The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Independen­ce needed to tackle cost-of-living crisis, claims Sturgeon

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Scottish independen­ce is essential to resolving the cost-of-living crisis impacting thousands of households, Nicola Sturgeon has said.

The First Minister will tomorrow outline her plans for holding a second referendum on Scotland’s future in the UK to the Scottish Parliament.

Ms Sturgeon has said she intends the vote to be held in October 2023.

However there are significan­t barriers in the way as the Westminste­r government is unlikely to approve the plans.

A section 30 order, a clause in the Scotland Act which would grant a legal referendum, is required but the UK Government has repeatedly rejected requests for one.

Speaking ahead of her statement to MSPs, Ms Sturgeon said Westminste­r austerity policies have caused families to face soaring energy bills and food prices.

She said: “The cost-ofliving crisis did not happen overnight. Years of benefit cuts, pay freezes and failure to tackle rising energy bills, these were deliberate political choices forced on Scotland by Westminste­r government­s that we did not vote for, and have had a devastatin­g effect on living standards.

“These decisions help explain why independen­t countries comparable to Scotland outperform the UK on a range of indicators, wealthier, more equal and with less poverty, and therefore more able to withstand cost-of-living pressures.”

Ms Sturgeon said a recent report by the Resolution Foundation, which found Brexit had damaged the UK’s competitiv­eness and will make Britons poorer in the coming decade, shows the “catastroph­ic consequenc­es” of leaving the European Union.

She added: “It is clearer than ever that when it comes to tackling the costof-living crisis, Westminste­r is not the solution to the problem, Westminste­r is the problem. And that is why independen­ce is essential to tackling the cost-of-living crisis.”

The first minister acknowledg­ed Scottish independen­ce is “not a guarantee of success”, but will let the country make its own choices.

She added: “Where we already have some independen­ce in areas like social security, we’ve used those powers to make far better, fairer decisions, with transforma­tional policies like the Scottish Child Payment.

“With the full powers of independen­ce, there is absolutely no reason why a country as resource-rich as Scotland cannot replicate the success of our neighbours.”

Scottish Conservati­ve leader Douglas Ross said he will “take no part” in the “pretend referendum”.

He urged the Scottish Government to focus on the “real” issues such as the cost-of-living crisis, NHS and education.

A UK Government spokespers­on said: “Now is not the time to be talking about another referendum.”

 ?? ?? The first minister is set to outline plans for a referendum.
The first minister is set to outline plans for a referendum.

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