With Britain tearing its hair out over the Brexit confusion, Scotland's government is biding its time as it prepares for the ultimate prize -- independence.
Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, a strong opponent of Brexit, has said she will set out her thinking on independence plans later this month.
The issue presents voters and leaders north of the border with another source of dispute, something that this week's decision to delay Britain's departure from the European Union has done little to resolve.
The government is "absolutely committed to an independent Scotland in the European Union," Scottish Minister for Europe, Migration and International Development Ben Macpherson told AFP while out campaigning in Leith, east of Edinburgh.
But even independence backers are divided over Brexit -- five years on from Scotland's own referendum in which 55 percent opted to remain a part of Britain.
Retiree Phil, enjoying the sunshine in a central Edinburgh park, said he wanted "complete independence".
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Phil said Sturgeon's Scottish National Party had "done a lot of good but I don't agree with them on Brexit".
He said he would even consider voting for Nigel Farage's new Brexit Party -- much to the consternation of companion Lisa.
"I'm Scottish first, then European," she said.
Some pro-EU voters who wanted to stay in the United Kingdom in the 2014 referendum are now in favour of independence, but the issue risks pushing away those who want a clean break from both London and Brussels.
Former SNP deputy leader Jim Fairlie said the government's policy of independence within the EU was an "oxymoron", and that tying the two issues together meant "they're not going to get the votes of traditional nationalists like me."