The Scotsman

Brexit pursuit is driving more people towards independen­ce

- By CONOR MATCHETT conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

The UK Government’s continued pursuit of Brexit is underminin­g support for the union and is driving S cots towards supporting Scottish in dependence, new analysis has found.

Polling researcher Professor Sir John Curtice, and Ian Montagu at the Scottish Centre for Social Research, found that pre-pandemic, all of those who shifted towards a pro - independen­ce viewpoint had positive opinions on the EU.

The study, which analysed data from Scottish Social Attitudes surveys conducted over the past several years, also found most Scots are pessimisti­c about the consequenc­es of Brexit.the results of the 2019 survey were released at the end of September, covering the period between April 2019 and March 2020.

Of Remain voters, if there was another EU referendum, support for Scottish in dependence has risen from 44 per cent in 2016 to 57 per cent. However, Yes support from those who would still vote Leave has dropped from 45 per cent to 39 per cent.

The survey also found 18 per cent believe the UK’S economy would be better off in the wake of Brexit, while 43 per cent feel Scotland’ s economy would improve under independen­ce.

Some 51 per cent listed their “constituti­onal preference” as independen­ce, while 36 per cent backed devolution and seven per cent backed having no Scottish Parliament.

University of Strathclyd­e professor Sir John said: “For a significan­t body of people in Scotland, independen­ce inside the EU has now come to look more attractive than being part of a UK that is outside the EU.

“That may not have been either the wish or the intention of those who have advocated leaving the EU but that does not mean that they can afford to ignore the apparent consequenc­es.”

Constituti­on Secretary Michael Russell said the survey showed a “fundamenta­l shift” in Scotland’s opinion on independen­ce caused by Brexit and Boris Johnson.

He said :“The people of Scotland overwhelmi­ngly reject Brexit and the narrow, isolationi­st stance of Boris Johnson’s government, and believe Scotland will pros per as an independen­t country.

“The Tories have removed Scotland from the EU against our will and are now, unbelievab­ly, threatenin­g to impose a disastrous hard Brexit in the middle of a pandemic and economic recession.”

Douglas Ross, the S cottish Tor y leader, said in a speech to the Policy Exchange thinktank, that Brexit has undermined the union.

He said: “There is no getting away from the fact that Brexit and how it has been delivered has undermined the perception that there are common shared values that unite us ." scottish Labour’ s Brexit and constituti­on spokespers­on Alex Rowley said :“Scottish Labour’ s focus at this time of acute crisis is on the public health an deco no mi cc hallenges that Scotland faces and that is why we will continue to urge the UK government, even at this stage, to extend the Brexit deadline. We believe further devolution, along with major reform of the UK constituti­on, remains the best way forward.”

 ??  ?? 0 For a significan­t body of people, independen­ce inside the EU has now come to look more attractive
0 For a significan­t body of people, independen­ce inside the EU has now come to look more attractive

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