I am going back to:
You missed the most important point of all. All the rest was just justification.
“It is absolutely right that a new and fair settlement for Scotland should be accompanied by a new and fair settlement that applies to all parts of our United Kingdom.
I didn't miss it, I just do not see how it is controversial for all to be treated fairly. I certainly did not miss any of the other quotes as I included them, or part of, in my post.
So, just as Scotland will vote separately in the Scottish Parliament on their issues of tax, spending and welfare, so too England, as well as Wales and Northern Ireland, should be able to vote on these issues and all this must take place in tandem with, and at the same pace as, the settlement for Scotland
I obviously disagree with your interpretation and I qualified my inclusion of that quote by saying that Cameron had pinned his colours to the mast and could be challenged. That is certainly what is happening, especially with the English question. Everybody recognises that this problem needs more time to iron out the complications. It is so complex that it will probably require the setting up of an Electoral Commission to look at all options. Those options will probably then have to be put to the English in a referendum of the "This, or this or this?" type and maybe with an element of second preference pro-rep thrown in.
That, however, does not mean Scottish devo-max being put on the back-burner, far from it. Nobody in their right mind would accept that - note "right mind". The most likely scenario is for Scots devo-max to be on the fast track whilst Wales and NI take the commuter line as the English "solution" is pushed in the sidings for copious applications of axle grease until a Deltic is found to drag it back to the main line.
I am also opposed to the "more powers for the English" line. Nothing could be further from the truth. The English already have the power. Their parliament is already the de facto and de jure parliament of the UK, how much more power could they possibly want? The strength of the main parties in England make it impossible for the Welsh, NI and Scottish to formal bloc to stop them. Due to part affiliations the could also not form a coherent coalition..... and that has always been the problem, for us all. The irony of all this is that with the power the English have fewer options. When devo-ma comes in Scotland will take over Welfare and as such can ditch the bedroom tax. We English have to put up and shut up.
Those things are why Ossie and I were discussing alternatives to the status quo. Many ideas are being looked at to prevent England always being top dog. They are a bit "out there" at the moment, but their time may come. Unfortunately politicians, the media and political commentators are stuck in the opaque Westminster bubble and cannot see anything beyond tinkering with the same old. Hopefully their bubble is about to burst.
As for a new referendum: it is not on. Cameron the SNP and Salmond have all made that clear. The on just held was a "once in a lifetime" or "once in a generation" event.
The Scottish National Party (SNP) was elected in Scotland in 2011 and promised a referendum on independence. We could have blocked that; we could have put it off, but just as with other big issues, it was right to take - not duck - the big decision.
I am a passionate believer in our United Kingdom – I wanted more than anything for our United Kingdom to stay together.
But I am also a democrat. And it was right that we respected the SNP’s majority in Holyrood and gave the Scottish people their right to have their say.
Let us also remember why it was right to ask the definitive question, Yes or No. Because now the debate has been settled for a generation or as Alex Salmond has said, perhaps for a lifetime.
So there can be no disputes, no re-runs – we have heard the settled will of the Scottish people.
But it is not just what was agreed and said, there are other reasons for no immediate new referendum. Cameron is about to be ousted, certainly after the next GE. In his place could come the wacky Johnson or the power mad Grove. Johnson is a maverick and Grove does not like to be challenged and it is not beyond either of them to carry out what you, Suff, mentioned in another thread. You pointed out that the government had suspended Stormont and could do the same to the Scottish parliament. I do not think Cameron would, but I would not put it past the other two.
There is also the way Labour could be treated in Scotland. If it is decimated and takes the blame for the failure of the Yes vote, it could well be obstructive of future referendum claims. If, by some fluke, it manages to form a government of its own, or in a coalition for LibDems and Greens, it could well refuse to put in place the required legislation to make any referendum legally binding.
Then there is the Scottish parliament problem. It has always been elected on about a 50% turnout. Even if Yes campaigners get in with 100% of the seats elected on 100% of votes cast, a world first, even Syria and N. Korea don't get those results, it would still be barely a mandate form the Scottish people. The more likely scenario is of a normal simple majority with the winners getting the highest percentage of votes cast in each seat - maybe a 20% mandate. Given that situation the UK government could say: "Fine have a referendum, have one every week, go knock yourselves out, but we are not going to recognise any of them. What then for Scotland, a Unilateral Declaration of Independence? The world already has a Zimbabwe, it does not need another.
I have said a few times, only to be dismissed or ignored, that the best option now is for all sides to work together. Defiance in defeat is fine, as Churchill noted, but it has to be tempered with pragmatism. At the moment the Yes camp is not displaying that pragmatism.
Out of interest I got my atlas out and could not find Englandshire. I guess it only exists in the minds of a new group that has appeared during the referendum, the Little Scotlanders.
And with that I will now put my thoughts on unchangeable past referendums to bed.