The Herald on Sunday

Sturgeon: Scotland will pay to keep EU citizens after Brexit

First Minister writes exclusivel­y for the Sunday Herald as SNP Conference starts today

- BY ANDREW WHITAKER

NICOLA Sturgeon has vowed to pay to keep EU citizens in Scotland after Brexit. The First Minister says that if they are forced to pay a fee to remain her government will cover the cost. Writing in the Sunday Herald, Sturgeon announced the dramatic move ahead of the start of SNP conference today.

She said the measure was needed to protect EU citizens from the “looming threat” of the Tories’ “extreme Brexit” plans. “Above all, it will send a clear message that EU citizens are welcome here,” Sturgeon said.

Sturgeon attacked the Tories’ “continued failure to offer complete, unequivoca­l guarantees on the rights of EU citizens living here”. This was “morally indefensib­le” and “economical­ly short-sighted”, she said.

Theresa May has said that EU citizens living in the UK after Brexit will be offered a new “settled status”. However, they will all be required to apply for a special ID card granting them the right to live in Britain. A British embassy source told the Sunday Herald that the charge was expected to be similar to that for a UK passport, which is currently £72.50.

Sturgeon promised that if the UK Government decides to charge for that status, Scotland’s devolved public bodies will meet the costs. She said: “Those EU nationals who are already living and working here under freedom of movement should not be made to jump through hoops to remain. The UK Government must guarantee their rights and make the process for staying here as simple and easy as possible – for example, people who are contributi­ng to our country should not have to pay a fee to stay here. It is their right as EU citizens. “But though we do not yet control immigratio­n rules, the Scottish Government will act where we can. As a concrete example of that, I will confirm this week that if the UK Government imposes charges on EU citizens forced to apply for settled status, the Scottish Government will ensure that devolved public bodies meet these costs for those working in our public sector. “This will give practical help to the individual­s concerned and it will also help us to retain the doctors, nurses and other valued public servants that we need.” In response, Labour also pledged support for EU nationals living in the UK. Scottish Labour Brexit spokesman Lewis Macdonald said: “We will guarantee the right of EU citizens to stay in this country from day one of the next Labour Government – not just in Scotland, but right across the UK. The only party that can kick the Tories out of Number 10 and deliver a jobsfirst Brexit is Labour.” A UK Government source said: “EU nationals living in the UK make a huge contributi­on to our economy and our society. We have acted quickly to give them certainty and will set out as soon as possible the detail of how that process will work.”

Sturgeon has also insisted that Scots must have the right to vote on independen­ce once the terms of Brexit are known, leaving open the possibilit­y of a second referendum before the next Scottish parliament­ary elections in 2021. She said: “The SNP’s position is clear – Scotland voted to stay in Europe, and we oppose the Tories’ extreme Brexit plans to drag us out of the single market and customs union, which threatens untold damage to jobs, investment and living standards.

“Brexit against our will is a clear illustrati­on of what can happen to a country that does not control its own affairs. And that looming threat is why I believe that Scotland should have a choice on its future once the terms of the Brexit deal are clear.”

Sturgeon also said the SNP was in an “unparallel­ed position of strength” after a decade in office. She dismissed suggestion­s the party was on a downward spiral after its electoral setback in June’s General Election.

Sturgeon is to deliver the closing speech on Tuesday at the SNP’s first major gathering since the General Election, when it lost 21 of the 56 Westminste­r seats it had won two years earlier.

Her speech comes as a new opinion poll showed the SNP has a commanding lead over both the Tories and Labour. If an election was held now the SNP would take 42 per cent of the constituen­cy vote and 35 per cent of the regional list vote for Holyrood in a YouGov survey of over 1,000 Scots. This would give the party 57 seats at Holyrood, down from 63. Labour polled 25 per cent in constituen­cies and 24 per cent for regions, while the Tories were backed by 25 per cent and 23 per cent in the respective sections of the vote – returning them to third place.

Sturgeon said that the SNP was the only credible option for progressiv­es in Scotland as an alternativ­e to a right- wing UK Tory Government and a divided Scottish Labour party.

Sturgeon added: “Contrary to the claims of our opponents and some commentato­rs, the SNP remains in an almost unparallel­ed position of strength for a party which has been in office for a decade – indeed, polls show that we are in a stronger position now than we were at the same stage of the electoral cycle in previous years.”

Deputy First Minister John Swinney will also claim today in his speech to the conference that the SNP is the “only progressiv­e government” in any part of the UK. Swinney will say that the SNP’s is pursuing a radical agenda in government by banning fracking and

lifting the public-sector pay cap. “In recent weeks, our bold and ambitious policy plans have set the agenda in Scotland and been heard around the world.”

In a separate move, SNP MEP Alyn Smith has launched a robust defence of the party’s “independen­ce in Europe” policy, amid claims from some senior colleagues it should be ditched. Smith will publish and deliver a book, Scotland In Europe, at the conference. He said it reasserts the SNP’s policy that an independen­t Scotland must be a full EU member state.

The “independen­ce in Europe” stance was adopted in the late 1980s by the SNP, which had previously been Euroscepti­c. Smith said: “We need to remem- ber that we are a pro-European party. We have a policy and we need to defend party policy.”

Leading SNP figures such as Alex Salmond have suggested Scotland would try to join the European Free Trade Associatio­n rather than the EU immediatel­y after independen­ce. However, former Cabinet minister Alex Neil has gone further and said the SNP must scrap its pro-EU policy if it is to win an independen­ce referendum.

THE SNP gathers in Glasgow today for our annual conference, buoyed by the fact that fully a decade into government we remain in a commanding position in Scottish politics. More than 10 years on from becoming the government at Holyrood we are recording double-digit leads over our opponents in the opinion polls, showing that we continue to hold the trust of a huge section of the Scottish electorate.

That trust was not easily won – I know from my own experience of long years of opposition how hard we had to work to persuade people to give us the chance to govern. And it is trust I do not take for granted. I will always listen to the people and seek to reflect their hopes and aspiration­s as we aim to shape the nation for the better.

That is why, contrary to the claims of our opponents and some commentato­rs, the SNP remains in an almost unparallel­ed position of strength for a party which has been in office for a decade – indeed, polls show that we are in a stronger position now than we were at the same stage of the electoral cycle in previous years. We are out-polling our performanc­e in 2008 and 2012 when, like now, we were a year or so on from winning a Holyrood election. The reasons for that strength of support are rooted in the fact that we continue to deliver for people across Scotland. We are mitigating Tory austerity, while setting out our own distinctiv­e, bold policy agenda which is helping to reshape Scotland for the future. And we are delivering every day while our principal opponents continue to tear themselves apart – obsessing about themselves rather than thinking about how to better the lives of the people who elect them.

The Prime Minister’s conference speech travails were unfortunat­e, and she cannot be blamed for things that were outwith her control – but in truth, the episode merely symbolised the utter chaos she is now presiding over on a daily basis. The UK Government, at a time of probably the biggest peacetime challenge in living memory, is lurching day to day from crisis to crisis – rudderless, clueless and increasing­ly leaderless.

Whether the level of discontent among Tory MPs is enough to force Theresa May from office in the near future remains to be seen. The only certainty amid the turmoil is that the Conservati­ves do not have their eye on the day job, whether that is Brexit or the multitude of other challenges they should be focusing on.

As for the Scottish Tories, for all the recent hype, the polls suggest they are now on the slide. This is a party, it should be remembered, which has not won a single election in Scotland in more than 60 years. And they are increasing­ly being exposed – not just for the questionab­le opinions of some of their elected representa­tives – but also for their lack of policies.

Aside from their constituti­onal obsession they have nothing to say, and have now fallen behind a bitterly divided and leaderless Scottish Labour party in the polls. Labour themselves do not have the answers Scotland needs – on too many issues they vacillate and equivocate.

That is the case on Trident, where the opposition of some in the Scottish party is trumped by UK Labour’s policy to renew nuclear weapons on the Clyde. And it is the case with Brexit, where Labour’s position remains what might charitably be termed as opaque. The SNP’s position is clear – Scotland voted to stay in Europe, and we oppose the Tories’ extreme Brexit plans to drag us out of the single market and customs union, which threatens untold damage to jobs, investment and living standards. Brexit against our will is a clear illustrati­on of what can happen to a country that does not control its own affairs. And that looming threat is why I believe that Scotland should have a choice on its future once the terms of the Brexit deal are clear. And there is evidence of a growing discontent in Scotland at Brexit itself and with the Tories’ bungling of the negotiatio­ns.

Meanwhile, the Conservati­ves’ continued failure to offer complete, unequivoca­l guarantees on the rights of EU citizens living here is not only morally indefensib­le, it is also economical­ly short-sighted. Those EU nationals who are already living and working here under freedom of movement should not be made to jump through hoops to remain. The UK Government must guarantee their rights and make the process for staying here as simple and easy as possible – for example, people who are contributi­ng to our country should not have to pay a fee to stay here. It is their right as EU citizens.

But though we do not yet control immigratio­n rules, the Scottish Government will act where we can. As a concrete example of that, I will confirm this week that if the UK Government imposes charges on EU citizens forced to apply for settled status, the Scottish Government will ensure that devolved public bodies meet these costs for those working in our public sector. This will give practical help to the individual­s concerned and it will also help us to retain the doctors, nurses and other valued public servants that we need. Above all, it will send a clear message that EU citizens are welcome here. Ten years on from entering office for the first time in our history, the SNP gathers for our conference in great heart. We have weathered challenges along the way, but we remain full of the energy and vision needed to build a confident, compassion­ate and successful European nation.

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 ?? Photograph: Jane Barlow/ PA Wire ?? First Minister Nicola Sturgeon will address the SNP conference on Tuesday
Photograph: Jane Barlow/ PA Wire First Minister Nicola Sturgeon will address the SNP conference on Tuesday
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 ??  ?? Nicola Sturgeon: ‘SNP is in great heart’
Nicola Sturgeon: ‘SNP is in great heart’

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