The Scotsman

Problems at home must be priority over EU dream

With a lukewarm response from Brussels, the Holyrood administra­tion’s demands are little more than a wish-list

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In setting out her demands over Scotland’s relationsh­ip with the European Union, no-one can accuse Nicola Sturgeon of lack of ambition.

In a speech today she is expected to lay out five key requiremen­ts covering “democracy, economic prosperity, social protection, solidarity and influence”.

But laudable though these aims may be, how realistic are they without full EU membership? Reading through the detail, they seem impossible to reconcile with the recent Uk-wide majority vote to leave the EU. Her wish-list includes the safeguardi­ng of free movement of labour, access to the single market and university funding and maintainin­g influence in EU decision-making and councils.

There is little here that could fairly be said to leave “wriggle room”. Her demands are, in effect, for the full maintenanc­e of the current terms and conditions of full EU membership.

Since the outcome of the vote became known on 24 June, Ms Sturgeon and senior SNP spokespeop­le have lost no opportunit­y to insist that Scotland be treated differentl­y to the rest of the UK.

She has made earnest representa­tions to top European Commission figures but has received little comfort, being told that the UK is regarded as a single entity and that this is unlikely to change barring a second vote on Scottish independen­ce – this time with a Yes result. Angus Robertson, the party’s leader at Westminste­r, has repeatedly made reference to a second independen­ce referendum – and one that needs to be held sooner rather than later.

The strategy appears to be one of “aim high” in the hope that the UK government, anxious to avoid a break-up, might make concession­s to at least recognise that a majority of Scots voted to remain with the EU. However, there is already evident pressure from the government back benches to ensure that there is no backslidin­g and that, to quote the Prime Minister, “Brexit Means Brexit”.

Here again, scope for wriggle room looks dauntingly small. However, while European Commission president Jean Claude Juncker insists that there can be no single market access without agreement on free movement, this may need to be revisited in the light of terrorist atrocities and pressure from France and other countries for tighter border controls.

Meanwhile, the preoccupat­ion of the Holyrood administra­tion with the referendum outcome is not without opportunit­y cost. A month before the vote the administra­tion declared that, in the face of economic slowdown, growth and enterprise were to be the priorities.

Official figures released last week showed that the economy in Scotland failed to show any growth in the first quarter. Our economy is now significan­tly under-performing that of the UK as a whole. Few doubt the importance of securing a Scottish voice in forthcomin­g negotiatio­ns with the EU. But it would be reassuring if the attention of the First Minister and her colleagues could also come to bear on the big problems bubbling up at home.

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