The Scotsman

‘Independen­t Scotland would be the best place in world to raise a family’

- ScOTT macNab POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

sCoTlaND will be the best country in the world to raise families if voters back independen­ce next year, First Minister alex salmond has said.

a Yes vote will get a generation of mothers back to work through universal childcare, according to the sNP leader who urged scots not to wake up the day after the referendum regretting what might have been.

But concerns over the risks of leaving the UK were expressed by pro-Union leaders who called for the scottish Government to be open about the drawbacks.

in his New Year message, Mr salmond said scots have the “opportunit­y of a lifetime” when they go to the polls on 18 september next year. “let’s not wake up on the morning of 19 september next year and think to ourselves what might have been. let’s wake up on that morning filled with hope and expectatio­n – ready to build a just and prosperous nation,” he said.

The people of scotland are the country’s “greatest asset”, he added. “let’s transform childcare in this country – unleashing the full potential of all of our working age population, and helping us become the best place anywhere in the world to raise a family,” he added. The debate about scotland’s future should be a “constructi­ve one” in which campaigner­s “respect each other’s views, regardless of how passionate­ly we hold our own”, said the First Minister, who delivered his New Year message at the National library in edinburgh.

scottish secretary alistair Carmichael said the independen­ce question will take “centre stage in scottish political life in the year ahead.” The liberal Democrat Coalition minister urged scots to “examine in detail the case being put forward” by Nationalis­ts and “press for answers”.

The prospect of scotland keeping the pound, how exports to england would be hit and eU entry were all raised by Mr Carmichael. He added: “we cannot accept answers that say ‘it will be alright on the night.’ This is our future. This is a year when we all need to use our head, not a hunch. This is a time for evidence not evasion.”

labour leader Johann lamont questioned how others will view the independen­ce debate. “will they see a healthy and invigorati­ng debate about how we best co-operate and engage with our neighbours and exercise power to make a difference?” she asked.

“or will they see a bad-tempered debate, mired in bitterness and grievance? will they see a divided country which has turned in on itself?”

Politician­s on both sides of the argument have “a duty to show the best of scotland and shape the debate to ensure it is inspiring”. Politician­s, like the athletes taking part in the Glasgow Commonweal­th Games, must “up our game and rise to the occasion”, she added.

Tory leader Ruth Davidson said the choice offered to voters in the independen­ce referendum was “stark”. “on the one hand is the irreversib­le break of independen­ce, an end to the economic and social union between scotland, england, wales and Northern ireland: a partnershi­p that has flourished for more than three centuries,” she said.

“on the other is a choice to renew that partnershi­p of nations and further strengthen devolution; a positive vote for working together to secure a prosperous future for the people of scotland and of all parts of the United Kingdom.”

liberal Democrat leader willie Rennie said: “i am confident we’ll reaffirm scotland’s place in the United Kingdom family of nations so we can share risk and reward for generation­s to come. we won’t undermine the progress by splitting scotland from the UK.”

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