ABC News September 19, 2014

Scotland Votes Against Leaving the United Kingdom

WATCH: Scotland Votes Against Independence

Scotland won't be leaving the United Kingdom after all.

After weeks of buildup, Scots rejected independence and voted against ending the country's 307-year union with England. The "No" side won with 55 percent of the vote to 45 percent for the "Yes" side.

PHOTOS: Scotland Votes Against Leaving the United Kingdom

While voters in Glasgow, Scotland's largest city, voted in favor of independence, voters in the capital of Edinburgh and the country's oil center of Aberdeen cast their ballots Thursday against it, keeping Scotland in the union with England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

"I accept that verdict of the people, and I call on all of Scotland to follow suit, and accepting the democratic verdict of the people of Scotland," Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond said from Edinburgh.

Matt Dunham/AP Photo
No supporters for the Scottish independence referendum celebrate a result at a No campaign event at a hotel in Glasgow, Scotland, early Friday, Sept. 19, 2014. From the capital of Edinburgh to the far-flung Shetland Islands, Scots embraced a historic moment Û and the rest of the United Kingdom held its breath Û after voters turned out in unprecedented numbers for an independence referendum that could end the country's 307-year union with England.

"By confirming our place within the union, we have reaffirmed all that we have in common and the bonds that tie us together," Alistair Darling, who led the anti-independence "Better Together" campaign, told supporters in Glasgow. "Let them never be broken."

British Prime Minister David Cameron also promised to keep commitments to Scotland made before the independence vote.

"We will ensure that they are honored in full," he said this morning, adding that there was now "a great chance" to change the way British people were governed.

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The ballot couldn't have been simpler, only asking: "Should Scotland be an independent country?"

The independence referendum saw a record-high turnout with nearly 85 percent of voters casting ballots.

The result means the U.K. won't lose a substantial portion of its territory and can keep its nuclear arsenal in Scotland.

"The United Kingdom is a founding member of NATO, and I am confident that the United Kingdom will continue to play a leading role to keep our Alliance strong," NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said in a statement.

"Harry Potter" author J.K. Rowling, who supported the anti-independence campaign, said Scotland should be proud of the vote.