Scottish Independence: Michael Gove says generation must pass before another referendum
The Cabinet minister was pressed by the SNP's Kenny MacAskill about the "inevitability" some senior Tories feel regarding another independence poll.
But Mr Gove said six years after the last referendum is too soon, given SNP leaders previously described the 2014 ballot as a "once-in-a-generation" event.
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Hide AdScottish Secretary Alister Jack earlier this month suggested a generation could be "25 or 40 years", although polling has indicated Scots support holding a second referendum if pro-independence MSPs win a majority at Holyrood next year.
Speaking in the Commons, Mr MacAskill said: "Even senior Tories are accepting the inevitability of a second referendum.
"And as (Irish nationalist Charles Stewart) Parnell once said, 'no man has the right to fix the boundary to the march of a nation'.
"Scots have learned, as the Secretary of State will know from the trickery of 1979 when even the dead were counted against.
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Hide Ad"Does the Secretary of State not then realise that the people of Scotland will not accept political chicanery on the number or nature of the question to be asked?"
Mr Gove replied: "It's absolutely vital we have confidence in the integrity of our democratic institutions and that's why the Electoral Commission and other bodies play such an important role.
"But of course it's also important people can have confidence in the promises made by politicians.
"And it was the case in 2014 that Nicola Sturgeon and other leading Scottish nationalists made the point that that referendum was for a generation.
"Just six years later, I do not believe a generation has passed."