Scottish parliament to hold its own non-binding vote on triggering Brexit

Scotland’s devolved parliament will vote on the triggering of Article 50, which formally starts the process of Britain leaving the European Union, even though its vote is not binding, the pro-independence devolved government said on Thursday.
The vote, to be held on Tuesday, is a fresh sign of tension in the three-centuries-old bond between Scotland, which voted to keep EU membership last June, and England, which voted to leave.
The Scottish government believes the Edinburgh assembly’s vote will send a strong signal of Scotland’s desire to retain ties with the EU.
Scots rejected independence in a referendum in 2014. But Nicola Sturgeon’s ruling Scottish National Party (SNP) says Britain’s overall decision to leave the EU last June has created the conditions for another independence vote.

British Prime Minister Theresa May was forced by a Supreme Court ruling to draft a new law giving her the right to trigger Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty, rather than being able to start the process without the approval of the national parliament at Westminster as she had intended.