A Scottish man who quit his job in England to move to Scotland so he could vote in the independence referendum has been unemployed ever since – and is now asking fellow Scottish nationalists on Twitter to help him find work.

Only people who lived in Scotland were able to vote in September's independence referendum, and Calum Craig – who is pro-independence – was more determined than most to make sure he didn't miss out on what he called "the biggest decision in Scotland's history".

Last summer, with the referendum looming, he handed in his notice at a management firm in Birmingham and moved his family back to his hometown of Ayr in the west of Scotland.

"When we moved back in August I thought everything was going to work out great," said Craig. "On the drive back up I thought, 'We're going to get a Yes vote and I'm going to get a great new job – yippee!'

"Neither really worked out."

He was unhappy in his job, and wanted his 5-year-old daughter to receive a Scottish education, but the independence referendum was the final motivation he needed to take the plunge and return to Scotland.

"The prospect of not being able to vote Yes ate away at me horribly, so we upped sticks and came back," he said. "Here I am a few months on without a job and I'm getting pretty scunnered of it all to be honest.

"Sometimes I question if I did the right thing, but if I hadn't voted it would have bothered me forever."

He "found it hard to concentrate" on jobseeking in the run-up to the vote, but has now applied for around 200 jobs with no success, except for "half a dozen" interviews. He has been on welfare benefits since moving back.

"It kind of sucks, in fact it's absolutely soul-destroying," he said. "I had a couple of interviews at the end of last year but nothing came of it, and that's why I've decided to give Twitter a go – maybe I'll finally find something this way."