There's Still an English Backlash
This British Social Attitudes press release is doing the rounds.
English resentment is growing over the high levels of public spending in scotland.
The scale of subsidies north of the border - worth an extra £1,600 a person - has fuelled a backlash.
As many as 0% of people in the social attitudes survey said scotland had more than its fair share of public spending, up from 21% in 2001.Scots have become more content with their lot. Just 38% believe they get too small a share of the cake, compared with 59% in 2000.
The research shows 82% of people in England and 57% in scotland agree that 'now that scotland has its own parliament, it should pay for its services out of taxes collected in scotland'.
There is little support for scottish independence yet 29% said they backed an English parliament. Just 17% said this in 2007.
The 29% in support of an English Parliament is the same figure released by IPPR at the start of this year in "Is An English Backlash Emerging? Reactions to devolution ten years on". So I strongly suspect that this 29% figure is from data previously reported in March.
UPDATE: See attached pdf