candidate nation (after the current official candidates, Croatia, Iceland, Macedonia, and Turkey have gained entry). I imagine they will then join the “reserve” list of Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro and Serbia. I also imagine some show will be made about them having to meet the entry criteria, but if past experience is anything to go by, that should not present insurmountable problems.
But, back to my original point, it seems that the catastrophic consequences of Mr Cameron’s intransigence forecast a week ago may not be quite so disastrous after all. Even Mrs Merkel seems to have warmed to DC!