The Scotsman

SNP report means we’re the only anti-austerity party, Leonard says

● Speech by Labour leader to exploit splits over Growth Commission report

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­rcorrespon­dent

0 The Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard will say in a speech today that independen­ce would deliver the ‘austerity economics of nationalis­m’ to the country Richard Leonard will seek to capitalise on criticism of the SNP’S Growth Commission from the left, with the Scottish Labour leader saying in a speech today that independen­ce would deliver the “austerity economics of nationalis­m”.

The Growth Commission’s report on the economy of an independen­t Scotland warned that “robust” control of public spending would be needed and called for the country’s deficit to be reduced to less than 3 per cent of the government’s budget.

It has been attacked from the left of the independen­ce movement, with the latest salvo coming from former Yes Scotland campaign chairman Dennis Canavan, who accused the report’s author of ignoring the role of trade unions.

But the report has been defended by First Minister Nicolastur­geon,whosaidyes­terday the report would win over No voters and help clinch victory in a second independen­ce referendum.

In a speech today, Mr Leonard will argue only Labour are committed to a radical, antiauster­ity economic agenda.

“The real divide in the UK is not between the people of the four nations,” he will say. “It is between the richest and the rest of us. Austerity is a political, not an economic, choice and it is the choice being taken by both Ruth Davidson and Nicola Sturgeon.

“That’s the new dividing line which has opened up in Scottish politics; the SNP and the Tories on one side promoting another decade of austerity and public expenditur­e cuts and Labour on the other promoting a decade of real and sustainabl­e investment in public services and our economy.”

In a column in the Sunday Herald ahead of the SNP conference this week, Ms Sturgeon said the report offered “clear and solid foundation­s” to “win the trust of a majority of our fellow citizens” in a future independen­ce referendum.

The First Minister admitted in her piece the document had been designed to target those that had been against independen­ce in 2014. She attacked claims it was a recipe for extreme austerity as “bogus” and as “scare” stories from the pro-union parties. Ms Sturgeon wrote: “Some others who have been firmly opposed to independen­ce have been prompted to look at the arguments afresh – and while not yet fully persuaded, now see the option of independen­ce as a legitimate and credible one.”

She said the report had been “deliberate­ly cautious” in order to “prove that the deficit is not a barrier to independen­ce” and added: “We have to show that people’s jobs, their bank accounts, their rents and mortgages and their pensions are at the forefront of our thoughts.”

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