Global Times

PM Johnson to visit Scotland

Trip coincides with record support for independen­ce

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Prime Minister Boris Johnson was expected on Thursday to praise the UK’s joint response to the coronaviru­s pandemic during a trip to Scotland, where support for independen­ce has hit record highs.

He was expected to be walking straight into a row with First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, leader of the Scottish National Party, who questioned whether Johnson’s trip contravene­s his own COVID- 19 rules on making only essential journeys.

Sturgeon said she was “not ecstatic” about the visit, adding that leaders should stick to the same rules as the general public.

“People like me and Boris Johnson have to be in work for reasons people understand, but we don’t have to travel across the UK. We have a duty to lead by example,” she said.

Johnson’s Downing Street office responded that it was “a fundamenta­l role of the PM to be the physical representa­tive of the UK government” and that it was “right that he’s visible and accessible for communitie­s, businesses and the public.”

The prime minister was expected to highlight the role played by central government in providing tests, setting up vaccine centers and subsidizin­g those who are unable to go to work.

“The great benefits of cooperatio­n across the whole of the UK have never been clearer than since the beginning of this pandemic,” he was expected to say, according to his office.

“We have a vaccine program developed in labs in Oxford being administer­ed across the UK by our Armed Forces, who are helping to establish 80 new vaccine centers across Scotland.”

The visit comes amid a slew of polls showing Scotland would vote to leave the union in any re- run of the 2014 referendum, in which it opted to stay.

Nationalis­ts said Britain’s vote to leave the European Union in 2016, opposed by most of Scotland, meant another referendum should be held.

The vote to leave the EU had little direct effect on support for independen­ce, with polls still showing a majority wanted to stay in the UK.

However, the coronaviru­s pandemic has seen a significan­t shift toward independen­ce.

Each devolved government has had a large say in dictating their response, often pitting them against London and providing a glimpse into how independen­ce could operate.

Johnson was expected to highlight the role played by central government in providing tests, setting up vaccine centers and subsidizin­g those who are unable to go to work.

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